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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The immunogenicity and adverse reaction of an inactivated hepatitis A (HA) vaccine were investigated. Sixty healthy adult volunteers who lacked antibody to HA virus (anti-HAV) received three doses of vaccine containing 720 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) units (EL.U) according to a 0, 1 and 6 month schedule. Blood tests for serum liver enzymes and anti-HAV were performed at screening 7 days prior to, and 1, 6 and 7 months after the first dose. Anti-HAV was tested by radio immunoassay and ELISA for titre determination. The seroconversion rates measured by ELISA were 98.3% (59/60) at months 1 and 6 and 100% at month 7. Sixty-one per cent (109/180) of the documented injections were followed by local symptoms, essentially mild soreness at the site of injection; and 22.2% (40/180) by minor general symptoms including malaise,
fatigue
and lethargy. It is concluded that HA vaccine is highly immunogenic and safe. It may replace immunoglobulin as an effective method of preventing HA
virus infection
in adults.
...
PMID:Safety and immunogenicity of hepatitis A vaccine in healthy adult volunteers. 839 10
To characterize the idiopathic postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome (POTS), we reviewed the records of all patients aged 20 to 51 who presented to the Mayo Autonomic Reflex Laboratory and who exhibited tachycardia at rest or during head-up tilt. These patients were usually women who experienced an acute onset of persistent lightheadedness and
fatigue
or gastrointestinal dysmotility. In seven patients, a
viral illness
may have preceded the onset of symptoms. In two instances, signs and symptoms of a small-fiber sensory neuropathy were present. Laboratory evaluation of autonomic function revealed increased diastolic blood pressure to tilt (5/16), increased Valsalva ratio, marked decrease in phase II of the Valsalva maneuver with normal phase IV overshoot, and normal forced respiratory sinus arrhythmia. Abnormal quantitative sudomotor axon reflex test and thermoregulatory sweat test and an excessive orthostatic increase of catecholamines were found in some patients. We conclude that in many instances POTS may be a manifestation of a mild form of acute autonomic neuropathy.
...
PMID:Idiopathic postural orthostatic tachycardia syndrome: an attenuated form of acute pandysautonomia? 842 77
The clinical, biochemical and histological features of 102 consecutively referred patients with chronic hepatitis C
virus infection
were analysed. Demographic, epidemiological, biochemical, haematological and histological details were catalogued for each patient. The mean follow-up was 49 +/- 6 months. Liver biopsies were obtained from 92 patients; a second biopsy was obtained from 35 patients. The average known duration of infection was 8.6 +/- 0.7 years. The most common risk factors that could be identified were past blood transfusion, surgery or intravenous drug abuse. Twenty-four of the 27 patients (85%) with past blood transfusion had received blood in countries outside of northern Europe. In contrast, 12 of the 16 former drug users were northern European. Patients were frequently diagnosed incidentally; one-quarter had no symptoms of liver disease and were generally asymptomatic or had presented with non-specific complaints and were found to have abnormal serum aminotransferase levels after routine screening. The mean serum aminotransferase levels were not significantly different in those presenting with
fatigue
compared to those diagnosed incidentally. The most common physical sign in these patients was a palpable liver, which was present in 52%. The mean serum albumin concentration in patients older than 40 years was significantly lower than that in younger patients. Splenomegaly and endoscopic evidence of varices was also more common in older patients. Cirrhosis was present in 37% of patients at presentation: 20% showed progression on rebiopsy, and 5% developed cirrhosis within 4 years of initial presentation. Of those treated, 27% showed histological improvement. Histological severity did not correlate with duration of disease, but did correlate with age.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Clinical, biochemical and histological features in 102 patients with chronic hepatitis C virus infection. 846 87
Poliomyelitis is an acute
viral disease
that attacks the brain and the ventral horn of the spinal cord. Damage to the lower motor neurons usually results in atrophy and weakness of muscle groups, perhaps paralysis and possibly deformity. A second type, bulbar poliomyelitis, infects the medulla oblongata and may result in dysfunction of the swallowing mechanism along with respiratory and circulatory distress. Minor forms of poliomyelitis result in fever, sore throat, headache, and upper body stiffness, but leave no significant atrophy or paralysis. The purpose of this paper is to review post-polio syndrome (PPS) as well as the effect of exercise on the symptoms and morphologic adaptations to PPS and where future research efforts should be directed. The most common features of PPS for over 350,000 afflicted survivors include general
fatigue
, weakness, and joint/muscle pain. The primary reasons for these symptoms include 1) destruction of the anterior horn cells by the polio virus, leaving fewer motor neurons to induce muscle contraction; 2) unaffected motor unit enlargement by reinnervation through terminal sprouting; and 3) defective transmission at the neuromuscular junction secondary to failure of terminal axonal sprout. Acute responses to resistive exercise suggest significant muscle strength decrements in the knee extensors compared with similar aged people without polio. However, limited training investigation indicates significant strength increases for the knee extensors following at least 6 wk of training. Acute aerobic responses also differ significantly from those observed in aged-matched control subjects. Chronic aerobic responses to limited training studies suggest significant elevations in maximal oxygen uptake.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Poliomyelitis and the post-polio syndrome: exercise capacities and adaptation--current research, future directions, and widespread applicability. 847
To determine the medical and psychiatric diagnoses that have an aetiological role in chronic
fatigue
we conducted a prospective study of 405 (65% women) patients who presented for evaluation with this chief complaint to an academic medical centre. The average age was 38.1 years and the average duration of
fatigue
at entry in the study was 6.9 years. All patients were given comprehensive physical and laboratory evaluations and were administered a highly structured psychiatric interview. Psychiatric diagnoses explaining the chronic
fatigue
were identified in 74% of patients and physical disorders were diagnosed in 7% of patients. The most common psychiatric conditions in this series were major depression, diagnosed in 58% of patients, panic disorder, diagnosed in 14% of patients, and somatization disorder, diagnosed in 10% of patients. Primary sleep disorders, diagnosed in 2% patients, and chronic infections, confirmed in 1.6% patients, explained the majority of cases whose chronic
fatigue
was attributed to a physical disorder. Thirty per cent of patients met the criteria used to define the chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS). Compared with age- and gender-matched control subjects with chronic
fatigue
, CFS patients had a similarly high prevalence of current psychiatric disorders (78% versus 82%), but were significantly more likely to have somatization disorder (28% versus 5%) and to attribute their illness to a
viral infection
(70% versus 33%). We conclude that most patients with a chief complaint of chronic
fatigue
, including those exhibiting the features of CFS, suffer from standard mood, anxiety and/or somatoform disorders. Careful research is still needed to determine whether CFS is a distinct entity or a variant of these psychiatric illness.
...
PMID:Chronic fatigue and chronic fatigue syndrome: clinical epidemiology and aetiological classification. 849 Nov
Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is a condition that results in moderate to severe disability, the primary feature of which is
fatigue
of unknown origin. There is a lot of interest in classifying, characterising and treating patients with CFS. Currently, the two major theories of a medical cause of CFS are
viral infection
and immune dysregulation. Patients report critical reductions in levels of physical activity, and many experience 'relapses' of severe symptoms following even moderate levels of exertion. Despite this, most studies report CFS patients to have normal muscle strength and either normal or slightly reduced muscle endurance. Histological and metabolic studies report mixed results: CFS patients have either no impairment or mild impairment of mitochondria and oxidative metabolism compared with sedentary controls. Current treatments for CFS are symptom-based, with psychological, pharmacological and rehabilitation treatments providing some relief but no cure. Immunological and nutritional treatments have been tried but have not provided reproducible benefits. Exercise training programmes are thought to be beneficial (if 'relapses' can be avoided), although few controlled studies have been performed. CFS is a long-lasting disorder that can slowly improve with time, but often does not. Further studies are needed to better understand the multiple factors that can cause chronic
fatigue
illness, as well as the effect that exercise training has on the symptoms of CFS.
...
PMID:Use of exercise for treatment of chronic fatigue syndrome. 877 Dec 84
1. Chronic fatigue syndrome is characterized by muscle
fatigue
and pain at rest, symptoms which are usually exacerbated with exercise. Although various studies have shown minor, non-specific morphological and biochemical changes in muscle of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, no consistent defect has been identified. Some have suggested that an enteroviral infection in muscle may cause the chronic muscle
fatigue
seen in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, with acute infection directly and irreversibly impairing mitochondrial function, and persistent infection depressing muscle protein synthesis and metabolism. 2. To clarify the involvement of enterovirus infection in chronic fatigue syndrome, muscle biopsies from a group of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome were examined for the presence of enteroviral RNA by reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction techniques in relation to functional studies of muscle mitochondria and the muscle RNA/DNA ratio. 3. Fifty-eight percent of patients reported an uncharacterized '
viral infection
' before the onset of their illness, but none of the muscle samples from 34 patients contained detectable amounts of enteroviral RNA. Muscle tissue had a general reduction in the RNA/DNA ratio and mitochondrial enzyme activities with no specific abnormality in the activity of enzymes encoded partially on the mitochondrial genome (cytochrome-c oxidase) or nuclear genome (citrate synthase, succinate reductase). 4. These data provide no evidence of an enteroviral infection in muscle of patients with chronic fatigue syndrome, although this does not exclude a role of enterovirus in initiating the disease process. The general reduction in RNA/DNA ratio and mitochondrial enzyme activities is consistent with a general reduction in habitual activity.
...
PMID:Investigation by polymerase chain reaction of enteroviral infection in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. 877 36
A retrospective follow-up survey was undertaken of residents of the North Coast of New South Wales infected with Ross River virus in 1992. The aims of the study were to describe the epidemiology and acute symptomatology of Ross River
virus infection
, its natural history during the first 12 months of infection, and its effects on those infected. Questionnaires were distributed to both cases and their medical practitioners. Of 129 people infected, aged between six and 85 years, 81 (63 per cent) were male and 48 (37 per cent) were female. The peak age-specific incidence was in the age group 50 to 59 years. The most common symptoms were arthralgia (95 per cent) and
tiredness
(91 per cent). Over 60 per cent took time off work. At 12 months follow-up, over 50 per cent reported persistent arthralgia, 35 per cent reported persistent
tiredness
and 15 per cent were still unable to carry out their normal activities. The median duration of symptoms was in the range 7 to 12 months, and of incapacity was in the range five weeks to three months. There were some differences from previous reports of Ross River virus outbreaks, in the incidence of major symptoms and the duration of illness and incapacity. These are likely to be at least partly due to inconsistent measurement methods. In this study, there were systematic differences between medical practitioners' and patients' estimates of periods of incapacity. Previous estimates of the direct economic costs and indirect human costs of infection based on data obtained from medical practitioners, although alarming, are almost certainly underestimates.
...
PMID:Ross River virus infection on the North Coast of New South Wales. 879 74
Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is often preceded by a
viral illness
and has recurrent "flu-like" symptoms. We compared demographic, clinical, and laboratory features (markers of inflammation and
viral infection
) among 717 patients with chronic
fatigue
(CF) with and without a self-reported postinfectious onset to identify associated clinical and biologic findings and to examine the subset of patients with CFS. Only subjective fever, chills, sore throat, lymphadenopathy, poorer functional status, and attribution of illness to a physical condition were significantly associated with a postinfectious onset. The features of patients with CFS were virtually identical to those of the broader category of patients with CF. We conclude that a postinfectious onset was not associated with a pattern of abnormalities across multiple psychosocial and biologic parameters.
...
PMID:Postinfectious chronic fatigue: a distinct syndrome? 884 79
Mixed cryoglobulinemia is a systemic vasculitis with clinical manifestations ranging from the characteristic benign-appearing syndrome of palpable purpura, arthrologies, and
fatigue
to severe vasculitis involving vital organs. A strong association of the disease with hepatitis C
virus infection
and the demonstration of the specific concentration of the virus in the cryoglobulins have implicated hepatitis C virus in the etiopathogenesis of the disease. The increase in illicit intravenous drug use in the past 30 years seems to have raised the occurrence in the United States of this once uncommon disease and changed the demographics: there seem to be more male intravenous drug users in their forties with the disease than women without risk factors for hepatitis C
virus infection
in their fifties and sixties. Pathogenesis, therapy, and the hypothesis on the etiologic role of hepatitis C virus are reviewed, and the implications of recent studies and new concepts for treatment of this often benign-appearing but deceptive and potentially life-threatening disease are discussed.
...
PMID:Mixed cryoglobulinemia secondary to hepatitis C virus infection. 890 62
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