Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011168 (dysphagia)
15,644 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fifty-five patients were reoperated on for an unsatisfactory outcome after antireflux surgery. Presenting symptoms were heartburn alone (27), heartburn and dysphagia (10), dysphagia alone (9), chest pain (4), left shoulder pain (1), left shoulder pain and fever (1), and signs of anemia (3). The symptom of dysphagia was usually of immediate onset whereas heartburn reoccurred after a symptom-free period (p = 0.014). The most common failed antireflux procedure was a Nissen fundoplication (37). The incompleteness of the residual wrap, its location around the stomach and the irreducibility of the gastro-oesophageal junction below the diaphragm were accurately predicted by barium swallow study in 70, 83 and 92% of the patients, respectively. Abnormal oesophageal body motility was related to oesophagitis, herniation of the residual repair into the chest or both (16/20), and it normalized in 6 of the 11 patients evaluated at follow-up. Oesophageal acid exposure and prevalence of oesophagitis were higher in patients with heartburn than in those with other symptoms (p < 0.02). Intraoperative findings were breakdown of the repair, its location around the stomach, its herniation into the chest, its too excessive tightness, a gastric fistula, or any combination. Remedial surgery consisted of a new antireflux procedure (42), a new antireflux procedure combined with closure of a gastric fistula (3), a closure of a gastric fistula alone (1), a closure of the crura (4), an oesophageal resection (3), a total gastrectomy (1), and a duodenal diversion (1).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Clinical, radiological and functional results of remedial antireflux operations. 817 56

This self-directed learning module highlights new advances in the understanding of co-morbid conditions and medical complications of stroke. It is part of the chapter on stroke rehabilitation in the Self-Directed Physiatric Education Program for practitioners and trainees in physical medicine and rehabilitation. This article covers co-morbid conditions of stroke patients, including cardiovascular disease, diabetes, and sleep apnea. It reviews recent information on complications of stroke, including deep venous thrombosis, dysphagia and aspiration, hospital-acquired infections, depression, falls, spasticity, shoulder pain, and seizures. Treatment advances in diabetes, depression, and spasticity are highlighted. Recent information is presented regarding exercise guidelines for the stroke patient with cardiovascular disease, the relationship between stroke and sleep apnea, prophylaxis of deep venous thrombosis, the changing spectrum of hospital-acquired infections, malnutrition in stroke patients, the problem of falls during rehabilitation, the evaluation and management of poststroke shoulder pain, and the risk of seizures after stroke.
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PMID:Stroke rehabilitation. 2. Co-morbidities and complications. 1032 98

A 56-year-old woman presented with multilevel myelopathy associated with Forestier disease (FD). The patient was hospitalized for dysphagia, bilateral shoulder pain, and progressive gait disturbance. The diagnosis was confirmed by radiography and magnetic resonance imaging which demonstrated coalescent anterior osteophyte formation extending from C2 to C7 with atlanto-axial dislocation and persistence of mobility at C3-4, and a hyperintense area in the spinal cord at the C1 and C3-4 levels on T(2)-weighted images. Dynamic radiography showed no instability at the C1 and C3-4 levels. Decompressive laminectomy of the atlas, dome-like laminectomy, and facet fusion at C3-4 were performed, resulting in symptomatic improvement. Myelopathy is very rare in patients with FD and is due to mechanical stress at the level where mobility persists. Strategic intervention should be considered based on evaluation of mobile levels and stenotic lesions.
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PMID:Myelopathy due to multilevel cervical canal stenosis with Forestier disease: case report. 2103 Aug 13

In late December 2010, a male resident of Wisconsin, aged 70 years, sought treatment for progressive right shoulder pain, tremors, abnormal behavior, and dysphagia at an emergency department (ED). He was admitted for observation and treated with benzodiazepines and haloperidol, a neuroleptic, for presumed alcohol withdrawal syndrome. The next day, he had rhabdomyolysis, fever, and rigidity, and neuroleptic malignant syndrome was diagnosed. The neuroleptic was discontinued, but the patient's clinical status worsened, with encephalopathy, respiratory failure, acute renal failure requiring hemodialysis, and episodes of cardiac arrest. With continued clinical deterioration, additional causes were considered, including rabies. On hospital day 12, rabies virus antigens and nucleic acid were detected in the nuchal skin biopsy and rabies virus nucleic acid in saliva specimens sent to CDC. A rabies virus variant associated with silver-haired bats (Lasionycteris noctivagans) was identified. The patient died on hospital day 13. His spouse reported that they had been selling firewood, and bats had been present in the woodpile; however, the man had not reported a bat bite. Two relatives and five health-care workers potentially exposed to the man's saliva received postexposure prophylaxis. This case highlights the variable presentations of rabies and the ease with which a diagnosis of rabies can be missed in a clinically challenging patient with comorbidities. Clinicians should consider rabies in the differential diagnosis for patients with progressive encephalitis or neurologic illness of unknown etiology and caregivers should take precautions to avoid exposure to body fluids. Continued public education regarding risks for rabies virus exposure during interactions with wildlife, particularly bats, is important.
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PMID:Human rabies--Wisconsin, 2010. 2188 47

On August 19, 2011, a male U.S. Army soldier with progressive right arm and shoulder pain, nausea, vomiting, ataxia, anxiety, and dysphagia was admitted to an emergency department (ED) in New York for suspected rabies. Rabies virus antigens were detected in a nuchal skin biopsy, rabies virus antibodies in serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and rabies viral RNA in saliva and CSF specimens by state and CDC rabies laboratories. An Afghanistan canine rabies virus variant was identified. The patient underwent an experimental treatment protocol but died on August 31. The patient had described a dog bite while in Afghanistan. However, he had not received effective rabies postexposure prophylaxis (PEP). In total, 29 close contacts and health-care personnel (HCP) received PEP after contact with the patient. This case highlights the continued risks for rabies virus exposure during travel or deployment to rabies-enzootic countries, the need for global canine rabies elimination through vaccination, and the importance of following effective PEP protocols and ensuring global PEP availability.
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PMID:Imported human rabies in a U.S. Army soldier - New York, 2011. 2255 6

Despite improvements in prevention and acute management, stroke remains a common condition and a major cause of permanent disability. For patients who have had a stroke, an effective rehabilitation program is critical to maximize functional recovery and quality of life. Rehabilitation can occur in a number of different physical settings and is often coordinated by a comprehensive interdisciplinary team of professionals. Rehabilitation includes retraining to regain loss of function and teaching compensatory strategies when that is not possible. A number of interesting training approaches have been developed in recent years to supplement more traditional rehabilitation programs. A variety of adaptive devices is available to improve mobility and performance of self-cares, and these devices should be prescribed for appropriate patients. Physicians caring for patients during stroke rehabilitation must be aware of potential medical complications, as well as a number of special problems that may complicate recovery, including dysphagia, urinary incontinence, shoulder pain, spasticity, falls, and poststroke depression. Involvement of the patient and caregivers in the rehabilitation process is essential. It is important to train and educate these individuals in the physical aspects of poststroke care, the expectations for recovery, and secondary stroke prevention. Issues related to community reintegration, including driving and vocational aspects, should be addressed in appropriate patients. Stroke rehabilitation is an important part of the "stroke continuum of care," which includes prevention, acute management, rehabilitation, and secondary prevention.
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PMID:Stroke rehabilitation. 2281 Aug 67

We describe a clinical case of an 80 year-old woman, with a history of Alzheimer's disease, who presented with right shoulder pain, numbness and decreased strength in the right arm, with right eye ptosis, cough and dysphagia. The chest X-Ray and thoracic-abdominal computed tomography scan showed a large mass in the upper lobe and apex of the right lung, supraclavicular metastatic lymph nodes. In the fine needle aspiration biopsy: poorly differentiated non-small cell carcinoma. She was referred to Oncology to start chemotherapy treatment.
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PMID:[Tumour of the right lung vertex that produced a Pancoast syndrome: description of a case]. 2489 8

Cervical acceleration/deceleration or whiplash injuries are a common cause of cervical spine trauma. Cervical acceleration/deceleration can result in vertebral fractures, subluxations, and ligamentous and other soft tissue injuries. Severe injuries are often evidenced by increased prevertebral swelling on lateral X-ray. Assessment of the prevertebral space on lateral cervical spine films is an essential component for identifying potential traumatic neck injuries. We describe a case in which an 84-year-old man on coumadin presented to the emergency department after a low-impact motor vehicle crash. The patient initially complained of neck and shoulder pain which subsequently progressed to hoarseness, dysphagia, and dyspnea. Imaging studies revealed significant prevertebral tissue swelling with anterior compression of his airway that required airway stabilization via awake fiber-optic intubation and reversal of his anticoagulation therapy.
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PMID:Expanding prevertebral soft tissue swelling subsequent to a motor vehicle collision. 2505 68

We report a case of a rupture of the common carotid artery caused by the medication of lenvatinib. The patient, 70-yearold female, was referred to our hospital by unresectable papillary thyroid cancer infiltrated the left common carotid artery. Externalbeam radiotherapy and radioiodine therapy were undergone after totalthyroidectomy. After 1 year 7 months from operation, she admitted our hospital due to left shoulder pain and dysphagia caused by the growing left cervical tumor. The medication of lenvatinib was decided after the careful informed consent. Computed tomography on the eighth day of lenvatinib medication showed the existence of air infiltration into the tumor surrounded left common carotid artery. So, a discontinuance of lenvatinib medication was decided immediately. But, on the ninth day, a rupture of the left common carotid artery occurred and on the tenth day, she died. Lenvatinib medication for the patient with the tumor surrounded artery should be decided carefully.
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PMID:[A Case of a Rupture of the Carotid Artery Caused by the Lenvatinib Medication]. 2939 18