Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Five patients received overdoses of vincristine ranging from 3.5 to 32 mg. Neurotoxicity accounted for most of the complications observed. Peripheral neuropathies, cranial nerve palsies, paralytic ileus, atony of the bladder, hypertension, hypotension, seizures, inappropriate ADH secretion, and severe bone marrow depression were all encountered. Two patients died within 72 hours of the overdose. Another patient died of sepsis 22 days after the overdose. Two patients recovered and were discharged. The three patients who survived longer than a few days showed improvement in the vincristine-induced neuropathy, and the two long-term survivors had essentially complete recovery. It appears that if a patient can be supported through the critical period following an overdose, he can be expected to recover normal neurologic function.
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PMID:Overdosage with vincristine. 18 48

Surface, needle and micro-electrode recordings were obtained from sensory nerves of patients with various types of peripheral neuropathy. Changes in amplitude and conduction velocity of nerve action potentials were measured after a single conditioning stimulus and after tetanic stimulation for 2 min. In patients with hereditary forms of axonal degeneration (AD), recovery processes of nerve fibres of all conduction velocities were normal; in acquired forms of AD fibres with conduction velocity less than 30 m/sec had greater and more prolonged post-tetanic depression than control nerves of similar conduction velocity. Where neuropathy was associated with segmental demyelination (SD), fibres of all conduction velocities had prolonged recovery processes after both single and tetanic stimulation. The changes were especially marked at higher skin temperature, and were greater than the changes seen in nerves with acquired forms of AD. Finally, 2 sural nerves were studied during the process of Wallerian degeneration after a biopsy had been obtained proximally, and recovery processes did not change during the period of degeneration. Perceptual abnormalities were similar in AD and SD. It is suggested that changes in recovery processes of nerve fibres with segmental demyelination or regeneration after injury contribute to the perceptual abnormalities which occur in clinically encountered peripheral neuropathies.
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PMID:A micro-electrode study of peripheral neuropathy in man. Part 2. Responses to conditioning stimuli. 20 Jul 18

In a retrospective analysis to determine whether secondary hyperparathyroidism in uremia has a role in uremic peripheral neuropathy, we simultaneously measured motor-nerve conduction velocity and serum parathormone level in 42 uremic patients. We compared age-matched groups of nondiabetic uremic patients, divided into three groups according to serum parathyroid hormone, for degree of impairment of motor-nerve conduction velocity, and 12 diabetic patients with uremia. The group with highest levels had a significantly (P less than 0.01) lower conduction velocity (25.3 +/- 4.9 m per second) than the group with normal or slightly elevated parathyroid hormone, who had only mild depression of nerve conduction (45.1 +/- 1.3 m per second). Mean serum calcium and creatinine were not significantly different between groups. Nerve conduction velocity was similarly depressed in 17 patients on additional dialysis studied prospectively and divided into groups according to parathyroid hormone levels. These results suggest a relation between high parathormone levels and uremic neuropathy and implicate parathyroid hormone as a uremic toxin.
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PMID:Search for the uremic toxin. Decreased motor-nerve conduction velocity and elevated parathyroid hormone in uremia. 20 86

Neurologic alteration in 36 patients who had received either a sagittal split osteotomy, an intraoral vertical ramus osteotomy, or a mandibular vestibuloplasty was evaluated by questionnaire, detailed neurosensory examination, and personality testing. Subjective sensory alteration was reported by 69.4% of the entire group; neurosensory examination showed demonstrable neuropathy in 54% of the 72 nerve divisions that were examined, with the greatest incidence, 84.6%, in the group that had received sagittal split osteotomies. Personality testing indicated that dysesthetic patients experienced greater degrees of neuroticism and depression than did patients without pain.
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PMID:Analysis of postsurgical neurologic alteration in the trigeminal nerve. 22 Apr

The widespread use of ethyl alcohol suggests its potential importance in clinical medicine. There is no proven therapeutic effect in cardiac patients and its role as an etiologic factor in heart disease has been disputed over the years and attributed to coexistent malnutrition. The latter factor, however, has been dissociated from ethanol use in many patients with the cardiomyopathic form of heart failure. Major support for the role of ethanol as a toxic agent when used in large amounts for a prolonged period has been obtained in various species of animals, including the subhuman primate. Abnormalities include depression of ventricular function, and metabolic and morphologic changes that parallel the changes in humans with preclinical malfunction of the heart. While the mechanism of progression to heart failure or arrhythmias is not known, several factors may be associated. These include, particularly in males, the cumulative effects of ethanol alone or after intensified drinking episodes, simultaneous exposure to trace metals in excess, and occasional specific nutritional deficiency or superimposed infection. The low prevalence of clinical nutritional deficiency in patients with alcoholic cardiomyopathy and the infrequency of heart disease in patients with cirrhosis or neuropathy supports the view that the cardiac abnormality is commonly not dependent on malnutrition. Clinical data indicate that the cessation of alcohol intake may reverse the disease or interrupt its progression in many patients. However, the pathogenic process may continue unabated in some patients who become abstinent.
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PMID:The role of ethanol in cardiac disease. 32 69

Marked weight loss with cachexia together with severe depression and pain from symmetrical peripheral neuropathy were noted in a 66-year-old man, known to have had diabetes for six years, which required insulin on admission to hospital. The patient died of bronchopneumonia after one year. The severe neuropathy was proven both neurophysiologically and at necropsy. There was no diabetic retinopathy and no histological evidence of renal glomerulosclerosis. There was no evidence of a malignant tumour either clinically or at necropsy.
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PMID:[Diabetic neuropathic cachexia (author's transl)]. 44 96

Initial observations in adults revealed that peripheral neuropathy, as documented by reduced conduction velocity is common in chronic renal failure. Critical analysis of this problem in children on long-term dialysis is scarce, consisting of a simgle report which demonstrated that the motor nerve conduction velocities were decreased early and frequently with more severe depression in peroneal nerve velocities. This is in distinct contrast to data from adults, in whom uniform rates of deterioration are encountered. In addition, a direct correlation of the degree of nerve conduction defect with the severity of the renal failure is found in adult patients. The present study showed a relative lack of nerve conduction defects in 11 children on long-term hemodialysis. With rare exceptions, the conduction velocities were normal. To date, no clinical symptoms of neuropathy were evident in our patients. It would seem that, with the short-dialysis schedule of 12--14 h/wk over a period of up to 5 yr, there is no progressive neuropathy as quantitated by nerve conduction measurements.
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PMID:Long-term hemodialysis and nerve conduction in children. 47 89

Dysthyroid optic neuropathy (DON) was diagnosed in 36 eyes of 21 patients with progressive visual loss and congestive ophthalmopathy. Systemic features in the patients with DON did not differ from those reported for Graves' disease patients except that patients with DON were older (mean age, 61 years) and did not show female preponderance. Congestive symptoms always preceded visual loss, which was gradual in onset and bilateral in most patients but acute and asymmetrical in several. Presenting acuities were poorer than 20/60 in 50% of cases; central scotomas, sometimes combined with inferior depression, were the predominant field defects. Congestive signs were of moderate intensity without severe proptosis or exposure keratopathy. Bilateral and symmetrical ductional restriction was the most common motility disturbance. Oral corticosteroids were effective in restoring visual function in ten of 21 eyes treated. Many steroid-unresponsive eyes were improved promptly by supervoltage orbital irradiation or surgical decompression. In general, therapeutic intervention appeared to hasten recovery and improve visual outcome.
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PMID:Dysthyroid optic neuropathy. Clinical profile and rationale for management. 66 28

A prospective study of possible aetiological factors for neuropathy associated with HIV infection was performed in 80 patients and 28 homosexual controls. At entry to the study twelve patients (15 per cent) had evidence of a generalized neuropathy not due to any other cause and a further three patients developed symptomatic neuropathy during a mean (SD) follow-up of 20 (7.5) months. All but two of these neuropathies were of the distal symmetrical sensory type. Electrophysiology was consistent with an axonal pathology and nerve biopsy confirmed this as the major pathological change. Warming threshold was the diagnostic test most frequently abnormal, sometimes in the absence of other electrophysiological abnormalities. No association was seen with opportunistic infection (cytomegalovirus, herpes simplex, Pneumocystis pneumonia, toxoplasmosis, Cryptococcus infection or tuberculosis). HIV proviral DNA could not be detected in paraffin sections of peripheral nerve in six patients with neuropathy. The presence of the neuropathy did not show significant correlation with depression of the number of CD4+ T cells in the blood, impaired T cell function tests, or IgG, IgM, or IgA levels. Immune complexes containing C1q, but not those containing IgG, IgM, IgA or C3c, were significantly more common among neuropathic patients (p = 0.01).
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PMID:A study of neuropathy in HIV infection. 144 48

In October 1988, five of seven members of a Florida family were poisoned with thallium, constituting the largest outbreak of acute thallium poisoning in the United States since thallium was banned as a rodenticide in 1972. Three patients had an acute severe neuropathy with respiratory depression; one died. The other two had no symptoms. No cases were identified among nonhousehold relatives or friends, or in the community. Of the more than 100 environmental specimens collected at the family household and tested by atomic spectroscopy, three empty and four unopened glass soft drink bottles of the same lot number yielded thallium in a concentration fatal to humans. All family members who consumed the soft drink were poisoned (5/5) as compared with none of those who did not (0/2). Because poisoning was clustered to the family and police investigators provided evidence that the poisoning was deliberately targeted to the family, it was assumed that no other soft drink bottles contained thallium, and it was decided not to recall all soft drink bottles with the same lot number. A year later a neighbor of the family was arrested and convicted of the murder.
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PMID:Thallium poisoning: an outbreak in Florida, 1988. 147 Sep 64


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