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Query: UMLS:C0013911 (
emaciation
)
1,059
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The clinical syndromes described with lesions of the hypothalamus are summarized in Table 9.5-9.7. The anterior hypothalamic syndrome consists of insomnia and loss of thirst regulatory mechanisms. In occasional larger lesions which interrupt the output from the supraoptic and paraventricular nuclei, diabetes insipidus has been noticed. In the tuberal region of the hypothalamus the most prominent findings are those that are caused by the disruption of the final common pathway to the pituitary. This results in endocrinopathy, most often the syndrome originally reported by Frohlich, with failure of sexual maturation and obesity. In the tuberal region, differences between lesions of the medial and lateral portions are quite marked. Medial lesions result in obesity while bilateral lesions result in
anorexia
and
emaciation
. The diencephalic syndrome of infancy with it's severe
emaciation
in young years and obesity in later years clearly indicates a different organizational pattern in the neonatal hypothalamus. Emotional disorders may be seen with lesions either in the medial or lateral hypothalamus at the tuberal level. Finally, in the posterior hypothalamic region, which includes the greatest effector apparatus, hypersomnia, apathy, and poikilothermia have been reported. Emotional disturbances and the Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome also seemed to be associated with lesions in this area. The hypothalamus remains the single most important integrator of vegetative and endocrinologic regulation of the body. Cushing said of the hypothalamus, "here in this hidden spot, almost to be covered with a thumb nail, lies the very main spring of primitive existence: vegetative, emotional and reproductive".
...
PMID:Surgical syndromes of the hypothalamus. 727 50
Chickens treated at seven weeks of age with 150, 200, or 250 mg of crystalline monensin sodium/kg body weight had signs of toxicosis, including extreme weakness,
anorexia
, paralysis and death. Gross lesions included
emaciation
, generalized congestion, myocardial enlargement and pallor, and hydropericardium. Samples of ventricular myocardium, superficial pectoralis (white fibers), anterior latissimus dorsi (intermediate fibers), and sartorius muscles (mixed red, intermediate, and white fibers) were examined by light microscope. Intermyofibrillar vacuolation, histochemically positive for neutral fat, was severe in the myocardium and red muscle fibers and moderate in the intermediate muscle fibers. Myofiber necrosis was limited to the red muscle fibers. Mitochondrial degeneration was apparent in myocardial sections from several chickens. Interstitial infiltration by macrophages and heterophils was common in the myocardium and aerobic skeletal muscle.
...
PMID:Monensin toxicosis in broiler chickens. 728 63
Cadmium (Cd) loading trials were conducted on a total of 110 (3 x 10 and 4 x 20) broiler chickens prereared for 21 days. The control chickens received no cadmium, while chickens in the six treatment groups were given different doses of Cd as an aqueous solution of CdSO4 administered either into the crop or mixed in the feed. The chickens were kept in a climatized animal house and treated usually for 3-5 weeks (maximum 68 days), with the exception of group Cd-75 chickens which were treated up to 239 days of age. The chickens' health status, body mass and feed consumption were monitored throughout the trial. On days 14-20 and on day 42 of the trial 2 chickens per group, then at the end of trial a total of 25 chickens were killed in anaesthesia. These birds, together with chickens that died or were killed during the trial, were subjected to detailed gross pathological examination. From 11 organs (kidney, liver, spleen, testicle, brain, myocardium, skeletal muscle, lungs, digestive tract, pancreas, tubular bones) of these chickens samples were taken for assay for a total of 16 elements, as well as for light and electron microscopic examination. With the exception of groups Cd-30 and Cd-600, no abnormal clinical signs were observed in the first two weeks of the trial. Chickens of group Cd-30 died before day 8-12 of the trial among signs of complete
anorexia
, rapid
emaciation
, huddling and diarrhoea, while chickens of group Cd-600 died before day 28, showing similar clinical signs. The body mass of chickens fed a Cd-supplemented diet either remained constant or decreased substantially, in a degree proportional to the Cd load. The only exception was group Cd-2.5, in which the average body mass of birds at the end of week 8 slightly exceeded that of the controls. Four out of the 10 cockerel chicks fed a diet containing 75 ppm Cd up to 239 days of age died of intercurrent diseases; the remaining six grew well and reached a body mass of 3.8-4.3 kg. Feed conversion efficiency was satisfactory in the control group and in group Cd-2.5 (2.1 and 2.4 kg, respectively) and could not be evaluated in a realistic manner in the other groups. At necropsy, the cockerel chicks of groups Cd-30 and Cd-600 showed severe
emaciation
, liver and kidney degeneration, myocardial hypertrophy and cardiac dilatation.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Complex study of the physiological role of cadmium. III. Cadmium loading trials on broiler chickens. 749 61
Pathogenicity of Strongyloides papillosus to rabbits was investigated by monitoring of food intake, body weight and electrocardiogram. No abnormalities were observed in rabbits infected with 10(4) infective larvae (L3)/kg. Rabbits given 10(5) L3/kg exhibited
anorexia
after the establishment of patent infections. Four of them died on Days 19-33 having lost 32-44% of initial body weight. The other one animal regained appetite and body weight as fecal egg output decreased. Cardiac rhythms remained normal even in the
emaciation
state. In lethal cases, cardiac activities finally disappeared through escape beats preceded by sinus arrhythmia as in a fasted control. These results suggest that heavy S. papillosus infection produces a wasting condition in rabbits resulting from
anorexia
under normal cardiac functions.
...
PMID:Wasting condition under normal cardiac rhythms in rabbits following Strongyloides papillosus infection. 786 72
This review presents 21 cases, found in the literature, of a CNS lesion (a tumor in 19 of them) associated with
emaciation
,
anorexia
and several psychic symptoms that had led to the diagnosis of anorexia nervosa (AN).
Anorexia
and psychic disturbances preceded the neurologic signs and/or the correct diagnosis in all patients (by a mean of 2.9 years, range = 0.2-17 years).
Anorexia
had begun before the age of 25 years in 18 patients of which two-thirds were females. Only a few cases fulfilled the DSM-III-R criteria for AN; the majority could be characterized as 'atypical AN'. Although AN is usually conceived as a primarily psychogenic disorder, structural lesions of the hypothalamus (or other sites involved in food regulation) in animal models and in these human cases mimic many features of AN, suggesting the possibility of an as yet unidentified structural hypothalamic disorder to be implicated in the etiopathogeny of AN. The unusually high incidence of germ-cell tumors in this review (33%) suggests that they are more likely than other tumors to influence the limbic system toward an anorectic syndrome.
...
PMID:Brain tumors and anorexia nervosa syndrome. 794
Six Indonesian buffaloes (Bubalus bubalis) were inoculated intravenously with 10(5) Trypanosoma evansi, examined clinically, haematologically and serologically, and then killed 1, 2, 3, 4, 8 or 12 weeks after infection for detailed pathological study. Relapsing fever was related to the waves of parasitaemia and fluctuations of pulse and respiration rates. Anaemic mucous membranes, depression, weakness, refusal to walk,
loss of appetite
and
emaciation
were seen. Body weight, packed cell volume, total platelet and red cell counts, and haemoglobin values were below those of two uninfected control buffaloes, as well as below the normal range; on the other hand antibody titres against T. evansi in infected animals were all above those in controls.
Emaciation
, serous atrophy of fat, hydropericardium, petechial to larger haemorrhages in the pericardium, pneumonia, congested liver and spleen, oedematous enlargement of the superficial lymph nodes and hyperplastic bone marrow were the major gross pathological changes. Histologically, the severity of the disease increased from 1 to 7 weeks after infection and became less obvious at 12 weeks. The most consistent lesions were interstitial pneumonia, interstitial myocarditis, splenic multifocal necrosis, interstitial myositis and hyperplastic bone marrow. The last three lesions appear not to have been reported previously in T. evansi infection in buffaloes or other animals. The clinicopathological findings in this study show that T. evansi is both an intravascular and extravascular parasite.
...
PMID:The pathology of experimental Trypanosoma evansi infection in the Indonesian buffalo (Bubalus bubalis). 804 Mar 89
One hundred fifty lactating mink on one ranch in southern Ontario were monitored over the lactation period in 1989 for evidence of clinical disease, and serial blood samples were collected for biochemical analysis. Antemortem blood samples were collected and necropsies performed on the 17 females that developed nursing disease and on 17 controls matched to the same stage of lactation and on ten nonlactating controls. Twenty-two additional nursing disease cases were selected from seven ranches in the following year and processed similarly. The clinical signs typically observed in affected females were sudden onset lethargy and
anorexia
followed by dehydration, ataxia, and a reluctance to move. The major clinical-pathologic findings were a marked increase in serum osmolality and total protein, urea nitrogen, creatinine, phosphorus, glucose, and potassium concentrations and a decrease in sodium and chloride concentration. In addition, the animals were acidotic, there was a reduction in the urine specific gravity, and the hemogram was consistent with a stress response.
Emaciation
and dehydration were the only pathologic changes consistently present in cases of nursing disease and not in controls. In almost all cases, bacteria were not cultured from the liver, spleen, and mammary gland, but Campylobacter jejuni was cultured from the intestinal contents of 15/17 affected mink and 2/5 controls. Aleutian disease virus antibody was not present in any of the affected mink. Lipid vacuoles in hepatocytes and renal tubular epithelium, hypertrophy of cells in the adrenal cortex, and pulmonary congestion and atelectasis were present in both diseased females and controls, as were various sporadic inflammatory lesions. Nursing disease may result from energy depletion due to lactation. All lactating females are affected by this process; clinical disease reflects the terminal physiologic decompensation of the most susceptible individuals.
...
PMID:Nursing disease in mink: clinical and postmortem findings. 811 44
A 33-year-old, HIV-1 positive, white, homosexual man was hospitalized in May, 1991, because of fever, cough, skin eruptions,
anorexia
, and weight loss during the previous 2 months. In October, 1990, he had traveled in Sumatra. On examination he was ill, tachypneic, normotensive with a temperature of 39.1 degrees Celsius. The spleen was substantially enlarged. Laboratory investigations showed: ALAT 72 U/I (normal 23 U/1), LDH 508 U/1 (normal 275 U/1). A bronchoscopy with bronchoalveolar lavage revealed yeast cells. Gastroscopy showed an ulcer in the hypopharynx and an erosion in the stomach. Biopsies of this ulcer demonstrated the presence of Penicillium marneffei. Biopsies of the liver showed the same organism. The patient was treated with amphotericin B induction therapy (1 dd 0.5 mg/kg for 21 days, total dose of 730 mg) in combination with flucytosine (3 dd 2500 mg, total dose 142 g in 19 days). In the following 2 weeks the temperature became normal, and the dyspnea and the skin eruptions disappeared, except for the mollusca contagiosa. The spleen diminished by 50%. LDH and ALAT became normal. Oral maintenance therapy followed with fluconazole (the first 3 months 400 mg daily, followed by 200 mg a day). 24 months later, no recurrence had been observed. Case 2 was a 28-year-old, HIV-infected, homosexual man, born in Suriname, who was hospitalized in October, 1991, with prolonged fever, dyspnea, and a painful throat. In March, 1991, he had traveled in rural Thailand. AIDS was diagnosed on the basis of cerebral toxoplasmosis in August, 1991. A biopsy of the ulcer in the oropharynx showed an active aspecific inflammation and also P. marneffei. Treatment with amphotericin B intravenously (0.5 mg/kg, total dose 1052 mg in 32 days) was commenced. The lesions in the oral cavity and throat, the lymph nodes, and the shortness of breath disappeared within a few days. Ten months later he died from
emaciation
caused by cryptosporidiosis.
...
PMID:Disseminated Penicillium marneffei infection as an imported disease in HIV-1 infected patients. Description of two cases and a review of the literature. 820 1
Anorexia
and
emaciation
are symptoms which can be found in many diseases either singly or in combination with other unspecific clinical signs such as diarrhea and vomiting. Therefore accurately assessing the medical history, performing a thorough clinical examination and carrying out laboratory tests are all necessary steps in establishing a diagnosis. Further specific examinations such as radiography, ultrasonography or endoscopy may also have to be performed. Since
anorexia
and
emaciation
can result in severe consequences for the organism, establishing a definitive diagnosis is important to enable the appropriate therapy to be applied without delay.
...
PMID:[Symptoms: anorexia and emaciation]. 834 27
Between January 1982 and December 1989 more than 5,000 clinical cases of bovine parasitic otitis were examined. Clinical signs were mild in early cases and were characterised by dullness,
anorexia
and occasional head shaking, but were severe in long standing cases where the major presenting clinical signs were dark brown aural discharges which soiled the hair below and in front of the ear,
emaciation
, central nervous signs, recumbency and death.
...
PMID:Clinical observations on bovine parasitic otitis in Tanzania. 846 37
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