Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0014070 (encephalomyelitis)
13,017 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We reviewed retrospectively the clinical records, autopsy protocols and central nervous system tissue sections of 50 patients who underwent orthotopic liver transplantation for end-stage liver disease between 12/83 and 8/93. The postoperative survival period ranged from hours (6), weeks (17), months (17), to years (10). All patients received immunosuppressive drugs from the immediate postoperative period to the time of their death (cyclosporine, steroids; occasionally azathioprine, OKT3, FK506). Nineteen patients had neurological manifestations (hepatic encephalopathy) prior to surgery. Post-transplant neurologic signs and symptoms included: hepatic encephalopathy/altered mental status (11), focal or generalized seizures (9) and stroke (2). In the majority of cases (37) the cause of death was septicemia and/or bleeding diathesis. The neuropathologic findings present in 36 patients could be classified into 3 distinct categories: metabolic disorders: hepatic/anoxic encephalopathy, central pontine myelinolysis (15); cerebrovascular disease: subarachnoid and/or intracerebral hemorrhage, bland or hemorrhagic infarction (23); and infection: bacterial meningitis/cerebritis, multifocal fungal microabscesses, presumptive viral meningitis/encephalomyelitis (10). In conclusion, 72% of 50 patients who came to autopsy after liver transplantation were found to have neuropathologic abnormalities; these abnormalities were predominantly infections and vascular diseases.
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PMID:Neuropathology of liver transplantation. 760 96

The purpose of this paper is to show several diseases that manifest symmetrical hyperintense lesions on the middle cerebellar peduncles, the largest connecting peduncles between the brainstem and the cerebellum, in conventional magnetic resonance (MR) images. We retrospectively reviewed cranial MR images obtained with 0.3-, 0.5-, 1.0-, and 1.5-Tesla scanners. We found symmetrical middle cerebellar peduncular lesions in patients with Wilson's disease; hepatic encephalopathy; extrapontine myelinolysis; acute disseminated encephalomyelitis; wallerian degeneration of the pontocerebellar tracts after either pontine infarction, pontine hemorrhage, or central pontine myelinolysis; leukodystrophy; olivopontocerebellar atrophy; and toluene abuse. Definitive diagnosis of these diseases can be made relatively easily on the basis of clinical data; however, examination of associated brainstem or supratentorial lesions in MR images is also important.
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PMID:Symmetrical lesions of the middle cerebellar peduncle: MR imaging and differential diagnosis. 1609 30

Hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection is considered a systemic disease because of involvement of other organs and tissues concomitantly with liver disease. Among the extrahepatic manifestations, neuropsychiatric disorders have been reported in up to 50% of chronic HCV infected patients. Both the central and peripheral nervous system may be involved with a wide variety of clinical manifestations. Main HCV-associated neurological conditions include cerebrovascular events, encephalopathy, myelitis, encephalomyelitis, and cognitive impairment, whereas "brain fog", depression, anxiety, and fatigue are at the top of the list of psychiatric disorders. Moreover, HCV infection is known to cause both motor and sensory peripheral neuropathy in the context of mixed cryoglobulinemia, and has also been recently recognized as an independent risk factor for stroke. These extrahepatic manifestations are independent of severity of the underlying chronic liver disease and hepatic encephalopathy. The brain is a suitable site for HCV replication, where the virus may directly exert neurotoxicity; other mechanisms proposed to explain the pathogenesis of neuropsychiatric disorders in chronic HCV infection include derangement of metabolic pathways of infected cells, alterations in neurotransmitter circuits, autoimmune disorders, and cerebral or systemic inflammation. A pathogenic role for HCV is also suggested by improvement of neurological and psychiatric symptoms in patients achieving a sustained virologic response following interferon treatment; however, further ad hoc trials are needed to fully assess the impact of HCV infection and specific antiviral treatments on associated neuropsychiatric disorders.
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PMID:Chronic hepatitis C virus infection and neurological and psychiatric disorders: an overview. 2574 Nov 33