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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The most common congenital cardiac defect is VSD. This malady accounts for 20 to 30 per cent of all congenital cardiac defects and is representative of a cardiac lesion that increases pulmonary blood flow. Although lesions, which increase pulmonary blood flow, may vary in incidence, they frequently have common symptomatology. Over time, congestive heart failure becomes a problem. Poor respiratory status leads to weight loss, poor feeding, and
failure to thrive
. If unrepaired, the child often presents with cyanosis and tachypnea. The history may include frequent respiratory infections, exercise intolerance, generalized malaise, or
fatigue
. In spite of poor weight gain, the child may be edematous and have a large liver. Definitive diagnosis of each lesion may be made by echocardiogram, cardiac catheterization, or both. With these data and a detailed history, treatment and management decisions are determined. In most cases, as the child gets older, symptoms become more evident. This is the result of high pulmonary pressure. High pressure over time causes a thickening of the alveolar tissue, which decreases the permeability of the alveolar membranes for gas exchange. Lung changes can become irreversible, but it is unusual for irreversible changes to occur before 1 year of age. All the lesions described in this article are amendable to primary repair before 1 year of age, affording the best functional results. Postoperative nursing care includes management of persisting CHF and PVR while maintaining adequate cardiac output. Many factors, including electrolyte balance, nutritional status, conduction disturbances, stress, and parental anxiety, influence the management of these infants. The outcome depends greatly on the assessment skill of a highly competent cardiac intensive care nurse and an environment conducive to collaborative practice.
...
PMID:Caring for patients with lesions increasing pulmonary blood flow. 281 77
Growth in children with congenital heart disease (CHD) is often compromised. For several decades, investigators have tried to identify the factors affecting growth in children with CHD. Cardiac malformations are undoubtedly responsible for malnutrition, which may range from mild undernutrition to severe
failure to thrive
(FTT). Malnutrition may then significantly undermine the outcome of corrective surgical operations and postoperative recovery. Mechanisms linking CHD to malnutrition may be related either to
decreased energy
intake and/or to increased energy requirements.
Decreased energy
intake can involve deficiencies of specific nutrients, or insufficient total caloric intake. Increased respiratory rate accompanying congestive heart failure may be responsible for increased energy requirements. Different types of cardiac malformations and consequent interventions may have different effects on growth and require diverse strategies. Most treatment strategies aim to facilitate "catch-up" growth, providing extra calories and protein that exceed the Recommended Dietary Allowance for age. However, there is no generally accepted set of guidelines that define appropriate caloric intake for catch-up growth. We attempt to identify the most important causes of malnutrition and highlight the most effective nutrition strategies for children with CHD.
...
PMID:Children with congenital heart disease: a nutrition challenge. 781 52
Fever in elderly persons is only one clinical presentation that can be used to assist the clinician at suspecting a serious disease, such as an infection. Infections, like all other illnesses in the geriatric patient, may occur with a variety of nonspecific, atypical, nonclassic, and unusual manifestations. The clinician caring for elderly patients should be aware of these nonclassical presentations of infections in this age group. Unexplained change in functional capacity, worsening of mental status, weight loss or
failure to thrive
, weakness and
fatigue
, falls, and generalized pain are only some of the clues that may aid the clinician in considering infection in elderly persons. Key concepts of fever in older adults are: Fever generally indicates presence of serious infection, most often caused by bacteria. Fever may be absent in 20%-30% of elderly patients harboring a serious infection. Criteria for fever in elderly patients should also include an elevation of body temperature of at least 2 degrees F from baseline values. FUO in elderly persons is caused by infections (30%-35%), CTD (25%-30%), and malignancies (15%-20%) in the majority of cases.
...
PMID:Fever in the elderly. 869 97
Polysomnographic evaluation in the sleep laboratory is recommended for patients with neuromuscular disorders who develop symptoms and sign of sleep-wake abnormality or nocturnal respiratory failure. Nocturnal sleep-related ventilatory alterations may occur in disproportion to the severity of the neuromuscular disorder. Diaphragmatic paralysis occurring in the context of a neuromuscular disorder is often an overlooked complication.
Failure to thrive
, daytime
tiredness
, and incapacitating
fatigue
may be the result of a potentially correctable sleep-related abnormality and not due to relentless progression of the neuromuscular condition. Application of CPAP and BiPAP and administration of supplemental oxygen are relatively simple, noninvasive, ambulatory, therapeutic maneuvers that may correct sleep-related ventilatory alterations in patients with neuromuscular disorders.
...
PMID:Sleep and neuromuscular disorders. 892 95
We describe the clinicoepidemiologic features, natural history, and therapeutic manipulations in three Greek patients with A-beta-lipoproteinemia (two brothers aged 15 and 29 years, respectively, and one sister aged 30 years). Diarrhea started in infancy in the two brothers and from the age of 13 in the sister. During the second decade of life, central nervous system symptoms became prominent, with
fatigue
and disturbance in gait and balance. Night blindness developed at a later phase of the disease in the brothers, whereas cavus developed in both legs in the sister. Apolipoprotein B was absent in all patients, and each had more than 50% of acanthocytes present on peripheral smear. The diagnosis of A-beta-lipoproteinemia was established on the basis of small bowel histology and serum lipid estimations. Family studies revealed normal lipid profiles in all healthy members. The human leukocyte antigen (HLA) pattern in the two most severely affected patients was identical. The only detectable difference between the severely ill patients and other members of the family, however, was homozygosity for the HLA B18 antigen, whereas the third patient had no alleles for the HLA B18 antigen. Treatment consisted of a low-fat diet and high doses of vitamins A and E. A modified diet substituting medium-chain triglycerides for dietary fat was also given, with significant improvement in the nutritional status of patients but not in symptoms related to advanced disease, such as retinal and cardiac manifestations. We conclude that the course of the disease in untreated patients is characterized by continuous symptoms. Some of the symptoms, however, especially those related to malabsorption, as well as some anthropometric parameters can be improved by the application of a modified diet including medium-chain triglycerides. We suggest the routine measurement of plasma lipids and apoproteins not only in children with
failure to thrive
, with unexplained malabsorption, or with neurologic symptoms, but also in adults with chronic diarrhea accompanied by neurologic symptoms or clinical and laboratory signs of malabsorption.
...
PMID:A-beta-lipoproteinemia: clinical and laboratory features, therapeutic manipulations, and follow-up study of three members of a Greek family. 960 Mar 71
Hereditary primary adrenal insufficiency syndromes due to ACTH resistance include hereditary glucocorticoid deficiency (HGD) and Allgrove's syndrome (AS). Patients with both conditions present in childhood with
failure to thrive
, weakness, and
fatigue
or adrenal crisis; patients with AS in addition have alacrima and achalasia (triple A syndrome). We studied four kindreds with HGD and four kindreds with AS for abnormalities of the ACTH receptor (ACTHR) gene. The ACTHR coding sequence in all AS kindreds and two HGD kindreds was normal. Analysis of the ACTHR gene of the proband in one of the HGD kindreds showed him to be homozygous for the previously described G221T transition causing a Ser74Ile substitution of the protein, which has been shown to inactivate the ACTHR in signal transduction. The proband in another HGD kindred was found to be a compound heterozygote with the G221T transition in one allele and a novel C818A transition in the other allele of ACTHR. The C818A transition caused the substitution of the highly conserved Pro273 by His in the receptor protein. In vitro expression of the mutated ACTHR in mouse melanoma M3 cells showed that at a medium ACTH concentration of 3 nM, cells transfected with the wild-type ACTHR produced twofold and threefold, respectively, of the amount of intracellular cAMP when compared to cells transfected with the ACTHR carrying the Pro273His and the Ser74Ile mutation, respectively, confirming that HGD in this kindred is caused by loss-of-function mutations of the ACTHR. These results showed that the genetic cause of the ACTH-resistant syndromes is heterogeneous.
...
PMID:Genetic heterogeneity of adrenocorticotropin (ACTH) resistance syndromes: identification of a novel mutation of the ACTH receptor gene in hereditary glucocorticoid deficiency. 975 16
Rubinstein-Taybi Syndrome (RTS) is a rare disorder affecting 1 out of 300,000 people, characterized by broad thumbs and toes, distinctive facial features, hypotonia, and developmental delays. In this study, 180 members of an RTS parent group completed a survey that elucidated breastfeeding practices of infants with RTS. Fifty-nine percent of mothers initiated breastfeeding with an average duration of 7.1 months. Overall, 48% of the women reported that their child had a good to fair suck, and 50% were fairly to very pleased with the breastfeeding experience. Problems reported with breastfeeding included poor weight gain (46%), poor nipple grasp (35%),
failure to thrive
(34%), and infant
fatigue
(33%). In other populations of infants with special needs, many breastfeeding problems have been alleviated with instruction, proper positioning, close nutritional follow up, and strong encouragement by the health care team. With adequate support, mothers and their children with RTS can successfully carry out breastfeeding.
...
PMID:Breastfeeding practices of infants with Rubinstein-Taybi syndrome. 1020 50
We report on a 2 1/2-year-old boy who is currently ventilated at home by positive pressure ventilation through a nasal mask during the night because of congenital central hypoventilation syndrome (CCHS). Up to age 2 he had developed normally. A reevaluation was performed because of symptoms suggestive of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome (OSAS), including snoring, nocturnal sweating, frequent nighttime awakenings, speech impairment, daytime
fatigue
, and
failure to thrive
. A sleep study indicated obstructive apnea episodes lasting up to 40 s and arterial desaturations below 50% during spontaneous sleep. During mechanical ventilation snoring persisted, and capillary PCO2 rose to 60 mm Hg. Partial upper airway obstruction, leaking around the mask, and arousal movements developed on passive flexion of the neck to 20 degrees. After adenoidectomy, symptoms of OSAS resolved. There were no more obstructive apneas during spontaneous sleep, but obstructive apneas could be provoked by neck flexion to 20 degrees. During ventilation, neck flexion of 20 degrees was tolerated, but a 40 degrees flexion led to partial obstruction. In CCHS patients, the problem of upper airway obstruction is rarely noted because most patients are ventilated through a permanent tracheostomy. Today, noninvasive ventilation strategies are becoming more common. Reduced activity of upper airway muscles and impaired reflex mechanisms could lead to upper airway obstruction during face mask positive pressure ventilation in children with CCHS. Enlarged adenoids worsened this problem in our patient, leading to insufficient ventilation and OSAS. Adenoidectomy resolved symptoms of OSAS and enabled successful nasal mask ventilation. Close follow-up of the patient avoided hypoxia and sequelae from OSAS such as pulmonary hypertension.
...
PMID:Resolution of obstructive sleep apnea syndrome after adenoidectomy in congenital central hypoventilation syndrome. 1034 14
Clinical and hematological features of nine cases of Hemoglobin E variant were studied prospectively over three years. There were three cases of HbE-beta thalassemia and six cases of homozygous HbE disease. Two cases were asymptomatic. The commonest symptom was jaundice (unconjugated 2). Other symptoms were left hypochondrial pain,
tiredness
, syncope and
failure to thrive
. Splenomegaly and microcytosis was detected in all. Mild anaemia was present in majority (6/9), and the mean hemoglobin was 11.3 gm/dl. Reticulocyte count was normal in all and cholelithiasis was seen in one patient only. Clinical and hematological features were evaluated and compared to reported series. Splenomegaly was found to be more common.
...
PMID:Hemoglobin E disorders in the north east India. 1131 Mar 86
A 12-year-old female presented with chronic diarrhea,
fatigue
,
failure to thrive
, sudden weakness of her upper and lower extremities and inability to walk. On neurological examination, atrophy was found of the lower extremity muscles, coupled with muscle weakness. Hypokalemia and a high creatine kinase (CK) level were detected. Antigliadin IgA, IgG and antiendomysial antibodies were positive. A duodenal biopsy revealed the classical findings of celiac disease. To our knowledge this is the first childhood case of celiac disease presenting with rhabdomyolysis.
...
PMID:Rhabdomyolysis in celiac disease. 1272 76
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