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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (
fatigue
)
51,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 3-yr-old boy was investigated for numerous episodes of
fatigue
, irritability,
pallor
, and sweating, which began at 11 mo of age, when he had an episode of symptomatic hypoglycemia with ketonuria. He had euphoria, mental confusion, drowsiness, nausea, and vomiting 1-5 hr after oral administration of glycerol in doses of 0.5-1.0gm/kg. Orally administered MCT (1 gm/kg) had similar effects. On one occasion, oral glycerol also provoked hypoglycemia, as had a 16 1/2 hr fast. Intravenously administered glycerol (0.09 gm/kg) induced an immediate loss of consciousness from which he recovered spontaneously after 30 min; there were no changes in blood glucose values. Intravenously administered fructose (0.25 gm/kg) was tolerated normally. Leukocytes showed normal activities for FDPase, glycerol kinase, and glycerol phosphate dehydrogenase. The restriction of dietary intake of fat has been associated with a marked improvement in physical and mental activities. These observations suggest a unique, yet undifined intolerance to glycerol, which suggest caution in the diagnostic use of glycerol in the investigation of hypoglycemia as well as in the therapy of increased intracranial or intraocular pressure.
...
PMID:Glycerol intolerance in a child with intermittent hypoglycemia. 16 54
The clinical pattern of 119 children with recurrent abdominal pain, located most commonly in the periumbilical region, revealed no distinct features. The most common associated symptoms were
pallor
,
tiredness
and anorexia. The most important socioenvironmental and behavioral factors were marital turmoil in 44%, school activity in 32%, and perfectionism in 30%. Laboratory and radiologic and fiberoptic endoscopic studies were uniformly unremarkable. Counseling on a continuing basis helped 105 of these children.
...
PMID:Recurrent abdominal pain in children: a retrospective survey of 119 patients. 63 Jul 81
A survey is presented of 15 patients from the Aurora Hospital and 35 patients reported in the literature with transient erythroblastopenia of childhood (TEC). The children were hospitalized because of
pallor
and
tiredness
, some of them having signs of mild infection. They displayed normochromic anaemia, reticulocytopenia and erythroblastopenia during the severe stage of the disease. In addition, they had moderately high values for serum iron and iron-binding saturation. No other haematological, chemical or cytogenetic abnormalities could be demonstrated. 80% of the children were between 6 and 48 months old and the sexes were equally affected. In the 15 patients from the Aurora Hospital a barely significant (p=0.02-0.05) association with blood group A was recorded. Remission, indicated by a rise in the reticulocyte count, begins within a week after the diagnosis is made, even without treatment. The aetiology of the disease is unknown. Analysis of the red blood cell population at the time of diagnosis indicates that damage to the red cell precursors has occurred 2-3 months before the child is brought for examination.
...
PMID:Transient erythroblastopenia in childhood. A study of 15 cases. 67 38
During the course of an obscure illness in a teenage girl it was eventually realized that the diagnosis was 'epidemic neuromyasthenia'. The illness which occurred between February and September 1976 was characterized by
fatigue
,
pallor
, headache, nuchal pain, alterations in mentation, dizziness, nausea and vomiting, paraesthesiae, weakness and heaviness of limbs, and a prolonged relapsing course. Investigation brought to light fourteen patients with similar symptoms--twelve female and two male. In view of the shortcomings of retrospective enquiries, especially those involving the assessment of notes made by other people, and the problem of trying to define a nonfatal illness with protean symptoms, many of a nonspecific nature, with few physical findings and negative laboratory studies, caution is necessary. Under these circumstances it is claimed on clinical epidemiological evidence that a diagnosis of 'epidemic neuromyasthenia' could be sustained confidently in three patients and probably in a fourth. Six patients were considered possible cases and four were rejected.
...
PMID:'Epidemic neuromyasthenia' in Southwest Ireland. 74 20
Preliminary results of this retrospective-prospective analysis of renal hypertension in 110 children indicate that hypertension may be secondary to a wide variety of acute progresive, and chronic renal diseases which may be either congenital or acquired. Affected children may be detected at any time from infancy through adolescence. Symptoms usually associated with acute glomerulonephritis (i.e., headache, swelling, nausea, vomiting, anorexia,
fatigue
, dizziness, and fever) occur in both acute and chronic renal diseases associated with hypertension. Headache and swelling are the most common symptoms in this series. Peripheral edema, rales, and increased heart size were found in between 10 and 25% of these children. Differential diagnosis may be approached by a consideration of causes of acute and chronic hypertension. The child with chronic renal disease usually presents with a long history of fatigability, poor growth, and
pallor
, and laboratory tests reveal elevation of the creatinine and BUN along with anemia, hypocalcemia, and hyperphosphatemia. In contrast, the child with acute renal disease and hypertension presents with a history of prior good health followed by the abrupt onset of signs and symptoms of renal disease; laboratory tests usually reveal modest elevations of creatinine and BUN, anemia is unusual, an abnormal urinalysis is common, and serum calcium and phosphorous levels are usually normal. Renovascular and asymmetric renal parenchymal disease represent uncommon but important conditions because surgery may be curative. Treatment may be surgical, medical, or combined. Surgical conditions include renal trauma, hydronephrosis, asymmetric renal disease, and renal arterial disease. Adequate blood pressure control without medication can be expected following surgery in instances of unilateral involvement with a normal contralateral kidney. Meticulous assessment of the contralateral kidney is needed to determine that it is normal. If surgery is unsuccessful or is not indicated, pharmacologic therapy is initiated with a stepwise regimen starting with the mildest agent (e.g., thiazides) and then adding additional antihypertensive drugs when adequate blood pressure control has not yet been achieved. The goal of therapy is the lowest, safest, tolerated blood pressure levels. Long-term, carefully designed studies of antihypertensive agents for children with renal hypertension are not available. The need for collection and critical analysis of data concerning the clinical course of children with renal hypertension is evident from a review of the literature and from the preliminary data presented in this series. The presentation of such information and a critique of outcome variables will provide a basis for program planning for affected children and improvement in patient care where indicated.
...
PMID:Renal hypertension in children. 99 44
The teratoma is a dysgenetic tumor consisting of tridermal differentiation products. The most common classification is made according to maturity - benign adult teratoma and malign nonmature embryonal teratoma. In the case demonstrated, a 15-year-old male suffers from
tiredness
,
paleness
and pains in the epigastrium. The radiological examination showed a tumor in the size of a fist with a number of teeth located partly within the stomach. The histological findings after operation confirmed the diagnosis of a coetaneous (= adult) gastric teratoma. The discussion shows that all cases of gastric teratoma published until 1972 are male, in 77% under the age of 1 year, in 13% under the age of 10, and only in 10% over the age of 10 years.
...
PMID:[Rare case of an adult teratoma of the stomach (author's transl)]. 122 71
Iron deficiency, the most common cause of anemia, is prevalent in 10 percent to 30 percent of the world's population. Inadequate intake of iron may be an important causative factor, particularly when the body requires more iron than usual (e.g., during infancy, early childhood, adolescence, pregnancy and periods of blood loss). The popular increase of fiber in diets may increase the incidence of iron-deficiency anemia because too much fiber in the diet renders available iron unabsorbable. Symptoms in children include skin or conjunctival
pallor
, excessive sleepiness, learning disabilities, diminished attention span,
tiredness
, irritability or inappropriate behavior, and pica. Adults may have shortness of breath, decrease in exercise tolerance, palpitations, tachycardia, angina, congestive heart failure, orthopnea and edema. Iron deficiency occurs in sequential states and is measured by many laboratory tests. The levels of hemoglobin and hematocrit are both decreased, while the red blood cell count may be normal initially, but will decrease as the iron-deficiency state continues. The steps of treatment include correction of the underlying disorder, administration of the amount of iron needed and observation of the response to treatment.
...
PMID:A guide to primary care of iron-deficiency anemia. 143 77
Ordinarily, severe disease due to acquired cytomegalovirus (CMV) infection does not occur in immunocompetent children. We describe a previously healthy boy who acquired primary CMV infection at approximately 2 years of age and experienced a 2-year-long debilitating multisystem illness from which he ultimately recovered. Clinical features of this illness included
fatigue
, poor weight gain,
pallor
, unexplained fever, musculoskeletal complaints, drenching night sweats, lymphadenopathy, and massive hepatosplenomegaly. Laboratory abnormalities included elevated erythrocyte sedimentation rate, lymphocytosis, and elevated immune complex levels. Cellular immune function was impaired during the illness but was demonstrably normal during convalescence, and there was no other evidence for a known immunodeficiency state. Immunoblot analysis showed enhanced antibody response to a 66-kd infected cell protein after symptomatic recovery. Despite consistently normal indices of hepatic function, liver enlargement persisted after other symptoms had resolved. Liver biopsy demonstrated a mononuclear cell portal tract infiltrate with fibrosis, but CMV could not be demonstrated directly in this tissue. Primary CMV infection has not been reported previously to cause the persistent symptoms seen in this child.
...
PMID:Protracted mononucleosis-like illness associated with acquired cytomegalovirus infection in a previously healthy child: transient cellular immune defects and chronic hepatopathy. 184 49
To evaluate the consequences of receiving human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1)-seropositive blood, 90 HIV-1-seronegative recipients of HIV-1-seropositive blood (case patients) and 90 HIV-1-seronegative recipients of HIV-1-seronegative blood, matched for age, sex, number of transfusions, diagnosis, and severity of illness (controls), were followed for 12 months after transfusion at Mama Yemo Hospital in Kinshasa, Zaire. Of case patients and controls, 72% were children transfused for anemia caused by malaria. Of the 46 case patients case patients alive 6 months after transfusion and for whom HIV-1 serologic results were obtained, 44 (96%) had seroconverted. Significantly more case patients (47%) than controls (16%) died within 1 year after transfusion (P less than .001). In the first 3 months after transfusion,
fatigue
, diarrhea, fever, cough, pruritus,
pallor
, oral candidiasis, polyadenopathy, hepatosplenomegaly, and rhinorrhea were observed more often among seroconverters than controls (P less than .04). Six percent of case patients and no controls had developed clinical AIDS after 12 months of follow-up. These findings underscore the urgent need for appropriate HIV screening facilities in transfusion centers worldwide.
...
PMID:Seroconversion rate, mortality, and clinical manifestations associated with the receipt of a human immunodeficiency virus-infected blood transfusion in Kinshasa, Zaire. 186 35
A 15-year-old girl was admitted after 1 week of increasing
fatigue
and
pallor
. She had no gastro-intestinal complaints. The patient had suffered from four episodes of syncope during the last 3 days prior to admission. Besides
pallor
and a discrete cardiac murmur, the physical examination was normal. A further thorough investigation revealed an iron deficiency anaemia related to a Helicobacter pylori positive chronic active haemorrhagic gastritis. Treatment consisted of amoxycillin and colloidal bismuth subcitrate (500 mg and 120 mg orally respectively, 3 times daily) during a period of 6 weeks. Iron supplements were not administered. Together with the clearance of H. pylori and healing of the haemorrhagic gastritis, as demonstrated by histology, haemoglobin values returned to normal and the symptoms disappeared. An eradication of the micro-organism was obtained. She has since had no further similar complaints.
...
PMID:Syncopes leading to the diagnosis of a Helicobacter pylori positive chronic active haemorrhagic gastritis. 195 61
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