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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A previously healthy middle aged man died following a 6 month illness which presented with middle ear symptoms, apparently resolved, and then 2 months later manifested as encephalitis. The illness was characterized initially by
depression
and intellectual deterioration. No family member or working associate was affected. The clinical diagnosis of viral encephalitis was confirmed by brain biopsy but no virus was isolated in the laboratory. Numerous intracisternal toroidal virus-like particles were demonstrated by electron microscopy in the perikarya and dendrites but not in glia. The particles resemble, but are not identical to, the oncornaviruses associated with spontaneous and induced murine neoplasms. The resemblance of these structures to the intracisternal toroidal type "A" virus of murine leukemia is noted and other possible causes for this atypical
meningoencephalitis
are discussed.
...
PMID:Meningoencephalitis with toroidal virus-like particles. 115 39
Lyme borreliosis, a tick-borne multisystem disease, may cause a variety of neurologic complications, including
meningoencephalitis
and encephalopathy. To evaluate neurobehavioral function following treated Lyme borreliosis, 15 patients with Lyme disease and complaints of persistent cognitive difficulty a mean of 6.7 months following antibiotic treatment underwent neuropsychological evaluation and were compared with 10 healthy controls, matched in aggregate for age and education, who underwent the identical neuropsychological assessment. Compared with controls, patients with Lyme disease exhibited marked impairment on memory tests and particularly on selective reminding measures of memory retrieval. The memory impairment did not correlate with serum or cerebrospinal fluid anti-Borrelia burgdorferi antibody titers and was not explained by magnetic resonance imaging findings or
depression
. The cause of this encephalopathy is currently unknown; however, indirect effects of systemic infection or other toxic-metabolic factors may be partly responsible.
...
PMID:Cognitive functioning in late Lyme borreliosis. 141 7
Junin virus (JV) infection of suckling mice leads to lethal
meningoencephalitis
consistent with a delayed-type hypersensitivity (DTH)-like immune response. In contrast, there are no central nervous system (CNS) alterations, and high antibody titers are induced in resistant adult mice. As a possible explanation, JV infection in adult mice may provoke DTH
depression
. Thus in this work we study the alterations induced by JV in the immune response of adult mice by using sheep red blood cells (SRBC) as an unrelated indicator antigen. JV infection was found to abrogate DTH significantly, regardless of SRBC priming time, virus strain attenuation, and viral route of inoculation. The effect proved viral dose-dependent and required live and infectious virus. However, the humoral response to SRBC, as determined by splenic "plaque-forming cell" count was found higher than controls. These results are consistent with adult mouse response to JV infection. In contrast to the guinea pig model, there is no destruction of immunocompetent cells. T-cell percentage in the spleen was high, suggesting involvement with DTH-suppressive action. We suggest that the immune response to SRBC in adult infected mice may be used for understanding the mechanisms involved in resistance.
...
PMID:Junin virus-induced delayed-type hypersensitivity suppression in adult mice. 283 14
A 63-year-old man with arterial hypertension suffered from
depression
and suicidal wish after a cerebrovascular accident and transitory left hemiparesis. He was urgently admitted to hospital in severe metabolic acidosis which caused renal failure and coma, ending fatally within two days. At necropsy calcium oxalate crystals were found in the renal tubules and cerebral vessel walls with chemically induced
meningoencephalitis
. From these findings glycol poisoning was diagnosed. There was a lethal concentration of ethylene glycol in the urine. The toxic effects of ethylene glycol are due to its metabolites. The oxalate crystals are primarily of diagnostic importance.
...
PMID:[Ethylene glycol poisoning]. 337 4
Four children with measles
meningoencephalitis
were treated with thymostimulin, a calf thymic extract. All patients were comatose when therapy was started. In all but one a good and sometimes rapid clinical improvement was observed. In the responsive patients no neurological or EEG sequellae were noted over a follow-up period of 1-4 years. The
depression
of cell-mediated immunity, present in some patients before treatment, normalised at the end of therapy.
...
PMID:Thymostimulin therapy in patients with measles meningoencephalitis. 372 44
Clinical differences were determined between granulomatous meningoencephalomyelitis, distemper, and suppurative
meningoencephalitis
in the dog. Dogs with granulomatous meningoencephalomyelitis had "head" signs on examination, which progressed to profound caudal fossa abnormalities, changes in mental status, and tetraparesis. Dogs with distemper had a gradual onset of posterior paresis; tetraparesis and occasional vestibular signs developed later in the course of disease. Dogs with suppurative
meningoencephalitis
had lethargy and anorexia at the time of examination, which progressed to nuchal rigidity, mental
depression
, tetraparesis, and profound alterations in consciousness. Analysis of cerebral spinal fluid was useful in distinguishing suppurative
meningoencephalitis
from the other 2 diseases. Twenty-seven cases of inflammatory disease of the CNS in dogs were reviewed. Comparisons of history, results of physical and neurologic examinations, ancillary data, and response to treatment were made. It appeared that certain clinical and neurologic features contributed to the diagnosis of these diseases.
...
PMID:Differential diagnosis of granulomatous meningoencephalomyelitis, distemper, and suppurative meningoencephalitis in the dog. 394 14
Six Boran steers were infected simultaneously with Trypanosoma congolense and T. brucei brucei while another group of 3 was inoculated with T. b. brucei one year after infection with T. congolense. Three further steers were infected with T. b. brucei alone. Whereas, the six animals which received simultaneous infections developed clinical signs of cerebral trypanosomiasis as evidenced by
depression
, ataxia and occasional circling, those infected with T. b. brucei alone did not. At necropsy, 4 out of the 6 simultaneously infected animals had a mild to severe disseminated non-suppurative
meningoencephalitis
. Trypanosoma b. brucei was isolated from the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of three out of the four animals with histological lesions. Two of the cattle superinfected with T. b. brucei one year after infection with T. congolense also developed both clinical and histological evidence of cerebral trypanosomiasis. Trypanosoma congolense was isolated from the CSF of one of these 2 animals. Specific antibodies to the variable surface glycoproteins (VSGs) of the infecting T. b. brucei and T. congolense clones were found in the CSF of the 8 animals that developed cerebral trypanosomiasis. In these animals however, there was neither temporal nor quantitative correlation between VSG-specific antibodies in serum and in CSF, implying a de novo synthesis of antibodies to the infecting trypanosomes in the CSF.
...
PMID:Cerebral trypanosomiasis in cattle with mixed Trypanosoma congolense and T. brucei brucei infections. 615 Jun 18
Diphenylhydantoin (DFH) treatment for epileptic patients has shown adverse effects such as malignant lymphadenopathy, systemic lupus erithematosus, periarteritis nodosa and recently immunological alterations such as a decreased lymphocytic response to fitohemaglutinin and serum IgA concentration, therefore we thought DFH effect on secretory IgA would be an important finding. This phenomenon might imply a defect in resistance local mechanisms for infection. Two groups of patients were studied: a) 25 children with an established diagnosis of epilepsy, "grand mal" type, that received anticonvulsive treatment with DFH for six months and b) 25 children with a diagnosis of infectious
meningoencephalitis
that required DFH to control convulsive crisis. Patients with a history of recurrent infections, lymphadenopathies, hepatosplenomegaly, drug allergy, collagenopathies and immunodeficiency were ruled out from this study. In all patients T and B lymphocytes, serum IgA, saliva and duodenal fluid and IgA determinations were made. Results show IgA concentration decrease in saliva and duodenal fluid of epileptic and meningoencephalitic patients (p less than 0.05), as well as lymphocyte T
depression
in epileptic and non epileptic patients treated with DFH (p less than 0.001).
...
PMID:Effect of diphenylhydantoin in serum and secretory IgA concentrations. 677 21
An 11-year-old girl developed a subacute illness characterized by fever, malaise,
depression
, and
meningoencephalitis
. The etiology remained elusive until her agglutinin titer against Brucella abortus rose from 1:20 to 1:320. Brucellosis is an uncommon illness in children, an neurological involvement has been described in only ten cases. Brucella
meningoencephalitis
is characterized by a lymphocytic pleocytosis and elevated protein in the cerebrospinal fluid. Patients respond well to specific therapy; it is important, therefore, to consider the diagnosis of brucellosis in patients with subacute meningitis of unexplained etiology.
...
PMID:Brucella meningoencephalitis in childhood. 680 35
Bacterial
meningoencephalitis
most commonly affected lambs two to four weeks old (median three weeks, range three days to six months) with clinical signs of episcleral congestion, lack of suck reflex, weakness, altered gait and
depression
extending to stupor, but hyperaesthesia to auditory and tactile stimuli. Opisthotonos was observed during the agonal stages of the disease. Analysis of lumbosacral cerebrospinal fluid revealed a highly significant increase in protein concentration (P < 0.01) with a neutrophilic pleocytosis, but bacteriological culture yielded organisms in only a few cases. A response was achieved with high doses of dexamethasone and chloramphenicol in only one of 20 cases. Polyarthritis and liver abscesses in a number of lambs provided evidence of a previous bacteraemic or septicaemic episode but no definite source of the central nervous system infection was identified. In common with other infectious bacterial conditions which are prevalent during the early life of sheep, control measures should ensure an adequate transfer of passive antibody, repeated treatments of the navel, and hygienic conditions in the lambing and rearing environments.
...
PMID:A field study of ovine bacterial meningoencephalitis. 798 44
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