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)

To the ill patient with diabetes, the behavioral symptoms of sickness such as fatigue and apathy are debilitating and can prevent recuperation. Here we report that peripherally administered insulin-like growth factor 1 (IGF-1) attenuates LPS-dependent depression of social exploration (sickness) in nondiabetic (db/+) but not in diabetic (db/db) mice. We show that the insulin/IGF-1 mimetic vanadyl sulfate (VS) is effective at augmenting recovery from sickness in both db/+ and db/db mice. Specifically, peak illness was reached at 2 h for both VS and control animals injected with LPS, and VS mice recovered 50% faster than non-VS-treated animals. Examination of the mechanism of VS action in db/+ mice showed that VS paradoxically augmented peritoneal macrophage responsivity to LPS, increasing both peritoneal and ex vivo macrophage production of IL-1beta and IL-6 but not TNF-alpha. The effects of VS in promoting recovery from sickness were not restricted to LPS, because they were also observed after direct administration of IL-1beta. To explore the possibility that VS impairs immune-to-brain communication via vagal afferents, the vagally mediated satiety-inducing effects of cholecystokinin 8 were tested in db/+ mice. Cholecystokinin decreased food intake in saline-injected mice but not in VS-treated mice. VS also inhibited LPS-dependent up-regulation of IL-1beta and IL-6 mRNA in the brain, while increasing by 50% the cerebral expression of transcripts of the specific antagonist of IL-1 receptors IL-1RA and IL-1R2. Taken together, these data indicate that VS improves recovery from LPS-induced sickness by blocking vagally mediated immune-to-brain signaling and by up-regulating brain expression of IL-1beta antagonists.
...
PMID:Inhibition of vagally mediated immune-to-brain signaling by vanadyl sulfate speeds recovery from sickness. 1621 19

An 80-year-old man presented to the internist with fever, fatigue and leukocytosis up to 66.8 x 10(3)/microl. Although a chronic myelogenous leukemia was initially suspected, he was diagnosed as metastatic bone marrow tumor with bone marrow necrosis from primary prostate cancer on the basis of the clinical and pathological findings. The serum concentrations of IL-6 and TNF-alpha were mildly elevated to 65.0 pg/ml and, 54.0 pg/ml respectively. It is probable that these humoral factors were partially responsible for the leukemoid reaction although other factors induced by the bone marrow necrosis with bone marrow metastasis of prostate cancer are also likely involved.
...
PMID:Leukemoid reaction in association with bone marrow necrosis due to metastatic prostate cancer. 1629 25

Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) is a progressive muscle-wasting disease due to a mutation in the dystrophin gene and the consequential protein deficiency in muscle. How the lack of the sarcolemmal protein dystrophin gives rise to the final disease status is still not clear. Several evidences suggest a role of nuclear factor kappa-B (NF-kappaB), a pleiotropic transcription factor, in muscle degeneration and regeneration in DMD patients and mdx mice. We investigated the effects of NF-kappaB blocking by pyrrolidine dithiocarbamate (PDTC), a well-known NF-kappaB inhibitor, on dystrophic process in mdx mice. Five-week-old mdx and wild-type mice received three times a week for 5 weeks either PDTC (50 mg/kg) or its vehicle. PDTC treatment: (i) increased forelimb strength (+20%; P < 0.05) and strength normalized to weight (+24%; P < 0.05) and a decreased fatigue percentage (-61%; P < 0.05) in mdx mice, (ii) blunted the augmented NF-kappaB nuclear binding activity and the enhanced TNF-alpha expression in dystrophic muscles (P < 0.01), (iii) at a quantitative morphological evaluation of extensor digitorum longus (EDL) and biceps muscles, increased area with normal fibers (P < 0.05, in EDL), reduced muscle necrosis (P < 0.05 in biceps; P < 0.01 in EDL), and enhanced muscle regeneration (P < 0.01, in biceps). Our data support the hypothesis that NF-kappaB contributes to the perpetuation of the dystrophic damage and show that its blockade produces beneficial effects on functional, biochemical, and morphological parameters in mdx mice. Most importantly, these new findings may have clinical implications for the pharmacological treatment of patients with DMD.
...
PMID:Nuclear factor kappa-B blockade reduces skeletal muscle degeneration and enhances muscle function in Mdx mice. 1641 3

Exercise for individuals with multiple sclerosis (MS) has been shown to improve cardiovascular function, increase strength and endurance, and reduce fatigue. The impact of exercise on immune function in the disease, however, remains mostly unexplored. Ten female MS patients participated in an 8 week programme of twice-weekly progressive resistance training, with pre- and post-training assessment of serum concentrations of cytokines IL-2, IL-4, IL-6, IL-10, CRP, TNF-alpha and IFN-gamma. After training, IL-4, IL-10, CRP and IFN-gamma showed statistically reduced resting concentrations in blood, while TNF-alpha showed non-significant reductions and IL-2 and IL-6 remained unchanged. These results suggest that progressive resistance training may have an impact on cytokine concentrations in individuals with MS and should be confirmed in studies with stronger statistical power. The impact of these changes on overall immune function in MS and on disease status and prognosis remains to be determined.
...
PMID:Cytokine responses to resistance training in people with multiple sclerosis. 1681 86

Oxidative stress is associated with muscle fatigue and weakness in skeletal muscle of ischemic heart disease patients. Recently, it was found that endurance training elevates protective heat shock proteins (HSPs) and antioxidant enzymes in skeletal muscle in healthy subjects and antioxidant enzymes in heart failure patients. However, it is unknown whether coronary ischemia and mild infarct without heart failure contributes to impairment of stress proteins and whether exercise training reverses those effects. We tested the hypothesis that exercise training would reverse alterations in muscle TNF-alpha, oxidative stress, HSP70, SOD (Mn-SOD, Cu,Zn-SOD), glutathione peroxidase (GPX), and catalase (CAT) due to chronic coronary occlusion of the left circumflex (CCO). Yucatan swine were divided into three groups (n = 6 each): sedentary with CCO (SCO); 12 wk of treadmill exercise training following CCO (ECO); and sham surgery controls (sham). Forelimb muscle mass-to-body mass ratio decreased by 27% with SCO but recovered with ECO. Exercise training reduced muscle TNF-alpha and oxidative stress (4-hydroxynonenal adducts) caused by CCO. HSP70 levels decreased with CCO (-45%), but were higher with exercise training (+348%). Mn-SOD activity, Mn-SOD protein expression, and Cu,Zn-SOD activity levels were higher in ECO than SCO by 72, 82, and 112%, respectively. GPX activity was 177% greater in ECO than in SCO. CAT trended higher (P = 0.059) in ECO compared with SCO. These data indicate that exercise training following onset of coronary artery occlusion results in recovery of critical stress proteins and reduces oxidative stress.
...
PMID:Exercise training reverses downregulation of HSP70 and antioxidant enzymes in porcine skeletal muscle after chronic coronary artery occlusion. 1687 55

Cancer chemotherapy-related symptoms such as fatigue, malaise, loss of interest in social activities, difficulty concentrating, and changes in sleep patterns can lead to treatment delays, dose reductions, or termination and have a profound effect on the physical, psychosocial, and economic aspects of quality of life. Clinicians have long suspected that these symptoms are similar to those associated with "sickness behavior," which is triggered by the production of the inflammatory cytokines IL-1beta, TNF-alpha, and IL-6 by macrophages and other cells of the innate immune system in response to immune challenge. The p38 mitogen-activated protein kinase (p38 MAPK) plays a central role in the production of these cytokines and consequently the induction of sickness behavior. Several cancer chemotherapy drugs have been shown to activate p38 MAPK, but whether these drugs can also induce the production of inflammatory cytokines to cause sickness behavior is unknown. The aim of this study was to determine whether the cancer chemotherapy drug etoposide (VP-16), which is known to activate p38 MAPK, could induce inflammatory cytokine production by murine macrophages and sickness-like behaviors when injected into mice. VP-16 activated p38 MAPK and induced IL-6 production in murine macrophages in a p38 MAPK- dependent manner. VP-16 administration rapidly increased serum levels of IL-6 in healthy mice and induced sickness-like behaviors as evidenced by a decrease in food intake, body weight, hemoglobin level, and voluntary wheel-running activity. These findings support the idea that the induction of IL-1beta, TNF-alpha, and IL-6 by cancer chemotherapy drugs underlies the fatigue and associated symptoms experienced by people undergoing cancer chemotherapy.
...
PMID:The cancer chemotherapy drug etoposide (VP-16) induces proinflammatory cytokine production and sickness behavior-like symptoms in a mouse model of cancer chemotherapy-related symptoms. 1700 55

There is increasing evidence that systemic inflammation plays an important role in the pathogenesis of COPD. Inflammatory markers show relationships with exercise performance, health related quality of life and breathlessness. These are important clinical outcomes in the management of COPD. Even more so is the consideration that systemic inflammation in COPD may be directly associated with mortality and deterioration of disease. Long-term exercise training clearly has beneficial properties in healthy subjects, whether the same is true in COPD remains to be seen. This review discusses aspects of the anti-inflammatory effects of exercise in relation to patients with COPD. There is intriguing evidence that the exercise-induced cytokine response differs in COPD patients compared with healthy subjects. We consider the role of IL-6 in the manifestation of fatigue in COPD and consider the implications of raised CRP- and TNF-alpha. Early data suggests beneficial effects of polyunsaturated fatty acid PUFA supplementation and exercise training in combination with appropriate nutritional support may yield rewarding therapeutic benefits. This review raises the hypothesis that physical training in COPD is associated with immunological changes that may confer anti-inflammatory benefits and in part, explain changes seen after pulmonary rehabilitation in COPD patients.
...
PMID:Exercise and the inflammatory response in chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD)--Does training confer anti-inflammatory properties in COPD? 1701 May 29

Infection commonly triggers nonspecific psychological and behavioral changes including fatigue and malaise, anhedonia, inability to concentrate, and disturbed sleep that collectively are termed "sickness behaviors". Converging evidence from several lines of research implicate the activities of proinflammatory cytokines as a cause of sickness behaviors. Here we elaborate upon the findings of previous research by examining whether infection-associated elevations in local proinflammatory cytokines are associated with increased negative mood and decreased positive mood. One hundred and eighty-nine healthy adults were experimentally exposed to rhinovirus or influenza virus during a 6-day period of quarantine. Infection, objective signs of illness, nasal IL-1beta, IL-6, and TNF-alpha, and self-reported affect were assessed at baseline and on each of the five post-challenge quarantine days. In the 153 persons who became infected following exposure to the challenge virus, daily production of IL-6, but not IL-1beta or TNF-alpha, was associated with reduced concurrent daily positive affect. One-day lagged analyses showed that daily production of all three cytokines was related to lower positive affect on the next day. All lagged associations were independent of previous-day positive affect and objective signs of illness (mucus production, mucociliary clearance function). There were no associations between cytokines and negative affect. Findings support a causal association between pathogen-induced local cytokine production and changes in positive affect over a 24-h timeline.
...
PMID:Infection-induced proinflammatory cytokines are associated with decreases in positive affect, but not increases in negative affect. 1705 18

While described in the past, the frequency and degree of fatigue associated with symptomatic coccidioidomycosis has never been quantified. Using the Fatigue Severity Scale (FSS), severe fatigue (FSS score = 41) was found in 65% of cases of active coccidioidomycosis compared to 42% in cohort of control subjects with chronic medical diseases (P=0.024). Fatigue in patients with symptomatic coccidioidomycosis declined significantly over four months (P=0.023). Severe fatigue in patients with symptomatic coccidioidomycosis was significantly associated with low body mass index (BMI; P=0.024) but was not significantly associated with either serum leptin (r2=0.078, P=0.261) or serum TNF-alpha (r2=0.028, P=0.504) concentrations. Severe fatigue is a common condition among patients with active coccidioidomycosis and is associated with a declining BMI.
...
PMID:Fatigue in coccidioidomycosis. Quantification and correlation with clinical, immunological, and nutritional factors. 1707 51

Increased cytokine and neopterin levels may be responsible for cancer-related fatigue, the most common complaint among cancer patients. We quantitatively reviewed empirical findings on this topic, focusing on studies not using immunotherapy. PubMed, PsychINFO and BIOSIS were searched for articles published until July 2006. Studies remained unweighted or were weighted according to study quality and sample size. The correlation coefficient r was used for statistical analyses. Heterogeneity among the studies was examined using the I(2) index. Eighteen studies (1037 participants) of moderately high methodological quality were located and statistically analyzed. Most studies measured more than one inflammatory marker, resulting in a total of 58 correlation estimates. In 31 of these, we had to input a null correlation because results had been simply reported as nonsignificant and no further statistical information was available. General analyses based on weighting according to sample size showed a significantly positive correlation between fatigue and circulating levels of inflammatory markers (r=0.11, p<0.0001). Analyses of individual inflammatory markers revealed significantly positive correlations between fatigue and IL-6 (r=0.12, p=0.004), fatigue and IL-1 ra (r=0.24, p=0.0005), and fatigue and neopterin (r=0.22, p=0.0001). Fatigue did not correlate significantly with IL-1 beta (r=0.05, p=0.42) or TNF-alpha (r=0.04, p=0.34). Given its preliminary nature due to the limited available data, this quantitative review showed a positive association between cancer-related fatigue and circulating levels of IL-6, IL-1 ra and neopterin. Future studies examining the relationship between cancer related fatigue and inflammation would benefit from multiple rather than single blood sampling and from repeated daily ratings of the multidimensional nature of fatigue.
...
PMID:The association between fatigue and inflammatory marker levels in cancer patients: a quantitative review. 1717 9


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 Next >>