Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0014118 (endocarditis)
15,629 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Neurologic complications are extremely common after bone marrow transplantation and occur in well over half of all patients. Approximately 6 per cent of BMT recipients die as a direct result of neurologic problems. Metabolic encephalopathy, the most common clinical syndrome, is usually due to multiple organ failure. The second most common complication is CNS infection with fungi and viruses. Cerebrovascular disorders are the third most common neurologic problem, and most are related to underlying endocarditis (either infectious or nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis). Less common neurologic complications include side effects of drugs, recurrence of malignancy, and treatment-induced leukoencephalopathy. Neurologic involvement due to GVHD appears to be limited to rare neuromuscular syndromes. No evidence of CNS involvement from GVHD has been detected.
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PMID:Neurologic complications of bone marrow transplantation. 304 47

Among 78 patients who died after bone marrow transplantation, neurologic complications were present in 55 (70%) and were the cause of death in 5 (6%). Metabolic encephalopathy occurred in 29 patients (37%). CNS infections included aspergillosis (3), herpes simplex encephalitis (2), and Listeria monocytogenes meningitis (1). Six additional patients had neuropathologic changes possibly due to cytomegalovirus infection. Cerebrovascular complications occurred in five patients (two hemorrhages and three infarcts). All infarcts were associated with endocarditis. The rate of nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis was significantly higher (p less than 0.001) than in the general autopsy population. CNS leukemia and therapy-induced injury were rare. There was no evidence of graft-versus-host disease involving the CNS.
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PMID:Neurologic complications of bone marrow transplantation. 388 33

Neurologic complications occur frequently in patients with cancer. After routine chemotherapy, these complications are the most common reason for hospitalization of these patients. Brain metastases are the most prevalent complication, affecting 20 to 40 percent of cancer patients and typically presenting as headache, altered mental status or focal weakness. Other common metastatic complications are epidural spinal cord compression and leptomeningeal metastases. Cord compression can be a medical emergency, and the rapid institution of high-dose corticosteroid therapy, radiation therapy or surgical decompression is often necessary to preserve neurologic function. Leptomeningeal metastases should be suspected when a patient presents with neurologic dysfunction in more than one site. Metabolic encephalopathy is the common nonmetastatic cause of altered mental status in cancer patients. Cerebrovascular complications such as stroke or hemorrhage can occur in a variety of tumor-related conditions, including direct invasion, coagulation disorders, chemotherapy side effects and nonbacterial thrombotic endocarditis. Radiation therapy is the most commonly employed palliative measure for metastases. Chemotherapy or surgical removal of tumors is used in selected patients.
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PMID:Neurologic complications of systemic cancer. 1006 11