Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
51,768 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Between 20 July and 15 Octoboer 1975, five cases of human infection with Babesia microti were diagnosed on Nantucket Island, Massachusetts. The illness was characterized by fever, drenching sweats, shaking chills, myalgia, arthralgia, extreme fatigue, and a mild-to-moderate hemolytic anemia. None of the patients had a history of splenetomy. Although all patients responded symptomatically to treatment with oral chloroquine phosphate, parasitemia and fatigue frequently persisted for several weeks to months.
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PMID:Human babesiosis on Nantucket Island. Clinical features. 55 20

Between February 1987 and July 1988, 45 patients with advanced refractory cancer were treated with LY186641, a diarylsulfonylurea that has shown a broad spectrum of activity in preclinical testing. Patients received a weekly p.o. dose of LY186641 for 6 consecutive weeks; responding and stable patients continued weekly therapy until progression occurred. Using a standard phase I study design, the first three patients received LY186641 at 30 mg/m2 week; the dose was escalated in subsequent patients until dose-limiting toxicity occurred. Methemoglobinemia was the major toxicity observed and was dose related. Methemoglobin levels peaked approximately 24 h after LY186641 was administered and fell to low levels after 48 h. Six patients developed fatigue, cyanosis, and dyspnea associated with serum methemoglobinemia levels of greater than 20%; four of these patients were subsequently removed from the study. Hemolytic anemia was also observed but was clinically significant in only 10 patients. Other side effects were mild and infrequent. The maximum tolerated dose of LY186641, when given at this schedule, was 2550 mg/m2/week. No objective tumor responses were observed.
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PMID:Phase I clinical study of N-[(4-chlorophenyl)amino]carbonyl-2,3-dihydro-1H-indene-5-sulfonamide (LY186641). 276 90

A case of advanced gastric cancer associated with metastatic carcinomatosis of the bone marrow, microangiopathic hemolytic anemia (MAHA) and disseminated intravascular coagulation (DIC) was reported. A 71-year-old woman complained of lumbago and general fatigue. At the time of admission, besides anemia, jaundice and a tendency to bleeding, the laboratory data showed, hyperbilirubinemia, elevated FDP and hemolytic anemia with fragmented red cells. The bone marrow was infiltrated by carcinoma, and an upper GI series examination showed Borrmann II type gastric cancer on the greater curvature of the antrum. After remission of both MAHA and DIC by mitomycin C, neothramycin and FOY, the patient successfully underwent subtotal gastrectomy. However, she died of cerebral hemorrhage on the 96th postoperative day.
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PMID:[Microangiopathic hemolytic anemia associated with gastric cancer]. 309 84

Confirmation of a causal relationship between hemolytic-uremic syndrome (HUS) and verotoxin-producing Escherichia coli (VTEC) infection is provided by the case of a 22-year-old West German woman. The patient presented with fatigue, nausea, and headache. Ultrasonography revealed enlarged kidneys, and laboratory investigations showed uremia, hemolytic anemia, lactate dehydrogenase, haptoglobin below the detection limit, and thrombocytopenia. She received hemodialysis and drug treatment (heparin, dopamine, and furosemide). To investigate the kinetics of the humoral response to verotoxin, the patient was followed for 3 months. Fecal specimens on day 23 yielded E coli serotype 0111:NM, and stool filtrates on days 16 and 23 showed highly cytotoxic activity for HeLa cells. While the patient's initial serum showed a high IgM immune response against purified Shiga toxin, there was a steady decline in IgM and steady increase in IgG antibodies over the ensuing 3 months. These findings are suggestive of a recent infection by a verotoxin-producing organism. This is the 1st reported case of VTEC-associated HUS with e coli 0111 infection in an adult, and the patient's 4-year history of oral contraceptives (OCs)--ethinyl estradiol and chlormadinoneacetate--is considered to be of etiologic significance. The diminished antibody coating of bacteria in the urinary tract of OC users may have facilitated invasion of verotoxin across the mucosal barrier in this patient. Severe hypertension has been reported previously in OC users with HUS. It is speculated that verotoxin may trigger HUS in longterm OC users, initiating vasoconstriction and microangiopathic hemolysis.
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PMID:Hemolytic-uremic syndrome associated with an infection by verotoxin producing Escherichia coli 0111 in a woman on oral contraceptives. 328 32

IMPY was given to 25 patients with advanced cancer on a twice weekly schedule in escalating doses from 165 to 3000 mg/m2. Nausea, vomiting, fatigue, generalized weakness, and decreases in performance status were dose-limiting. In one patient treated at a dose of 3000 mg/m2 for three doses, hemolytic anemia resulted, with a 6-g/dl decrease in hemoglobin. No tumor regression occurred. A reasonable starting dose for phase II studies is 1200 mg/m2 twice weekly for 3 weeks, with planned rapid escalation to 1800 mg/m2 in patients tolerating the lower dose level.
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PMID:Phase I evaluation of IMPY in a twice weekly schedule. 723 64

A 63-year-old man developed a mild hemorrhagic diathesis which led to the diagnosis of chronic lymphatic leukemia. Treatment with prednisone and chlorambucil was initiated. During the first 10 day-cycle (10 mg chlorambucil and 100 mg prednisone) no side effects were noted. On the 8th day of second cycle (10 mg chlorambucil and 25 mg prednisone) the patient noticed fever, tiredness, myalgia, pruritus and erythema on the skin. The third cycle (10 mg chlorambucil alone) hat to be stopped on the second day due to the development of myalgia, generalized erythroderma with exfoliation and edema of the face and arms. In the patch-test with chlorambucil, a strongly positive (histologically verified) allergic reaction was noted. A lymphocyte stimulation test (detecting in vitro lymphocytes sensitized to chlorambucil) was also positive. These findings, together with the marked clinical reaction to chlorambucil alone, led to the diagnosis of a delayed hypersensitivity reaction to chlorambucil. Such well documented allergic reactions to chlorambucil are very rarely described in the literature. Up to now only 1 case of immune hemolytic anemia, 1 case of Lyell-syndrome, 2 cases of delayed hypersensitivity reactions and a few cases of less well documented type I reactions have been described. In all these cases no crossreactivity with other alkylating agents occurred, and hence all patients could be successfully treated with cyclophosphamide.
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PMID:[Delayed allergic reaction to Chlorambucil (Leukeran). Case report and literature review]. 748 46

We characterized urinary excretion of C3 fragments among patients with systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) as a possible indicator of renal involvement. 28 patients, representing a broad range of disease activity were admitted to our study. Urinary proteins were separated on 4-20% gradient SDS-PAGE gels, under reducing conditions, and transblotted to nitrocellulose. Western blots were developed with a polyvalent goat-anti-human C3d antiserum, and an alkaline phosphatase-conjugated rabbit anti-goat IgG. Three patterns were obtained: 1) no bands detected; 2) bands suggesting the presence of intact C3; and 3) samples with additional low molecular (< 4 x 10(4)) bands. The 12 patients with no C3 bands had minimal disease activity (e.g. fatigue, arthralgia, arthritis, rash, oral ulcers). The seven patients with intact C3 patterns also had minimally active disease. Their primary clinical findings included fatigue, pleurisy, renal disease which had been treated, hemolytic anemia, and arthritis. Patients with low molecular weight C3 fragments in their urine formed two sub-sets, based upon their presenting features. The first group had severe disease and contained all patients with active lupus nephritis (n = 4), while the second consisted of non-renal patients with primary clinical findings of moderate disease activity (e.g. thrombocytopenia, pneumonitis, arthritis). Our results suggest urinary excretion of low molecular weight C3 fragments correlates with active renal disease, but is a variable finding among SLE patients with non-renal manifestations of disease activity.
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PMID:Complement C3 fragments in urine: detection in systemic lupus erythematosus patients by western blotting. 819 18

A 32-year-old man visited Kanto Teishin Hospital complaining of general fatigue in May, 1992. He had been diagnosed as having paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria since 1980, because of brownish urine in the morning. He received blood transfusion in 1980. In 1983, he was treated with medication. There was no remarkable improvement, however, and he stopped coming to the hospital. When he was admitted to our hospital, hemolytic anemia and hemosiderinuria were noticed. Sucrose hemolysis test and acidified-serum lysis test (Ham test) were both positive. Positive rates of decay accelerating factor and CD59 were 38.8% (control 100%) and 45.4% (control 100%), respectively. His diagnosis was thus confirmed. Bone marrow was slightly hypocellular, and erythroid cells were relatively hyperplastic (M/E ratio 0.68). The oral administration of iron and oxymetholone was not effective for anemia. He was treated with daily subcutaneous administration of recombinant human erythropoietin (EPO, 3,000U/body/day). His hemoglobin level increased from 7.5g/dl to 12.0g/dl in 4 weeks, and general fatigue disappeared. Since he had concurrent chronic hepatitis C, alpha-interferon was also administered and his hemoglobin level is now controlled between 10 and 11g/dl. This case suggests that EPO can be useful for treating hemolytic anemia, even though erythroid cells in the bone marrow are hyperplastic.
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PMID:[Improvement of anemia by recombinant human erythropoietin in paroxysmal nocturnal hemoglobinuria]. 823 Jul 45

A 85-year-old female was admitted with general fatigue and chest discomfort in July 1991. Her chest X-ray film showed several pulmonary nodules in the bilateral lung fields without hilar lymphadenopathy. Metastatic lung cancer was suspected, but primary cancer was not detected in spite of cancer screening. Hemoglobin was 8.7 g/dl. The patient also had various immunological abnormalities including increased serum cold agglutinin titer, decreased serum complement, positive anti-nuclear antigen and IgM-kappa monoclonal gammopathy detected by immunoelectrophoresis. She was diagnosed as having autoimmune hemolytic anemia with cold agglutinin disease and M-protein. With the administration of corticosteroids, hemolytic anemia improved temporarily, but the patient died of hemorrhagic gastritis. At autopsy, a lung tumor was detected in the left upper lobe, mainly without hilar lymphadenopathy. The autopsy specimens showed Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma (diffuse medium-sized cell type), differentiated from macroglobulinemia by immunohistochemical studies. In elderly patients, with various immunological abnormalities, B-cell lymphoproliferative disorders such as malignant lymphoma should be suspected.
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PMID:[Non-Hodgkin's lymphoma with pulmonary involvement and various immunological abnormalities in an elderly patient]. 836 Oct 68

A 65-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of severe anemia. A skin biopsy was done in January 1994 and sarcoidosis was diagnosed. Diffuse reticular shadows were seen in both lung fields on a chest X-ray film and mediastinal lymph node swelling was seen on a chest CT scan. She was followed as an outpatient and was not treated. She suddenly experienced vertigo and general fatigue in March 1995. Laboratory findings on admission were as follows: Hb 6.2 g/dl, MCV 115.9 fl, Ret 198%, LDH 732 IU/L, I-Bil 1.9 mg/dl, and Coombs' test was positive. Autoimmune hemolytic anemia was diagnosed, and she was treated with prednisolone (1 mg/kg). As of the time of this writing, she has no relapse of hemolytic anemia though prednisolone was discontinued 6 months ago.
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PMID:[Sarcoidosis in a patient with autoimmune hemolytic anemia]. 896 7


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