Drugs online research references
J Pharmacol. 1983;14 Suppl 2:61-6.
[Antinuclear antibodies and lupus induced during treatment of arterial hypertension. Role of beta-blockers and alpha-methyldopa]
[Article in French]
Homberg JC, Abuaf N, Plouin PF, Menard J, Fillastre JP.
Comparison of hypertensive patients receiving no treatment with subjects of the same age reveals the presence of antinuclear antibodies in twice as many of the former as the latter. Various antihypertensive drugs increase this prevalence. They may induce iatrogenic lupus. Alpha-methyldopa: the frequency of antinuclear bodies is three times greater than in untreated hypertensive patients. However there are no reported cases of clinical symptomatology of induced lupus. Beta-blockers. Practolol, acebutolol, labetalol, atenolol, timolol, metoprolol, pindolol and oxprenolol are suspected of increasing antinuclear antibodies. These drugs may be weak inducers of iatrogenic lupus when compared with major drugs: procainamide, high doses of hydralazine and D-penicillamine.
online pharmacy ref source: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=6138472&dopt=Abstract
Biochem Biophys Res Commun. 1984 May 31;121(1):346-54.
Comparison of rat and human left ventricle beta-adrenergic receptors: subtype heterogeneity delineated by direct radioligand binding.
Vago T, Bevilacqua M, Dagani R, Meroni R, Frigeni G, Santoliss C, Norbiato G.
Beta adrenergic receptors were identified in rat myocardial left ventricle and human papillary muscle by using the antagonist radioligand 3H-dihydroalprenolol. The number (37.3 and 44.5 fmol/mg of protein, respectively in rat and man), and the KD (1.6 and 2.8 nM, respectively in rat and man) of beta receptors were not significantly different. Adrenergic receptors of both beta 1 and beta 2 subtypes were found to coexist in the left ventricle. The relative proportions of the two beta receptor subtypes were determined by the use of competition radioligand selective binding and computer modelling techniques employing the subtype selective antagonists ICI 118,551 (beta 2 selective) and atenolol (beta 1 selective) in rat or metoprolol (beta 1 selective) in man. The rat left ventricle contained about 74% beta 1 and 26% beta 2 adrenergic receptors, human left ventricle papillary muscles contained about 69% beta 1 and 31% beta 2. Human and rat left ventricles contain both beta 1 and beta 2 adrenergic receptors with similar affinities. Rat might be a model for the study of human myocardial beta adrenergic receptors.
online pharmacy ref source: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=6329198&dopt=Abstract
J Hum Hypertens. 1994 Mar;8(3):191-8.
Time course of reduction in left ventricular mass during long-term antihypertensive therapy.
Franz IW, Ketelhut R, Behr U, Tonnesmann U.
Klinik Wehrawald der BfA, Todtmoos, Germany.
Left ventricular mass sometimes decreases during treatment of hypertension but the effects are inconsistent and the response to long-term treatment is unknown. Therefore the long-term effects of antihypertensive therapy on echocardiographically-proven left ventricular hypertrophy (LVH) were prospectively investigated in 117 previously untreated hypertensive patients (mean age 46 +/- 9 years; 15 women and 102 men). Twenty-two patients received 100 mg of gallopamil daily, 24 patients received 200 mg of metoprolol, 35 patients received both 50 mg of atenolol and 20 mg of nifedipine (follow-up five years), 14 patients received 200 mg of acebutol plus 20 mg of nifedipine, and 21 patients received 50 mg of atenolol and 10 mg of enalapril daily (follow-up of four years). For the entire population, there was a significant (P < 0.001) decrease in left ventricular mass index (LVMI; measurements were performed blind by two observers) of 24.5% after one year, with a further continuous and significant (P < 0.001) reduction of 44.1% after five years of treatment. There was a significant (r = 0.61, P < 0.001) correlation between the extent of LVMI before therapy and the percentage of regression of LVMI after five years of treatment. In 82% of the patients, almost complete regression of LVH was achieved. Nevertheless, there was no significant change in ventricular end-diastolic dimension but fractional shortening increased by 16% (P < 0.001). It can be concluded that achieving maximum regression of LVH by antihypertensive therapy in previously untreated hypertensives takes a long time and depends not only on the drug regimen chosen but especially on the duration of treatment and the extent of pretreatment left ventricular mass.
online pharmacy ref source: www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/entrez/query.fcgi?cmd=Retrieve&db=PubMed&list_uids=8006919&dopt=Abstract
online pharmacies ||
Hair Million herbal formula for hair loss and hair growth ||
Amoxicillin ||
Tramadol ||
Paxil ||
Rx Drugs USA, Prescription Drugs Online Pharmacy ||
Zithromax ||
online pharmacy ||
Antibiotics and prescription medications online literature ||
Antibiotics