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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
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Intermittent hyperthyreosis occurs under various forms of stress, especially heat stress. The clinician may diagnose such cases as masked or apathetic hyperthyroidism or "forme fruste" hyperthyreosis or thyroid autonomy. As most routine and standard tests may here yield inconsistent results, it is the patients' anamnesis which may provide the clue. Our Bioclimatology Unit has now seen over 100 cases in which thyroid hypersensitivity towards heat was the most prominent syndrome: 10-15% of weather-sensitive patients are affected. The patients complain before or during heat spells of such contradictory symptoms as insomnia, irritability, tension, tachycardia, palpitations, precordial pain, dyspnoe, flushes with sweating or chills, tremor, abdominal pain or diarrhea, polyuria or pollakisuria, weight loss in spite of ravenous appetite, fatigue, exhaustion, depression, adynamia, lack of concentration and confusion. Determination of urinary neurohormones allows a differential diagnosis, intermittent hyperthyreosis being characterized by three cardinal symptoms: 1. tachycardia -- every case with more than 80 pulse beats being suspect (not specific); 2. urinary histamine -- every case excreting more than 90 mug/day being suspect. Again the drawback of this test is its lack of specificity, as histamine may also be increased in cases of allergy and spondylitis; 3. urinary thyroxine -- every case excreting more than 20 mug/day T-4 being suspect. This is the only specific test. Therapy should make use of lithium carbonate and beta-blockers. Propyl thiouracil is rarely required.
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PMID:Intermittent hyperthyreosis -- a heat stress syndrome. 5 84

During the period 1972-1974 10 patients suffering from pyogenic spondylitis have been treated at the Central Hospital of Middle Finland. Three of the patients had become acutely ill with septic fever and back pain. In the remaining cases the onset of the disease was insidious. Fever, weight loss and fatigue were the general symptoms. Percussion revealed local tenderness at the site of infection in all patients. Two patients showed neurological signs. The ESR was elevated in all cases and alkaline phosphatase was elevated in six patients. Blood culture was positive in those three patients who had become acutely ill. Narrowing of the intervertebral space was observed in all patients. Scanning with Tc99 was performed in nine patients, seven of whom were at an early stage of the disease; a significant uptake was recorded in five of these cases. The average interval between the onset of symptoms and the diagnosis was 3 months, range 1 to 5 months. The treatment consisted of bed rest and antibiotics. All the patients recovered and became symptom-free.
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PMID:Pyogenic spondylitis. 67 1

Tuberculous spondylitis, also known as Pott's disease, is an entity that produces a characteristic kyphotic deformity, and was described by Sir Percivall Pott in 1779 and 1782. The majority of his patients were infants and young children. Although the incidence of tuberculosis in the industrialized world has since declined dramatically, the number of cases of extrapulmonary disease, though small, has remained relatively unchanged. In developing countries, spondylitis is still generally a disease of children, but in Europe and North America, it more commonly involves older adults. Pott's spondylitis represents a reactivation of latent disease, frequently years after the initial infection. Clinical findings include complaints of back pain and symptoms of fever, chills, weight loss, malaise, and fatigue. Characteristically a late finding, paraplegia is occasionally the initial indicator of spinal involvement. There is an average delay of a year between the onset of symptoms and patient presentation. Plain spinal radiographs usually are the initial diagnostic modality utilized. Computed tomography scanning and magnetic resonance imaging can be used to further define the process. The differential diagnosis includes neoplasm, pyogenic or disseminated fungal infection, and sarcoid arthritis.
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PMID:Percivall Pott: tuberculous spondylitis. 865 42

We studied the clinical features of cases of Reiter's disease as seen in two tertiary care hospitals in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia, over a period of 9 years. We gathered 34 cases, 29 (85%) males and 5 (15%) females (M:F ratio 5.8:1). The mean age of onset was 29.4 (SD 6.4) years. Gastrointestinal and genitourinary infection were elicited in 24 patients (71%). Fever occurred in 6 patients (18%), fatigue in 13 (38%) and conjunctivitis in 13 (38%). Lower limb large joints were affected at presentation in 23 patients (68%), followed by combined presentation of peripheral joints and axial joints in 10 patients (30%). Sacroilitis was seen in 5 cases (15%). One patient had spondylitis, while enthesopathy was seen in 6 patients (18%). Bone scintigraphy was done in 14 patients, 11 of which were positive at peripheral joints, while 9 showed increased uptake at the sacroiliac joints. HLA B27 status was tested in 15 patients, 4 (27%) of which were positive.
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PMID:Profile of Reiter's disease in Saudi Arabia. 1132 81

Ankylosing spondylitis (AS) is the prototypical form of the spondyloarthropathies, which at a prevalence of 2 % is among the most frequent rheumatic diseases. Spondyloarthropathy comprises the following five disorders: AS, reactive arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, enteropathic arthritis in Crohn's disease, and ulcerosing colitis as well as undifferentiated spondyloarthropathy. In 99 % of the patients with AS initial abnormal findings affect the sacroiliac joints. The radiographic changes required for diagnosing AS occur as late as 5 - 9 years after the onset of clinical symptoms. MRI of the sacroiliac joints reliably demonstrates both chronic inflammatory changes (erosions, sclerotic changes, bone bridges) and acute inflammatory changes (synovitis, capsulitis, osteitis) and allows for grading the chronicity and acuity of such changes. Enthesitis of the interosseous ligaments of the retroarticular space is a manifestation of AS. Spondylodiscitis (Andersson 1937) may occur as an inflammatory or non-inflammatory process (transdiscal fatigue fracture). Inflammations of the facet and costospinal joints developing into ankylosis are typical of AS. Changes of the vertebral bodies occur as anterior (Romanus 1952), posterior, and marginal spondylitis. All forms of spondyloarthropathies are furthermore characterized by asymmetrical synovitis of the large joints, particularly of the legs (gonarthritis, coxitis, tarsitis, peripheral oligoarthritis), rheumatic fibroosteitis (pelvic enthesitis, rheumatic calcaneopathy), and peri- and synchondritis of the pubic symphisis and sternal synchondrosis. Since early inflammatory changes of the spinal column and of the extravertebral localizations in AS are demonstrated by MRI before they become apparent on radiographs, and thereby the diagnostic gap could be closed, the early use of MRI for diagnostic and follow-up is commendable, when new therapeutical options like the so-called "biologicals" are employed.
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PMID:[Magnetic resonance imaging in ankylosing spondylitis (Marie-Struempell-Bechterew disease)]. 1247 19

We evaluated the effect of exercise therapy on back pain, spinal range of motion (ROM), and disability in persons with diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis (DISH). Persons with symptomatic DISH received a daily exercise program for 24 weeks consisting of mobility, stretching, and strengthening exercises for the cervical, thoracic, and lumbar spine. It included 14 supervised sessions over 8 weeks. Outcomes included visual analogue scales (VAS) for pain, stiffness, and fatigue, 13 spinal measurements, the neck pain and disability scale, the Quebec back pain disability scale, the Bath Spondylitis Functional Index, and the MACTAR patient preference scale. Assessments were made at baseline, 8 weeks, and 24 weeks. Fifteen of 17 completed the study. Comparing week 24 with baseline, Schober's test improved significantly (p = 0.02), and VAS stiffness and left finger-to-floor test demonstrated a trend to improvement (p = 0.07 each). The physical measures, which were expected to improve with the exercise program, all moved in the direction expected, but had p values > 0.10. At 24 weeks, eight (53.3%) participants rated their status as improved, three (20%) as unchanged, and four (27%) were unsure about the benefit. The exercise program designed for DISH and tested in this study led to small improvements in physical measures which achieved significance only for lumbosacral flexion.
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PMID:Exercise therapy for patients with diffuse idiopathic skeletal hyperostosis. 1788 26

The purpose of this study was to evaluate changes in health-related quality of life after eight to twelve months of recreational exercise in patients with rheumatic diseases (inflammatory joint disease, osteoarthritis, fibromyalgia and other generalized pain syndromes), and to determine whether patient (age, sex, diagnosis) and exercise characteristics (follow-up time, type of activity, frequency of participation) are related to health-related quality of life change. Health-related quality of life was assessed twice in 138 patients with rheumatic diseases. 1) At enrolment in a centre for outpatient recreational exercise and 2) following eight to twelve months of recreational exercise. Health-related quality of life was measured using the Short-Form Health Survey 36 and three numeric rating scales for pain, fatigue and general condition. Multiple linear regression was used to analyze the influence of patient and exercise characteristics on follow-up HRQoL-score. Patients showed significant improvements in pain and general condition, and reported a positive change in health. A diagnosis of inflammatory joint disease (e. g. rheumatoid arthritis, polyarthritis, spondylitis) or osteoarthritis, participating in sports activities two to three times per week, and following land-based fitness classes were associated with the most improvement in health-related quality of life. Regular participation in recreational exercise contributes to improved health-related quality of life in patients with rheumatic diseases.
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PMID:Recreational exercise in rheumatic diseases. 1968 15

Streptococcus suis, a major global porcine pathogen, is an emerging zoonosis in Southeast Asia that triggered a 2005 outbreak in China. S. suis causes meningitis, sepsis, and endocarditis in both pigs and humans and involves significant mortality. We report the case of a previously healthy 50-year-old dairy farmer who developed S. suis type 2 endocarditis complicated by pulmonary embolism and spondylitis. He experienced a high fever, chills, fatigue, and worsening low back pain in the 6 weeks prior to admission. On physical examination, he had lumbar spine tenderness and weakness of the left leg. Blood culture identified penicillin-sensitive S. suis type 2. Echocardiography showed vegetation on the tricuspid valve, and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed signs of spondylitis. The man reported sudden chest pain several days after admission, which computed tomography (CT) showed what was diagnosed as a septic pulmonary embolism. He was treated with penicillin G for 4 weeks and gentamicin for the first 2 weeks, followed by 2 weeks of oral amoxicillin, after which his symptoms gradually improved. The infection source was probably his dairy herd, since calves often bit his fingers while feeding and S. suis was found in their oral mucus. Over 400 cases of human S. suis infection have been reported globally, but this is, to our knowledge, the first known case of bovine transmission. All of Japan's 8 other cases involved occupational swine exposure, 5 of whom had injuries to their fingers. This emerging situation should be made known to all possibly involved in unprotected direct contact with swine and cattle, particularly when the skin could be compromised by cuts or abrasions.
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PMID:[A case of Streptococcus suis endocarditis, probably bovine-transmitted, complicated by pulmonary embolism and spondylitis]. 1986 Feb 57

The spondyloarthritides are group of interrelated and overlapping arthritic conditions which primarily include ankylosing spondylitis, reactive arthritis/Reiter's disease and arthritis associated with psoriasis and inflammatory bowel disease. They are characterised by the absence of rheumatoid factor and by association with HLA-B27 antigen. The main clinical features are inflammatory back pain, spondylitis, sacroileitis, asymmetric arthritis of lower limbs, enthesitis, dactylitis, besides fatigue, uveitis, skin and mucous membrane lesions, cardiac and pulmonary involvement. Although there are similarities among the spondyloarthritides, each of them have specific characteristic that help us to distinguish them.
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PMID:[Spondyloarthritides--clinical features]. 2223 48

A 65-year-old man with diabetes mellitus (DM) presented with an indwelling urethral catheter placed for urinary retention by his previous doctor. Thereafter, he had fever, vomiting and general fatigue. His blood examination showed severe inflammatory findings. He was diagnosed with acute prostatitis and immediately admitted to our hospital. Pelvic computerized tomography (CT) showed a prostate abscess. We performed transrectal ultrasonographic-guided puncture of the prostate abscess for drainage and blood culture was tested. Methicillin-sensitive Staphylococcus aureus (MSSA) was cultured from the puncture fluid and blood. We administered antibiotics with strict control of DM. After the prostate abscess improved and the urethral catheter was removed, the patient was systematically examined for potential sepsis-related disease caused by MSSA septic infection. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the head indicated multiple cerebral infarction, abdominal CT indicated splenetic infarction, ultrasonography of the heart indicated vegetation on the mitral valve and aortic valve, and chest X-ray indicated pulmonary congestion. Furthermore, MRI of the lumbar spine showed a high intensity lesion at the 4th and 5th lumbar spine, indicating pyogenic spondylitis. We diagnosed prostate abscess with sepsis, infectious endocarditis, congestive heart failure and pyogenic spondylitis. Aortic valve replacement, mitral annuloplasty, tricuspid valvuloplasty and ovale hole closure surgeries were performed to treat these conditions.
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PMID:[A case of prostate abscess with sepsis, infectious endocarditis and pyogenic spondylitis]. 2323 81


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