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Searched for Gastrointestinal. Results 341 to 350 of 424 total matches.
Drugs for Parasitic Infections
Treatment Guidelines from The Medical Letter • Aug 01, 2013 (Issue 143)
A. costaricensis causes gastrointestinal
disease. Most patients infected with either species have a self-limited ...
With increasing travel, immigration, use of immunosuppressive drugs and the spread of AIDS, physicians
anywhere may see infections caused by parasites. The table in this document lists first-choice and alternative drugs for most
parasitic infections.
Drugs for HIV Infection
Treatment Guidelines from The Medical Letter • Feb 01, 2014 (Issue 138)
and/or gastrointestinal symptoms3; possible
increased risk of myocardial infarction4
Didanosine Peripheral neuropathy ...
Antiretroviral therapy is recommended for all HIV-infected
patients, both to reduce the risk of disease
progression and to prevent transmission of the virus to
others. Various guidelines for treatment of HIV infection
are available.
Pergolide And Selegiline For Parkinson's Disease
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Sep 08, 1989 (Issue 800)
.
Pharmacokinetics − Selegiline is rapidly absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract and readily
crosses the blood ...
Levodopa combined with carbidopa (Sinemet) is the treatment of choice for Parkinson's disease (Medical Letter, 30:113, 1988). After prolonged treatment, however, the symptoms of the disease often become difficult to manage. The benefit from each dose becomes shorter (the 'wearing-off' effect), sudden fluctuations occur between mobility and immobility (the 'on-off' phenomenon), and abnormal involuntary movements (dyskinesias) may become frequent. The dopamine agonist bromocriptine (Parlodel) can ameliorate some of these effects. Two new drugs, pergolide (Permax - Lilly), another dopamine...
Use of Nicotine to Stop Smoking
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Jan 20, 1995 (Issue 940)
, from the gastrointestinal tract. In one study, the one-year success rate was
15% with the active drug and 5% with placebo ...
Many patients ask physicians to help them stop smoking. Since nicotine gum and patches were first marketed (Medical Letter, 26:47, 1984; 34:37, 1992), more data have become available on their effective use, and new formulations of the drug have been developed. Because of its slower rate of absorption, nicotine from gum or patches does not produce the pleasure some people associate with cigarette smoking, but it can relieve the irritability, difficulty in concentrating and other symptoms that occur after withdrawal from smoking.
More New Drugs for HIV and Associated Infections
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Feb 14, 1997 (Issue 994)
of cidofovir for CMV infection at other sites such as the gastrointestinal tract. A doubleblind trial found ...
Four new drugs have become available in the USA for HIV infection or its complications. Nevirapine (Viramune - Roxane), intravenous cidofovir (Vistide - Gilead), and amphotericin B oral suspension (Fungizone Oral Suspension - Bristol-Myers Squibb) have been approved by the US Food and Drug Administration; nelfinavir (Viracept - Agouron) is currently available only through an "Expanded Access Program."
Cefdinir--A New Oral Cephalosporin
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Aug 28, 1998 (Issue 1034)
.
PHARMACOKINETICS — Cefdinir is absorbed somewhat slowly from the gastrointestinal
tract, reaching peak ...
Cefdinir (Omnicef - Parke-Davis), a third-generation oral cephalosporin, has been approved by the FDA for treatment of acute sinusitis, otitis media, acute exacerbations of chronic bronchitis, pharyngitis, community-acquired pneumonia and skin infections. Other drugs available for these indications are reviewed in The Medical Letter Handbook of Antimicrobial Therapy, 1998.
Three New Drugs for HIV Infection
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Dec 04, 1998 (Issue 1041)
, with fever, gastrointestinal symptoms, malaise and sometimes rash. Symptoms resolve after the drug is stopped ...
Combination antiretroviral therapy including protease inhibitors has dramatically changed the treatment of HIV infection and the prognosis of those affected (Medical Letter Handbook of Antimicrobial Therapy, 1998, page 122). Due to limitations and failures with these drugs in many patients, however, three new drugs, none of them protease inhibitors, have rapidly come into wide use in clinical trials or 'expanded access' programs. They are abacavir (Ziagen - Glaxo Wellcome), adefovir (Preveon - Gilead) and efavirenz (Sustiva - DuPont). Efavirenz was recently approved for treatment of...
Amprenavir: A New HIV Protease Inhibitor
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Jul 16, 1999 (Issue 1057)
COPYRIGHT LAWS
PHARMACOKINETICS — Amprenavir is rapidly absorbed from the gastrointestinal tract. It
can ...
Amprenavir is the fifth protease inhibitor to become available for treatment of HIV infection. It was approved by the FDA for use with other drugs in the treatment of HIV-infected adults and children at least four years old.
Rosiglitazone for Type 2 Diabetes Mellitus
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Aug 13, 1999 (Issue 1059)
acarbose and miglitol cause abdominal discomfort and other
usually mild gastrointestinal effects ...
Rosiglitazone, the second thiazolidinedione derivative to be marketed in the USA for treatment of type 2 diabetes, has been approved by the FDA for use either alone or combined with meformin.
Gatifloxacin and Moxifloxacin: Two New Fluoroquinolones
The Medical Letter on Drugs and Therapeutics • Feb 21, 2000 (Issue 1072)
can cause gastrointestinal disturbances and
skin rashes. Central nervous system toxicity, including ...
Gatifloxacin and moxifloxacin are now available for once-daily treatment of patients with community-acquired pneumonia, acute bacterial exacerbations of chronic bronchitis, or acute sinusitis.