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

We evaluated clinical presentation, cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in patients with late-onset multiple sclerosis (LOMS). Fifty-two patients with definitive multiple sclerosis (MS) diagnosed after the age of 50 years were identified between 1991 and 2002. Data pertaining to clinical characteristics, CSF analysis, and cerebral and spinal MRI were compared with those of 52 young-onset MS (YOMS) patients matched for sex and disease duration. Mean age at the time of diagnosis was 57 years in the LOMS group - the oldest patient was 82 - and 29 years in the YOMS group. Motor symptoms were significantly more often present in the LOMS than in patients with YOMS (90 % vs. 67 %, p = 0.014). Visual symptoms, residual signs of optic neuritis, and dysarthria were less frequent for LOMS. Sensory symptoms, ataxia, oculomotor symptoms, cognitive disorder, or fatigue did not differ between both groups. The majority of LOMS patients (83 %) had a primary progressive disease course, whereas 94 % of the YOMS group had a relapsing-remitting course. MRI showed typical multifocal supratentorial (LOMS vs. YOMS: 96 % vs. 98 %) and infratentorial (44 % vs. 62 %) lesions without significant group differences. Of particular interest, spinal lesions were more common (81 %) in LOMS compared to YOMS (48 %, p = 0.024), and cerebellar lesions were less frequent in the LOMS group (11 % vs. 44 %, p = 0.001). Gadolinium-enhanced lesions were initially present in less LOMS patients (15 %) than in YOMS (63 %, p < 0.001). CSF analysis revealed pleocytosis less frequently in LOMS (34 %) compared to YOMS (67 %, p = 0.006) but oligoclonal banding occurred without in both groups without differences. YOMS patients responded to corticosteroids (93 %) to a significantly greater degree than LOMS patients (73 %; p = 0.004). For individuals who develop LOMS, a primary progressive course is frequent, with motor symptoms as the prominent feature. Vigilance is necessary to recognise MS in this population because of its unusual presentation.
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PMID:Clinical characteristics of patients with late-onset multiple sclerosis. 1828 94

Visual symptoms are often reported by patients with neck pain. The aim of the study was to report on the prevalence and most troublesome visual disturbances in subjects with neck pain. Seventy subjects with neck pain and seventy healthy control subjects answered questions about the presence and magnitude (/12) - product of frequency (0-4) and intensity (0-3) of each of 16 visual symptoms noted to be associated with neck pain and other possible causes. A visual complaint index (VCI) (/168) was generated from the sum of the magnitude rating of 14 significant symptoms. The neck pain group had significantly (P > 0.05) greater prevalence and magnitude of 14/16 visual complaints and VCI (mean 27.4) compared to control subjects (mean 6.2). The most prevalent symptoms were 'need to concentrate to read' (70%) and 'sensitivity to light' (58.6%). The least prevalent were 'double vision' (28.6%) and 'dizzy reading' (38.6%). The most troublesome symptoms (greatest magnitude) were 'need to concentrate to read' (3.4/12), 'visual fatigue' (3/12), 'difficulty judging distances' (2.1/12) and 'sensitivity to light' (2.1/12) while the least troublesome complaints were 'double vision' (0.5/12), 'red eyes' (1/12) and 'spots and words moving' (1/12). The characteristics of the visual symptoms were mostly consistent for those previously associated with neck pain. Subjects with traumatic neck pain had a significantly higher VCI compared to those with idiopathic neck pain. The results could help with differential diagnosis. The visual symptoms might be related to eye movement control disturbances in neck pain, however further research is required.
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PMID:Characteristics of visual disturbances reported by subjects with neck pain. 2452 26

About 4% of non-small-cell lung carcinomas involve an EML4-ALK tyrosine kinase fusion gene and occur almost absolutely in carcinomas arising in non-smokers. Crizotinib, the first inhibitor of anaplastic lymphoma kinase (ALK), ROS1 and c-Met receptor kinase, has been used in the treatment of ALK-positive non-small cell lung cancer. Side effects of crizotinib mostly consist of grade 1-2 gastrointestinal events (nausea, vomiting, diarrhea and constipation), grade 1-2 edema and fatigue; grade 1 visual disorders, rare cases of elevated liver enzymes and pneumonitis. We are presenting a case of adenocarcinoma of lung, who progressed on first-line chemotherapy and received crizotinib as second line therapy for 9 months. Patient has very good partial response to crizotinib and had some side effects of crizotinib like nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, fatigue, asthenia and anorexia, asymptomatic transaminitis in the first 2 to 3 weeks of therapy and managed symptomatically. But after 9 months, he developed sudden onset left sided vision loss. On fundoscopic examination he was found to have "cherry red spot" and fundus flourescein angiography revealed central retinal artery occlusion (CRAO). After 15 days of vision loss patient developed pleural effusion, and pleural fluid cytology was positive for malignant cells. Visual symptoms are very well known in the literature as side effects of crizotinib, but CRAO is not yet been documented. As this patient is not having any prothrombotic state like diabetes, hypertension, atherosclerosis, hyperhomocysteinemia or any genetic disorders except malignancy. Hypercoagulability disorders are known to be commonly associated with a variety of cancer types including lung cancer. This appears to be a sign of early crizotinib resistance in this patient because there was no history of prior hypercoagulable state. To the best of our knowledge this is the first case report in the world literature, as CRAO presenting as a sign of crizotinib resistance in an adenocarcinoma of lung patient who was on crizotinib.
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PMID:Central retinal artery occlusion, an early sign of crizotinib resistance in an alk positive adenocarcinoma of lung: A rare case report. 2760 84

Myalgic encephalomyelitis (ME) is a devastating disorder marked by debilitating fatigue. It not well understood and its diagnosis is controversial. It is very important therefore that significant clinical features are investigated. Visual symptoms in ME represent a group of distinct, quantifiable, clinical features that could significantly improve diagnosis and provide insights into underlying pathology. The purpose of the present study was therefore to explore the effect of ME on spatial windows of visibility using the spatial contrast sensitivity function. Contrast sensitivity was determined for stationary luminance-defined sinusoidal gratings spanning a five-octave range of spatial frequencies (0.5 to 16 c/deg) in a group of 19 individuals with ME and a group of 19 matched (age, gender) controls. Compared to controls, the ME group exhibited a restricted spatial window of visibility for encoding stimulus contrast. This was characterised principally by a contrast sensitivity deficit at lower spatial frequencies and a narrower bandwidth. Our findings suggest that contrast sensitivity deficits may represent a visual marker of ME, and be indicative of abnormal visual processing at the level of the retina and in the cortical and subcortical visual pathways.
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PMID:Restricted Spatial Windows of Visibility in Myalgic Encephalomyelitis (ME). 3173 66