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

Table salt can now be fortified with iodine and iron without interaction and without loss of potency. According to Levente Diosady, professor of Food Engineering at the University of Toronto, the amounts of the two micronutrients available to the human body have been significantly reduced when the two interacted. In the new technology, the iodine is covered with a dextrin (a water soluble starch) capsule that serves as a physical barrier to the iron. Micronutrient Initiative (an international secretariat based at IDRC that works to eliminate health problems resulting from iron, iodine, and vitamin A deficiencies) and IDRC supported the development of the technology. The efficiency of absorption of the two micronutrients in the new double fortified salt in the human body is being tested at the Hospital for Sick Children in Toronto. Later testing will be conducted by University of Ghana scientists in IDRC-funded trials that will focus on women and their families in areas of Ghana where these deficiencies are endemic. Iodine is part of thyroid hormone, which contributes to brain development in the fetus and regulates human metabolism; iodine deficiency is the most frequent cause of preventable mental retardation. Related disorders include lethargy, physical disabilities, goiter, stillbirth, and neonatal death. Iron deficiency, the most common nutritional problem in the world (particularly among women, infants, and children), is associated with anemia, fatigue, learning problems, pregnancy complications, premature births, and maternal mortality. The two deficiencies together affect more than one-third of the world's population. Approximately 1.6 billion people, in more than 100 countries, live in areas where iodine is not available in sufficient amounts; those most at risk include about one-third of China's population. It is also a severe problem in the Himalayas, the Andes, India, and West Africa.
...
PMID:Micronutrient deficiencies. Reports from the field -- Africa. 1229 Mar 27

This study examines Indian career women's work and family roles, sources of stress, ways of coping, and well-being in the light of cultural expectations in India and the West. A number of different instruments were included to measure job satisfaction, mental health, job stressors, coping behavior, demographic characteristics, domestic responsibility and satisfaction. Data were collected, using two earner stressor questionnaires (a coping behavior questionnaire and a mental health and job satisfaction questionnaire), from 100 career women in India and 60 in the US (New York) and England. In-depth interviews were conducted with 15 career women in India and 15 women in England. The results showed that women in India had more somatic symptoms than those in the West, who expressed their anxiety directly rather than suppressing it. Fewer women in India than in the West reported that they shared responsibilities for domestic work and child care with their spouses. Major work-family pressures are similar for women in both groups: overload, time pressures, constant fatigue, work interfering with relations with children, and guilt and anxiety over children while at work. Lifestyle differences between women in India and the West nevertheless exist and may impinge in various ways on women's experiences of work and family. Although this study has led to many interesting findings, the results are still inconclusive and should be treated with caution. Due to the small size of the sample, this study needs further broadening, as it should incorporate the experiences of non-Western women, including those living at the junction of two cultures.
...
PMID:Work and family roles: Indian career women in India and the West. 1234 97

The purpose of this study was to explore cultural meanings of breast cancer among Korean women in South Korea. A descriptive longitudinal study using methodological triangulation was conducted, and only qualitative findings are presented in this article. Ten Korean women who were newly diagnosed with a plan of surgery and subsequent chemotherapy, who did have severe fatigue at the time of recruitment, were recruited through Seoul National University Hospital. Data were collected using in-depth, 2-hour interviews and analyzed using thematic analysis. The themes emerged through the analysis process included: (a) "I did wrong," (b) "I cannot ask male physicians." (c) "I don't want to show the operation site to my husband." and (d) "I do household tasks by myself." The overriding theme was marginalization of the women within the context of their patriarchal culture. The findings suggest that culture is an important context circumscribing women's health/illness experience.
West J Nurs Res 2002 Nov
PMID:Korean women's breast cancer experience. 1242 93

Qualitative researchers have long recognized that fatigue is a common concern among those with chronic illness; however, the insights derived from this body of inquiry have not been synthesized into a coherent body of clinical knowledge that could provide direction for nursing practice. Using a synthesis approach of meta-study, the authors identify four predominant assumptions embedded in qualitative studies that have influenced the way researchers have interpreted and made sense of their findings about fatigue in chronic illness over the past two decades. They argue that these assumptions may have inhibited the development of more dynamic, comprehensive understandings of fatigue. They conclude that addressing some of the methodological issues within this body of research might lead to a more accurate portrayal of the complexity, fluidity, and contextual nature of the fatigue experienced in chronic illness.
West J Nurs Res 2003 Mar
PMID:Embedded assumptions in qualitative studies of fatigue. 1266 39

Despite considerable attention to fatigue in acute and chronic illnesses, little is known about fatigue in a healthy population. A detailed exploration of fatigue, therefore, was conducted to answer the broad question of what fatigue is to a basically healthy population and to lay the groundwork for establishing an empirically based definition of fatigue. Qualitative and quantitative methods were used. Results of the qualitative phase of the study, in which 40 persons were interviewed, are presented here. Categories and themes of the experience of fatigue were identified. Based on the qualitative findings, we propose that fatigue in generally healthy adults is an acute, subjective, sometimes overwhelming, but temporary state (with physical, emotional, and behavioral manifestations) caused by stress and overwork in one's life roles, which disrupts activity and alerts the person to take restorative measures.
West J Nurs Res 2003 Jun
PMID:A qualitative investigation of fatigue among healthy working adults. 1279 57

Poliomyelitis has recently been identified as a cause of muscle weakness in patients with West Nile virus (WNV) infection. However, the clinical spectrum of WNV-associated weakness has not been described. We reviewed data on 13 patients with WNV infection. Patients with muscle weakness were classified into one of three distinct groups based on clinical features. Group 1 comprised five patients who developed acute flaccid paralysis, four with meningoencephalitis and one without fever or other signs of infection. Paralysis was asymmetric, and involved from one to four limbs in individual patients. Electrodiagnostic studies confirmed involvement of anterior horn cells or motor axons. Group 2 involved two patients without meningoencephalitis who developed severe but reversible muscle weakness that recovered completely within weeks. Muscle weakness involved both lower limbs in one patient and one upper limb in the other. Group 3 consisted of two patients who experienced subjective weakness and disabling fatigue, but had no objective muscle weakness on examination. In addition to the three distinct groups, two other patients developed exaggerated weakness in the distribution of preexisting lower motor neuron dysfunction. We conclude that the clinical spectrum of WNV-associated muscle weakness ranges from acute flaccid paralysis, with or without fever or meningoencephalitis, to disabling fatigue. Also, preexisting dysfunction may predispose anterior horn cells to additional injury from WNV. Awareness of this spectrum will help to avoid erroneous diagnoses and inappropriate treatment.
...
PMID:Clinical spectrum of muscle weakness in human West Nile virus infection. 1292 89

The experiences and support needs of adolescent mothers who commenced breastfeeding were elicited using focus groups and in-depth semistructured interviews. The study took place in the North West of England, UK. The qualitative data were analyzed using thematic networks analysis. Five themes related to experiences emerged: feeling watched and judged, lacking confidence, tiredness, discomfort, and sharing accountability. A further 5 themes were developed to describe the adolescents' support needs: emotional support, esteem support, instrumental support, informational support, and network support. These forms of support were most effective when provided together in a synergistic way and within a trusting relationship. Key supporters identified were the mother's mother, the partner, and the midwife employed in a teenage pregnancy coordinator role. Health professionals need to further explore the ways in which relationships may be developed and sustained that provide the range of support required by adolescent mothers to enable them to continue breastfeeding.
...
PMID:Adolescent mothers and breastfeeding: experiences and support needs--an exploratory study. 1462 Apr 53

A 27-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital with a depression, anaemia and fatigue. She had come from Angola to the Netherlands as a refugee 2 years before this evaluation. As an explanation for her symptoms tropical infectious diseases of parasitic origin were considered, but no clues were found in this direction. The test for trypanosomiasis was considered to be suggestive for an infection in the past (persistent titre 1:200). She was discharged but readmitted 6 months later because of a deterioration of her clinical condition. Magnetic resonance imaging showed bilateral signal abnormalities within the white matter of the brain. On examination no neurological signs or abnormalities were found. Again, no definite diagnosis could be made and the patient was discharged. Because of a further deterioration of her clinical condition she was readmitted a short time later for the third time. On the MRI the white matter lesions had increased. The serum protein electrophoresis was markedly abnormal with an elevated IgM Level. Finally, at a repeated lumbar puncture mobile trypanosomes were found. The diagnosis of 'West African sleeping sickness' was made and the patient was treated with eflornithine. She recovered completely during the next 18 months.
...
PMID:[Clinical reasoning and decision making in practice. A depressive foreign woman with symptoms of malaise]. 1545 26

Documentation of symptoms in the medical record provides clinicians and researchers with valuable information about the patient's experience during acute myocardial infarction (AMI). To examine the consistency between the patient's reported symptoms and the medical record, 215 patients were interviewed and their medical records examined for information about their admission symptoms. Chest pain was the most frequently reported and recorded symptom, and there was good agreement between the patient's report and the medical record. Although fatigue was the second most frequently reported symptom by patients, it was rarely documented in the medical record. Time of symptom onset was identified by 87.9% of patients but only documented in 60.5% of medical records. Clinicians may be recording those symptoms that support the AMI diagnosis and not those perceived to be less relevant. Findings suggest that the medical record is an inaccurate and inadequate source of information about patients' actual experience of AMI symptoms.
West J Nurs Res 2004 Aug
PMID:Is the medical record an accurate reflection of patients' symptoms during acute myocardial infarction? 1535 57

Physicians in areas with active West Nile virus (WNV) transmission should be aware that WNV infection can present as a polio-like syndrome and that the spectrum of neuromuscular signs and symptoms may range from acute flaccid paralysis in the absence of fever or meningoencephalitis to subjective weakness and disabling fatigue. This awareness will help to avoid less tenable diagnoses and the morbidity associated with inappropriate treatment. Although anterior horns are the major site of spinal cord pathology, inflammatory changes also may involve spinal sympathetic neurons and ganglia, providing an explanation for the autonomic instability seen in some patients with WNV infection. However, the role that autonomic dysfunction plays in the morbidity and mortality of human WNV infection has to be elucidated. Another unresolved issue with important neuromuscular implications is whether WNV infection may lead to autoimmune disease. Support for this contention arises from reports of WNV patients presenting with various neuromuscular diseases that have a presumed autoimmune mechanism, including Guillain-Barre syndrome, other demyelinating neuropathies, myasthenia gravis, brachial plexopathies, and stiff-person syndrome. Although there is no specific treatment or vaccine currently approved for WNV infection in humans, and the standard is supportive care only, several drugs that can alter the cascade of immunobiochemical events leading to neuronal death may be potentially useful. Among these agents, minocycline (a semisynthetic derivative of tetracycline), interferon alpha, and high-dose corticosteroids are candidate therapies, although human experience is limited. In addition, passive immunization with intravenous immune globulin containing WNV-specific antibodies seems promising, based on anecdotal human reports.
...
PMID:Neuromuscular Manifestations of Human West Nile Virus Infection. 1561 Jul 3


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>