Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (ataxia)
15,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A novel immunosuppressant, succinyl acetone (4,6-dioxoheptanoic acid), was studied in dogs. Results with bolus intravenous injections at doses ranging from 50 to 1600 mg/kg showed dose-dependent alpha and beta half-lives, ranging from 30 to 80 min and 7 to 27 hr, respectively. Results suggested that continuous i.v. infusion was necessary to maintain constant plasma levels. Four dogs were given 9.2 Gy total-body irradiation and autologous marrow transplants along with continuous i.v. infusion of succinyl acetone at 50, 100, 200, or 400 mg/kg/day for 21 days, and all four had rapid, sustained hematopoietic engraftment. However, two of the four dogs receiving 200 and 400 mg succinyl acetone/kg/day, respectively, developed bilateral hind-limb ataxia, with histologically confirmed cerebellar lesions in the dog given the higher dose, thus establishing a potential dose-limiting neurotoxicity. Prevention of graft-versus-host disease was studied in recipients of allogeneic marrow. Dogs were given 9.2 Gy TBI, followed by hematopoietic grafts from unrelated DLA-nonidentical or DLA-haploidentical littermate dogs. Succinyl acetone was given as continuous infusion for 21 days after transplant at doses of 100-300 mg/kg/day. Starting succinyl acetone on the day of marrow infusion in four dogs failed to prevent rapid onset of acute GVHD, and dogs survived no longer than controls. Starting succinyl acetone 3 days before transplant delayed the onset of acute GVHD and prolonged survival significantly compared with that of dogs not given postgrafting immunosuppression (P = 0.008); survival was comparable to that in previously reported dogs given either methotrexate or cyclosporine as postgrafting immunosuppression (P = 0.88 and 0.99, respectively). Seven of the sixteen allogeneic recipients developed evidence of neurotoxicity during succinyl-acetone infusion. Neurological dysfunctions were manifested by hind-limb ataxia and posterior paresis. In conclusion, succinyl acetone significantly delayed the onset of GVHD and prolonged survival of DLA-nonidentical marrow graft recipients but did not induce graft-host tolerance and was associated with dose-limiting neurotoxicity.
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PMID:Pharmacologic, toxicologic, and marrow transplantation studies in dogs given succinyl acetone. 144 Aug 68

D-Lactate-associated encephalopathy is a rare clinical syndrome characterized by dizziness, ataxia, confusion, headaches, memory loss, lethargy, and aggressiveness which may progress to frank but reversible coma. It occurs in patients with profound dysfunction of the short-bowel syndrome and is believed to result from massive carbohydrate malabsorption with resultant over-production of D-lactate and other organic anions by the colonic flora. Extremely elevated serum levels of D-lactate (but not L-lactate) confirm the diagnosis, but currently D-lactate is not clearly established as the putative neurotoxin. We describe a patient who repeatedly developed D-lactate encephalopathy after surgical removal of nearly the entire jejunum and ileum. Markedly elevated D-lactate serum levels were documented during an encephalopathic episode. Potential pathophysiologic mechanisms and the treatment rationale are discussed.
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PMID:D-lactate-associated encephalopathy after massive small-bowel resection. 276 Apr 34

D-Lactic acid can accumulate in blood in some patients with intestinal failure, leading to a clinical syndrome of severe acidosis and encephalopathy. The possible impact of parenteral nutrition on its clinical course has not been established. One patient with a severe short-bowel syndrome supported by long-term parenteral nutrition who suffered repeated episodes of ataxia and disorientation associated with elevated serum levels of D-lactate was studied. Results demonstrated no impact of glucose- vs lipid-based parenteral nutrition formulations on total acid production or serum D-lactic acid levels, increased serum D-lactate levels during administration of neomycin, but prompt resolution of both acidosis and clinical symptoms with discontinuation of oral intake. This study confirms the findings of other investigators that D-lactic acidosis may be a significant, heretofore unappreciated complication in patients with severe short-bowel syndrome, and that prompt resolution may be effected with abrupt discontinuation of oral intake. Furthermore, the present study suggests neither a detrimental nor a beneficial effect of parenteral nutrition on this syndrome.
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PMID:Effect of parenteral nutrition and enteral feeding on D-lactic acidosis in a patient with short bowel. 312 29