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)
Congenital vascular anomalies of the aortic arch are unusual etiologies of
dysphagia
in the adult. Swallowing abnormalities associated with compression of the esophagus primarily occur at birth or in the immediate neonatal period. However, as the result of arteriosclerotic vascular disease or aneurysm formation, anomalies which were asymptomatic postnatally may produce
dysphagia
in the adult. A retrospective analysis of 59 cases with aortic arch anomalies presenting initially in adulthood revealed characteristic clinical signs and symptoms. An aberrant right subclavian artery with left aortic arch was the most frequently encountered abnormality. The embryologic development of each vascular anomaly is described and the value of selective arteriography with contrast esophagography is stressed. Patients with minimal swallowing impairment are treated with dietary management alone. Surgical division of the anomalous artery is indicated only when severe
dysphagia
is associated with progressive life-threatening
anorexia
and weight loss.
...
PMID:Aortic arch anomalies in adult disorders of deglutition. 68 93
As various chemotherapeutic agents are added to treatment routines, the possibility of adverse effects is appreciably increased, particularly in those organs for which the agents have specific toxicity. Symptoms most commonly associated with radiation sickness, such as malaise,
anorexia
, nausea, vomiting, diarrhea,
dysphagia
, dermatitis, and depleted hemopoietic elements, are usually seen late in the course of radiation therapy or shortly thereafter. Consequently, they are managed by the physician in charge of radiation or the patient's referring physician. The general physician may be concerned with symptoms arising from delayed organ pathology. These symptoms may arise in many tissues that are still considered somewhat radioresistant, but secondary to sequelae arising because of connective tissue changes from obliterative narrowing of the finer vasculature. Radiation may be only one of several possible causes, and the symptoms of sequelae may appear only after a long latent period, so that the previous radiation may not be considered in the differential diagnosis unless a detailed history is taken. The medical management of these sequelae is, in general, similar to that used for the pathology produced in these organs by other agents.
...
PMID:Sequelae of abdominal radiation and their medical management. 83 56
The behaviour of some urinary metabolites of tryptophan/nicotinic acid pathway was studied in 7 patients with Parkinson's disease during a 24-day period of levodopa treatment. Corresponding to the appearance of side-effects (agitation,
anorexia
,
dysphagia
, glossitis, abdominal pains) in 5 patients there was an increase in urinary Ky, AA, AAG, o-AHA, and 3-HK, while 3-HAA excretion fell. Since no other drugs were given, it was presumed that this effect was due to levodopa administration.
...
PMID:Tryptophan/nicotinic acid pathway during levodopa treatment of Parkinsonism. 124 93
124 Rhesus monkeys (Macaca Mulatta) were caught in the Taihang Mountain region, a high incidence area of human esophageal cancer in Northern China, in January 1989. Among them, two monkeys died of esophageal carcinoma in 1990. Case 1, a male monkey about 6.5 years old and weighing 14.5 kg, had symptoms of salivation, vomiting and
dysphagia
in February 1990. The symptoms became gradually more serious and died in March 1990. Postmortem examination revealed a huge tumor in the distal segment of esophagus, causing severe stricture of the organ. The tumor was classified as medullary type and histopathologically diagnosed as a well differentiated squamous cell carcinoma, with metastases to mediastinum and lymph nodes of right gastric group. Case 2, a female monkey about 11-year-old and weighing 10.0 kg, showed
loss of appetite
, tiredness, somnolence, coughing and vomiting in September and died in December 1990. Autopsy revealed an annular tumor involving the whole circumference of lower portion of the esophagus. The tumor was of ulcerative type and diagnosed as a well differentiated squamous cell carcinoma. The symptoms and pathological changes of the two monkeys showed high similarity to esophageal cancer in humans. We believe that the present findings would provide important leads for further study to clarify the etiology and pathogenesis of human esophageal cancer in this high incidence area of esophageal cancer.
...
PMID:[Esophageal cancer in rhesus monkeys from the Taihang Mountain area. A preliminary report]. 130 71
Two policies of palliative thoracic radiotherapy for NSCLC have been compared in a randomised multicentre controlled trial aimed at simplifying the palliative treatment of patients with poor performance status. A total of 235 patients were entered. They had inoperable, microscopically confirmed disease, too advanced for 'curative' radiotherapy. Their main symptoms were related to the primary intrathoracic tumour even if metastases were present, and they had a poor performance status. Patients were allocated at random to regimens of either 17 Gy given in two fractions of 8.5 Gy 1 week apart (F2 regimen, 117 patients), or a single fraction of 10 Gy (F1 regimen, 118 patients). Two patients (one in each group) were excluded from all analyses because they were found to have had previously treated malignant disease and had been admitted in error. On admission, 95% of the 233 eligible patients had cough, 47% haemoptysis, 59% chest pain, 64%
anorexia
, and 16%
dysphagia
. As assessed by the clinicians, these symptoms were palliated in high proportions of patients, ranging in the F2 group from 48% for cough to 75% for haemoptysis, and in the F1 group from 55% for
anorexia
to 72% for haemoptysis and chest pain. For all five symptoms the median duration of palliation was 50% or more of survival. All these results were similar in the two treatment groups. In contrast, on daily assessment by the patients using a diary card, those treated with the F2 regimen experienced substantially more
dysphagia
, which was recorded in 56% of the patients compared with 23% in the F1 group (difference 33%: 95% confidence interval 17-48%). The median survival from randomisation was 100 days in the F2 group and 122 days in the F1 group. The F1 regimen, as it requires only a single attendance for treatment, is recommended as a palliative regimen for patients with inoperable NSCLC and a poor performance status.
...
PMID:A Medical Research Council (MRC) randomised trial of palliative radiotherapy with two fractions or a single fraction in patients with inoperable non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC) and poor performance status. Medical Research Council Lung Cancer Working Party. 137 84
Oesophageal tuberculosis secondary to tuberculous mediastinal lymphadenopathy is a very unusual presentation of adult tuberculosis. We report a young patient who presented with
anorexia
and weight loss. The chest radiograph and CT scan revealed mediastinal lymphadenopathy causing extrinsic oesophageal compression on the barium swallow. This was confirmed by upper gastrointestinal endoscopy. Four weeks later, because of spontaneous partial relief in
dysphagia
, upper gastrointestinal endoscopy was repeated and revealed an ulcerated lesion with nodular margins at the mid-oesophagus. Biopsy from the ulcer margin revealed non-caseating granulomas. The patient had complete relief of
dysphagia
and other symptoms within 3 weeks of start of antituberculosis therapy.
...
PMID:An unusual presentation of oesophageal tuberculosis. 142 52
We examined how social, economic, location, health, and food need characteristics are related to elderly persons' not eating for 1 or more days. The following variables were positively related to not eating: ethnicity, location, receipt of Medicaid, living alone, health problems, mobility, age less than 80 years, cancer, nausea,
difficulty swallowing
, diarrhea,
loss of appetite
, and receipt of food from a food pantry. These results have implications for allocating meal program funds, screening clients, and monitoring whether clients eat regularly.
...
PMID:Characteristics related to elderly persons' not eating for 1 or more days: implications for meal programs. 154 86
In a prospective open study, 61 consecutive patients with advanced cancer admitted to a Palliative Care Unit underwent survival estimation by two independent physicians after a complete medical exam performed during the first day of admission. An independent research nurse also assessed each patient during the first day of admission. The assessment included activity, pain, nausea, depression, anxiety,
anorexia
, dry mouth, dyspnea,
dysphagia
, weight loss, and cognitive status. After the assessment was completed, patients were followed until discharge or death. In 47 evaluable patients, logistic regression showed a significant correlation between survival and
dysphagia
, cognitive failure, and weight loss. Accordingly, an "indicator of poor prognosis" was considered to exist in any patient who demonstrated weight loss of 10 kg or more plus cognitive failure (Mini-Mental State Questionnaire less than 24) plus
dysphagia
to solids or liquids. This indicator had a similar level of sensitivity, specificity, and overall accuracy, and a higher level of significance as compared with the assessment by physician #1 and physician #2, respectively. Our data suggest that three simple determinations, which may be performed by a nurse, can predict survival more or less than 4 wk as well as the assessments of two skilled physicians. These results need to be confirmed in other trials with large numbers of patients. Perhaps confirmation of these results and identification of other prognostic factors will result in staging systems for survival estimation of terminally ill cancer patients.
...
PMID:Estimate of survival of patients admitted to a palliative care unit: a prospective study. 157 89
Two policies of palliative thoracic radiotherapy for non-small-cell lung cancer have been compared in a randomised multicentre controlled trial. A total of 369 patients with inoperable, histologically or cytologically confirmed disease, too advanced for radical 'curative' radiotherapy, and with their main symptoms related to the primary intrathoracic tumour even if metastases were present, were studied. They were allocated at random either to a regimen of 17 Gy given in two fractions of 8.5 Gy 1 week apart (F2 regimen), or to a conventional multifractionated regimen of either 30 Gy in ten fractions or 27 Gy in six fractions (a biologically equivalent dose), given daily except at weekends (FM regimen). On admission, 93% of the patients had cough, 47% haemoptysis, 57% chest pain, 58%
anorexia
, and 11%
dysphagia
. As assessed by the clinicians, palliation of the main symptoms was achieved in high proportions of patients ranging in the F2 group from 65% for cough to 81% for haemoptysis and in the FM group from 56% for cough to 86% for haemoptysis. Haemoptysis, chest pain, and
anorexia
disappeared for a time in well over half the patients with these symptoms, and cough in 37%. For all the main symptoms, the median duration of palliation was 50% or more of survival. Performance status improved in approximately half of the patients with a poor status on admission. All these results were similar in the two treatment groups. As assessed daily by the patients using a diary card, the quality of life deteriorated slightly during treatment but then improved steadily during the next 5 weeks. The proportion of patients with
dysphagia
increased considerably during treatment, but fell to the pretreatment level during the next 2 weeks. The results were similar in the two groups. Radiation myelopathy was suspected in one (F2) patient. There was no difference in survival between the two groups (log-rank test), the median survival time from the date of allocation being 179 days in the F2 and 177 days in the FM group. In the light of all the findings, the regimen of two fractions of 8.5 Gy given 1 week apart is recommended.
...
PMID:Inoperable non-small-cell lung cancer (NSCLC): a Medical Research Council randomised trial of palliative radiotherapy with two fractions or ten fractions. Report to the Medical Research Council by its Lung Cancer Working Party. 170 40
Idiopathic hypoparathyroidism was diagnosed in five young to middle-aged cats of mixed breeding. Three of the cats were male and two were female. Historic signs included lethargy (n = 5),
anorexia
(n = 5), muscle tremors (n = 4), weakness (n = 4), generalized seizures (n = 3), ataxia (n = 3), mental dullness or disorientation (n = 3), panting (n = 2), pruritus (n = 1), ptyalism (n = 1) and
dysphagia
(n = 1). Weakness (n = 4), dehydration (n = 2), cataracts (n = 2), hypothermia (n = 1), and bradycardia (n = 1) were found on physical examination. Results of electrocardiography revealed a prolonged Q-T interval in two cats. Results of initial laboratory tests revealed profound hypocalcemia and severe hyperphosphatemia with normal renal function. The diagnosis of hypoparathyroidism was made on the basis of the history, clinical signs, and results serum biochemical testing (i.e., severe hypocalcemia and hyperphosphatemia); in two cats, the diagnosis was also confirmed by histologic examination of parathyroid glands. Initial treatment included intravenous administration of 10% calcium gluconate and oral administration of large loading doses of calcium and vitamin D (dihydrotachysterol). Successful long-term management with dihydrotachysterol and calcium was achieved in all cats. The final dosage of dihydrotachysterol required to maintain normocalcemia in the five cats ranged from 0.004 to 0.04 mg/kg/day (mean = 0.015 mg/kg/day). Long-term calcium supplementation was given to three of the cats in dosages ranging from 29 to 53 mg/kg/day (mean = 42 mg/kg/day) of elemental calcium. One cat died after 28 months of therapy from widely metastatic hemangiosarcoma; the other three cats are still alive and well after 5 to 37 months of treatment.
...
PMID:Idiopathic hypoparathyroidism in five cats. 202 14
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>