Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011168 (
dysphagia
)
15,644
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The CREST syndrome refers to a disorder comprising the manifestations of calcinosis, Raynaud's phenomenon, esophageal dysfunction, sclerodactyly, and telangiectasia. Thirteen CREST patients (two with CRST) were compared with 26 patients with systemic sclerosis but without the full manifestations of the CRST syndrome. No significant difference was found between the groups in the age of onset of Raynaud's phenomenon, degree of multiphasic digital color changes, ulcerations of fingers, sclerodactyly, or in the frequency of abnormal esophageal peristalsis or
dysphagia
. Laboratory results were similar, including the frequency of an elevated
ESR
. However, the CREST patients had a significantly lower frequency of arthralgia (54%) and arthritis (15%) than did those with scleroderma (88% and 65%, respectively). All but one of the CREST patients were women, which was a greater proportion than found among scleroderma cases (69%), and all were white (P less than .05). Most patients with the CREST syndrome had rather severe acrosclerosis. At last evaluation, four patients were chronically ill and three had died. The CREST and CRST syndromes are closely related disorders that seem to be part of the spectrum of systemic sclerosis.
...
PMID:The 'CREST' syndrome. Comparison with systemic sclerosis (scleroderma). 50 20
Neurologic manifestations, afflicting up to 70% of SLE patients, include psychosis, seizures, chorea, neuropathies, and stroke. MRI is useful in evaluation of lupus patients and several reports have documented cerebral atrophy or focal hyperintensities. We report an unusual MRI appearance in a 56-year-old woman with SLE, diagnosed on the basis of pleuritis, lymphopenia, anti-DNA antibodies, and neurologic involvement. She reported recent onset of Raynaud's phenomenon and generalized macular rash. She presented after two months of gradual deterioration with memory loss, flattened affect,
dysphagia
, dysarthria, anomia, and somnolence, without focal neurologic signs. Investigations included elevated
ESR
, reduced complement, normal CSF without oligoclonal bands, negative viral serology, normal hormone and vitamin levels, normal renal and hepatic function. Neuropsychologic testing showed widespread impairment (WAIS-R: FSIQ-63; WMS-69; DRS-98; RCPM-14; WAB AQ-78.8). CT was normal but MRI showed strikingly symmetric, confluent hyperintensities extensively involving cerebral and cerebellar white matter on T1 and T2 weighted scans. Basal ganglia and subependymal and subcortical white matter were spared. Treated with prednisone, the patient made a gradual, but incomplete, recovery. These MRI findings may reflect widespread vasculopathy or direct immunologic brain insult with or without immunologic blood-brain barrier disruption.
...
PMID:Dementia with leukoencephalopathy in systemic lupus erythematosus. 191 71
Therapeutic results were analysed in 50 patients, including 17 with polymyositis (PM) and 30 with dermatomyositis (DM). All patients were treated with prednisone (Encorton, Polfa) and 47% of patients with PM and 73% with DM required combined treatment with prednisone and cytostatic agents, mostly with cyclophosphamide (Endoxan G.D.R.). Long-term treatment monitored with the clinical status led to remissions persisting after treatment discontinuation in 17.6% of PM patients and 24.2% of DM patients. In 64.7% of PM patients and 57.6% of DM patients regression of the clinical signs of the disease was achieved but these patients required further treatment. No information was obtained on 5 cases. Four DM patients died. The cumulative 17-year survival rate of PM patients was 100%, and that of DM patients was 78.8% . In 45 follow-up cases, the mortality was 8.9%. Side effects of the combined treatment included most frequently mucosal candidiasis (22.2%), transient leucopenia (14.8%) and recurrent respiratory tract infections (11.1%). In 5 cases liver biopsy was done and histological examination disclosed moderate fatty, glycogen and vacuolar degeneration of the hepatocytes. The statistical analysis of prognostic factors such as the diagnosis of PM or DM, sex, age at disease onset, disease duration till diagnosis establishing and beginning of treatment, fever,
dysphagia
, circulatory and respiratory changes, leucocytosis nad
ESR
at the beginning of the disease showed that sex (female), older age at disease onset and respiratory system changes may be accepted as poor prognosis factors.
...
PMID:Polymyositis-dermatomyositis:25 years of follow-up of 50 patients disease course, treatment, prognostic factors. 213 29
A 57-year-old woman suffered from polyarthralgia for 7 years, and was treated by using NSAID with the diagnosis of RA. From Jan. 20th 1987, she complained of back pain and numbness of both hands, and from May 7th 1987, she also complained of
dysphagia
and dysarthria, and she was not able to button up. Soon afterwards she could eat only one custard pudding a day, so she admitted to our hospital on March 17th 1987. The neurological examination showed hyporeflexia and muscle weakness of the four extremities; and hypesthesia of the 7th to 11th intercostal nerve area and both lateral sides of the dorsum pedis. The laboratory examination showed
ESR
17 mm/h, gamma-glob 1.66 g/dl, CRP(+), RAHA 80 x, CH50 24.0 U/dl, HLA-antigen; DR 4(+). Cerebrospinal fluid examination showed cell 5/mm3, protein 63 mg/dl, IgG 13 mg/dl, IgG% 20.6%. X-ray examination indicated destruction of both wrists, left elbow, right 2-5th MTP, and left 5th MTP joints. A light microscopic examination of the left sural nerve showed perivascular infiltration with lymphocyte, occasional macrophages and giant cells at the epineurium, and no demyelination or Wallerian degeneration at the nerve fiber. These histological findings were the same as type-I arteritis in nerves in RA proposed by D.L. Conn. Clinical improvement was obtained after administration of prednisolone 30-60 mg/day.
...
PMID:[A case of rheumatoid arthritis associated with polyneuritis]. 266 32
A 67 years old man was admitted on July 1979 for nausea,
dysphagia
and rectal pain. At age 64 he had undergone radiotherapy on the lower lip for an epidermoid carcinoma. He remained then healthy. His medical history was negative with the exception of chronic bronchitis. He had never been exposed to toxic agents or drugs and had never left Europe. A few days after admission he suffered acute intestinal obstruction but at laparostomy no etiology was found. At the same time the patient complained of pain in all four limbs and he was found to have diffuse wasting of muscles, areflexia and distal sensory loss. No sign of dysautonomia was present. Physical examination was negative with the exception of a cervical lymphadenopathy. The lymph node biopsy showed an undifferentiated metastatic carcinoma. Negative investigations included: blood cells count; serum ionogram and immunoelectrophoresis; thyroid function tests; serological test for Chagas' disease. The following abnormalities were found:
ESR
: 55-105; CSF protein: 145 mg/100 ml and 1 cell mm3; whole blood folic acid: 1,7 mg/ml; Hbs antigen was present in blood; EMG showed evidence of denervation but motor conduction velocities were normal. By September the patient's weakness had increased and complete intestinal obstruction persisted. At oesophageal, gastric and duodenal fibroscopy no contraction was visible, and biopsies were negative. The patient died of peritonitis on October 5th, 1979. At necropsy peritonitis secondary to multiple perforation of the large bowel was found. No recurrence of the lip carcinoma or metastase or evidence of a primary carcinoma was found. Light microscopy showed no evidence of amyloidosis or scleroderma. Examination of the alimentary tract showed abnormalities restricted to the myenteric plexuses which varied from one level to another. In the small bowel there was hyperplasia of the smooth muscle and the myenteric plexuses were enlarged by marked proliferation of Schwann cells. Severe neuronal loss and nodules of Nageotte were also noted. Schwann cells proliferation was less marked in the stomach and large bowel. Lympho-histiocytic infiltration strictly confined to the region of the myenteric plexuses was present in oesophagus, stomach, large bowel and rectum. Mild chronic inflammatory lesions were also found in anterior and posterior spinal roots and semi-lunar ganglia. The striking feature of this case is the association of an undifferentiated carcinoma and a polyradiculoneuritis with a complete alimentary tract palsy of rapid onset, secondary to lesions restricted to the myenteric plexuses. The low folate level was insufficient to explain the neuropathy. Investigations showed no evidence of the usual causes of intestinal pseudo-obstruction: muscular, dysautonomic, toxic, plexic (idiopathic, familial, inflammatory), Chagas' disease). The clinical course, the pathological pictures of the alimentary tract and spinal roots and the association with a carcinoma suggest that our case may represent a paraneoplastic syndrome...
...
PMID:[Paralysis of digestive tract with lesions of myenteric plexuses. A new paraneoplastic syndrome (author's transl)]. 729 42
We report a 65-year-old woman with progressive multiple cranial neuropathy. She had been suffered from bronchial asthma since 1979 for which prednisolone had been prescribed. She noted an onset of pain around her nose in October, 1989, which extended into the periorbital regions bilaterally. In February, 1990, she was treated with stellate ganglion block and trigeminal nerve block; these treatments partially alleviated her pain. In May of 1991, she noted a difficulty in swallowing solid foods. In November of the same year, she developed right facial paresis; two weeks later, she noted numbness in her left face, and was hospitalized to our service on December 16, 1991. On admission, she was afebrile and general physical examination was unremarkable except for piping rales in her both lung fields. On neurologic examination, she was alert and oriented to all spheres; higher cerebral functions were intact. In the cranial nerves, her olfactory sense was lost bilaterally; her vision was markedly diminished bilaterally only to recognize hand movements; the optic fundi appeared normal; the pupils were isocoric and reacted to light promptly. The extraocular muscles were moderately weak to most of the directions more on the left; no nystagmus was present. Facial sensation was diminished bilaterally; the jaw deviated to right; right facial paresis of peripheral type was present; her hearing was diminished bilaterally more on the right. The movement of the soft palate was diminished on the right side;
dysphagia
was present; her voice was horse; the gag reflex was diminished. The sternocleidomastoid muscle was weak bilaterally; the tongue appeared normal. Examination of gait was differed because of headache, however, no apparent motor weakness was present. No ataxia or involuntary movement was noted. Deep reflexes were normally elicited and symmetric. Plantar response was flexor. Sensation in the extremities was intact. Kernig's sign was positive at 70 degree leg extension; eyeball tenderness was also present bilaterally, however, no nuchal stiffness was noted. Following abnormalities were present in the laboratory examination: WBC 11,400/microliters,
ESR
50 mm/hr, CRP 6.1 mg/dl. The lumbar CSF was under a normal pressure containing 29 WBC/microliters (neutrophils 7, lymphocytes 20, others 2), 67 mg/dl of protein, and 53 mg/dl of sugar; cultures for acid-fast bacilli as well as for other bacteria were negative; no malignant cells were found. A cranial CT scan revealed an isodensity mass in the orbit and ill-defined low density areas in the white matters of the frontal lobes.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A 65-year-old woman with headache, facial pain, and progressive multiple cranial neuropathy]. 787 85
To assess the frequency of subjective and objective
dysphagia
and its possible pulmonary sequelae, we prospectively studied 22 out-patients with Parkinson's disease; 15 spouses served as controls. All subjects answered a standard questionnaire concerning swallowing and respiratory functions and underwent barium swallow videofluoroscopy. Possible pulmonary infection was investigated by recordings of body temperature,
ESR
, leucocyte count, and chest X-ray. Patients had significantly more symptoms than controls, especially choking, piece-meal deglutition and regurgitation. Videofluoroscopy revealed tracheal aspiration in one patient, vestibular aspiration in one patient and in one control. Non-fluent swallowing movements were common in patients: abnormal bolus formation, delayed swallowing reflex, vallecular stasis, and piriform sinus residue. None of the subjects had signs of pulmonary infection. Both subjective and objective oro-pharyngeal dysfunction is frequent in ambulant Parkinson patients, but apparently does not produce demonstrable pulmonary infection.
...
PMID:Dysphagia in ambulant patients with Parkinson's disease: common, not dangerous. 818 Sep 6
We observed a 42-year-old woman presenting with severe
dysphagia
secondary to paralysis of the lower cranial nerves and right phrenic nerve involvement, followed by respiratory failure. An EMG confirmed bilateral denervation of the 9th, 10th, 11th and 12th cranial nerves and right phrenic nerve. Videolaryngoscopy showed bilateral vocal fold immobility. Anemia, elevated
ESR
, microhematuria and C-ANCA (PR-3) antibodies were detected. Brain MRI and CSF were normal. A chest CT showed bilateral, irregular pulmonary lesions. An 18F-FDG total body scan showed diffuse hypermetabolic regions in both pulmonary bases, in the mediastinic region and in the rhinopharynx, raising the suspicion of a neoplastic process. A transthoracic biopsy disclosed nodular granulomatous aggregates with multinucleated giant cells, supporting the diagnosis of Wegener's granulomatosis. Immunosuppressive therapy achieved complete clinical resolution and cleared the pulmonary lesions. To the best of our knowledge this is the first report of Wegener's granulomatosis presenting with neurogenic
dysphagia
due to lower cranial nerve palsy.
...
PMID:Severe dysphagia in lower cranial nerve involvement as the initial symptom of Wegener's granulomatosis. 1765 54
Dysphagia
is a rare manifestation of sarcoidosis. It is more commonly the result of esophageal compression by enlarged mediastinal lymph nodes rather than direct esophageal involvement and rarely secondary to neurosarcoidosis and oropharyngeal
dysphagia
. We report a 54 year old female presenting with a six month history of worsening
dysphagia
. She denied respiratory symptoms. Physical exam was normal.
ESR
was 61 mm/hr. Serum ACE level was 65 mcg/L. Chest X-ray was normal. Esophagram revealed a large amount of contrast pooling in pharyngeal recesses with intermittent laryngeal aspiration. Swallow videofluorography showed a decreased retraction of the base of the tongue, limited laryngeal elevation, and a large amount of contrast pooling in pharyngeal recesses with intermittent laryngeal aspiration. EGD showed a normal opening of the upper esophageal sphincter and the cricopharyngeus appeared normal. Proximal esophageal biopsies were normal. Brain MRI with gadolinium was normal. Lumbar puncture was performed. CSF showed a moderate pleocytosis, a WBC count of 19 with 97% lymphocytes, an elevated total protein level of 85 mg/dl (15-60). Neck CT scan showed no oropharyngeal tissue thickening or infiltration, no masses or enlarged lymph nodes. Chest CT scan showed enlarged intrathoracic lymph nodes and no esophageal compression. Bronchoscopy showed the vocal cords to be intact, and the CD4/CD8 ratio in BAL was 5.3. Subcarinal lymph node EBUS biopsy revealed non caseating granulomas. The patient was started on IV methylprednisolone. Three days later, the swallow videofluorography showed a near complete response to steroids. The patient tolerated regular consistency diet with thin liquids, and she was discharged on a slow taper of prednisone over a period of three months. A unique case of isolated
dysphagia
unmasking bulbar neurosarcoidosis and pulmonary sarcoidosis is herein reported.
...
PMID:Isolated dysphagia unmasking bulbar neurosarcoidosis and pulmonary sarcoidosis. 2509 53
Case report. 21 years old woman with 30 week pregnancy, complicated by a 3 month multitreated skin condition, who was referred to General Hospital Morelia, with probable diagnosis of Kapossi sarcoma and sus- pected HIV. She presented with exulcerations involving the palate, lips, chest, abdomen, back and extremities. The lesions were, itchy and painful, with thick yellowish secretion, accompanied by
dysphagia
to solid foods. Laboratory results showed normochromic normocytic anemia, elevation of
ESR
, hypocalcaemia, increased PCR, results in alterations in various TORCH listing, HIV negative. The biopsy of a lesion of the forearm reported histological changes consistent with herpes, subsequently confirmed by direct immunofluorescence. Liquid aspiration secretion of one of the lesions reported coagulase negative staphylococcus sp and Enterobacter cloacae. The final diagnosis was 30 weeks pregnant women with gestational herpes complicated by pyogenic infection of the lesions, discarding infection with HIV and found positive for IgG to toxoplasma, rubella, cytomegalovirus and herpes virus.
...
PMID:[Herpes gestationis. A case report]. 2551 61
1
2
Next >>