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Query: UMLS:C0015672 (fatigue)
51,768 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Recent electron probe analytic studies of freeze-dried cryosections of vascular smooth and vertebrate striated muscle are reviewed. The results show that the sarcoplasmic reticulum of striated muscle is not in ionic communication with the extracellular space. Vacuolation by hypertonic solutions and fatigue involves the T-tubule system. The high calcium content of the terminal cisternae of the resting muscle has been quantitated in situ. In smooth muscle, the high Cl content is distributed in the cytoplasm, and mitochondria in rabbit portal vein smooth muscle cells do not contain high concentrations of calcium. Mitochondrial calcium loading in the form of granules is generally due to fiber damage. Nuclear and mitochondrial composition in situ has been quantitated and compared to the composition of the cytoplasm of the same cells. Preliminary phosphorus x-ray maps of smooth muscle show the feasibility of this approach in defining the composition of organelles in thin cryosections. The use of x-ray maps at intermediate resolution is illustrated with tropomyosin paracrystals labelled with Hg-containing dye at the thiol residues. Mercury x-ray maps of such paracrystals show the 40nm periodicity of the thiol groups and their Fourier transforms contain information to a spatial resolution of 10-20nm.
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PMID:Electron probe analysis of muscle and X-ray mapping of biological specimens with a field emission gun. 52 37

Periodic sleep apnea may be due to repeated episodes of upper airway obstruction in patients who have a short thick neck and/or large jowls. Apnea due to complete cessation of breathing may occur to a lesser extent. Anaylsis of the sleep electroencephalogram shows that these patients rarely achieve deep sleep and have less stage 1-REM sleep than normal subjects of comparable age. They are chronically sleep-deprived, a manifestation expressed by daytime somnolence, chronic fatigue and often by personality disturbances marked by paranoia, agitated depression and hostility. The definitive diagnosis of this syndrome may be established by monitoring during sleep, the electroencephalogram, measuring abdominal excursions through a mercury-in-Silastic-strain gauge and recording air flow at the nose by means of a thermocouple. As demonstrated by other investigators, chronic hypoventilation during sleep leads to both pulmonary and systemic arterial hypertension, which may produce generalized cardiac enlargement and congestive heart failure. The abnormalities in the periodic sleep apnea syndrome are abolished by establishing a patent airway either through tracheostomy or weight reduction.
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PMID:Periodic sleep apnea: chronic sleep deprivation related to intermittent upper airway obstruction and central nervous system disturbance. 111 91

A multicenter open trial involving 50 hypertension patients enabled evaluation of the efficacy and tolerability of Isoptine L.P. (sustained release verapamil) in mild to moderate essential hypertension. Following a 2-week placebo run-in period, patients were given Isoptine L.P. (240 mg/24 h) as a morning dose for 3 months, with a possible dose increase (360 mg/24 h) in case of diastolic blood pressure of 95 mmHg or more at the 30-day evaluation. Blood pressure was measured by mercury sphygmomanometer and, in 20 patients, by a Dinamap type Automatic device. After 3 months of treatment, blood pressure levels in supine and standing position, measured manually and automatically, showed a highly significant decrease, with a mean fall of 18.4 mmHg for systolic (13.7 percent) and 13.2 mmHg diastolic (-14.6 percent). 67 percent of patients were responders after 1 month of treatment and 79 percent at 3 months, including one-fifth at the dose of 360 mg/24 h. Seventeen patients, i.e. 34 percent, reported one or more adverse reactions. Among these, four patients had to stop treatment, twice because of headache and twice for constipation. Adverse events seen most frequently were constipation, headache, tiredness and vomiting. No cardiac adverse events were reported with the exception of one case of atrial premature contractions. The electrocardiogram revealed significant slowing of heart rate, as well as slight prolongation of PR and QT intervals and slight widening of the QRS complex. Tolerability on the basis of laboratory parameters was good.
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PMID:[Efficacy and tolerability of isoptine LP in mild to moderate hypertension. A multicenter study with 50 patients]. 130 Sep 22

Possible effects of mercury on the central nervous system (CNS) were examined in a group of chloralkali workers exposed to mercury (n = 89) and compared with a control group (n = 75), by registration of subjective symptoms, personality changes, forearm tremor, and performance on six computerised psychometric tests in the two groups. The groups were similar in age, education, verbal comprehension, and work tasks. In the chloralkali group, median blood mercury concentration (B-Hg) was 55 nmol/l, serum mercury concentration (S-Hg) 45 nmol/l, and urine mercury concentration (U-Hg) 14.3 nmol/mmol creatinine (25.4 micrograms/g creatinine). Corresponding concentrations in the control group were 15 nmol/l, 4 nmol/l, and 1.1 nmol/mmol creatinine (1.9 micrograms/g creatinine) respectively. The number of self reported symptoms, the scores for tiredness and confusion in the profile of mood states (POMS), and the degree of neuroticism in the Eysenck personality inventory (EPI), were significantly higher in the mercury exposed group compared with the controls. Performance on the psychometric tests and tremor frequency spectra did not differ significantly between the two groups. Dose-response calculations showed weak but statistically significant relations between symptom prevalence and current mercury concentrations in both blood and urine. The performance on three of the psychometric tests was negatively correlated with earlier peak exposures. The findings indicate a slight mercury induced effect on the CNS among the chloralkali workers.
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PMID:Effects of occupational exposure to mercury vapour on the central nervous system. 151 46

Long term exposure to low doses of mercury or lead can induce neurasthenic symptoms with slight cognitive deficits, lability, fatigue, decreased stress tolerance, and decreased simultaneous capacity. After exposure to higher concentrations permanent neuropsychological deficits can be seen. The present paper gives a new idea of possible molecular mechanisms underlying the symptoms. Impairments of astrocyte function are probably important, especially due to their capacity to regulate the ionic and amino acid concentration in the extracellular micromilieu, brain energy metabolism, and cell volume. Recent results have shown that these functions are under monoaminergic control. Aspects of therapy are outlined.
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PMID:Chronic encephalopathies induced by mercury or lead: aspects of underlying cellular and molecular mechanisms. 157 Dec 93

Three siblings with inhaled elemental mercury toxicity are described, and the signs and symptoms of mercury toxicity, interpretation of mercury concentrations, and management of elemental mercury exposure are reviewed. A 4-year-old girl was admitted to the hospital with a history of fever and increasing irritability, fatigue, malaise, insomnia, headache, anorexia, and ataxia. She was discharged two days later with a diagnosis of acute cerebellar ataxia. During the following 18 days, the child's condition worsened, and she was rehospitalized. Meanwhile her 11-year-old sister was hospitalized for evaluation of fatigue, weakness, lower back pain, and ataxia. The older girl's blood mercury concentration, at 5.5 micrograms/dL, was in the toxic range. Twenty-four-hour urine mercury screening confirmed mercury intoxication in both children. Questioning revealed that the girls' brother had recently spilled 0.5-1 oz of elemental mercury in the house. All family members underwent blood and urine mercury testing. The brother underwent a dimercaprol challenge to determine his tissue mercury burden, which was found to be greater than 2.4 micrograms/dL. The sisters underwent two courses of chelation therapy with dimercaprol. Symptoms persisted in all three children, and they underwent five 10-day cycles of N-acetyl-D,L-penicillamine (NAP) therapy; the youngest underwent a third dimercaprol regimen. All siblings continued NAP chelation therapy because of extensive tissue mercury burden until the results of repeated urine mercury concentration determinations were normal.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Elemental mercury poisoning. 174 59

The study was carried out in 89 men aged 21 to 57 years with a history of exposure to mercury vapour from 2 to 26 years during occupational work involving chlorine production by the method of mercury electrolysis. The workers were divided into three groups depending on the duration of occupational exposure: 1) 32 workers with a short history of exposure 2-10 years, 2) 37 workers with medium-long exposure - 11-20 years, and 3) 20 workers with a history of long exposure - 21-26 years. The urinary concentrations of mercury in these individuals was 73 +/- 60 microliters x 1(-1), and in blood this concentration was not exceeding 50 microliters x 1(-1). The control group comprised 40 men aged 17 to 52 years. They had not had any occupational exposure to chemicals, or harmful physical factors. On the basis of clinical, haematological and biochemical studies 89 workers with occupational exposure to mercury vapour were regarded as clinically healthy. None of them had any symptoms and signs of the complete neurasthenic syndrome or organic brain injury. Increased nervous excitability was the complaint of 24 workers, 9 had headaches, sleep disturbances were reported by 5, and a feeling of tiredness and apathy was mentioned by 5 men. EEG recording demonstrated 81 normal tracings, and moderately pathological records in 8 men. The parameters of immunity and proteins acute phase reaction were determined, measuring the concentration of immunoglobulins, lysozyme, C3c, C4, alpha 1-acid glycoprotein, haptoglobin and ceruloplasmin in serum. A lower level of IgA, IgG and lysozyme was only noted in individuals with occupational exposure exceeding 20 years.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Parameters of immunity acute phase reaction in men in relation to exposure duration to mercury vapours. 172 75

The findings presented here suggest that mercury poisoning from dental amalgam may play a role in the etiology of cardiovascular disorders. Comparisons between subjects with and without amalgam showed amalgam-bearing subjects had significantly higher blood pressure, lower heart rate, lower hemoglobin, and lower hematocrit. Hemoglobin, hematocrit, and red blood cells were significantly lower when correlated to increased levels of urine mercury. The amalgam subjects had a greater incidence of chest pains, tachycardia, anemia, fatigue, tiring easily, and being tired in the morning. The data suggest that inorganic mercury poisoning from dental amalgam does affect the cardiovascular system.
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PMID:The relationship between mercury from dental amalgam and the cardiovascular system. 227 Apr 68

Muscle fatigue is a prominent symptom in patients with chronic heart failure (CHF). To determine whether it results from an intrinsic abnormality of vasodilating capacity of the vasculature in exercising muscle, we studied local forearm blood flow (FBF) during exercise in 13 patients with severe CHF and in eight normal untrained subjects of similar age. Intermittent forearm static exercise was performed by squeezing a hand dynamometer for 5 seconds, three times per minute, for 5 minutes at 15%, 30%, and 45% of maximum voluntary contraction. FBF was measured by mercury-in-rubber strain gauge venous plethysmography at baseline before exercise and during the last 3 minutes of each exercise state. Exercise was repeated after 24 hours of intravenous administration of milrinone in the patients with CHF. FBF increased with forearm exercise in a reproducible manner during 24 hours in the normal subjects: rest, 2.54 +/- 0.23 (0 hours), 2.90 +/- 0.23, (24 hours); 15%, 7.25 +/- 0.92, 5.85 +/- 0.56; 30%, 9.20 +/- 1.08, 10.05 +/- 0.85; 45%, 14.62 +/- 1.64, 13.85 +/- 1.09 ml/100 ml/min; p = NS, 0 versus 24 hours. In patients with CHF, FBF was reduced at baseline compared with normal subjects (1.70 +/- 0.15 ml/100 ml/min, p less than 0.05), but no significant differences from normal subjects were observed during exercise (15%, 5.04 +/- 0.65; 30%, 7.64 +/- 0.99; 45%, 12.56 +/- 1.20 ml/100 ml/min). Peak exercise blood flow was correlated negatively with central venous pressure (r = -0.65, p less than 0.05) and positively with right ventricular ejection fraction (r = 0.59, p less than 0.05).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Muscle blood flow during forearm exercise in patients with severe heart failure. 237 94

Pharmacotherapy of hypertension in the aged does not differ qualitatively but only quantitatively from that in use for younger patients. Adjusted, usually lower doses of diuretics, beta-blocking agents, ACE-inhibitors and calcium-channel blockers are the basic drugs. Individual aging processes and concomitant diseases determine the choice of drugs in the elderly (individualized therapy). All substances are initially prescribed at very low dose. The increasing infirmity of the aged often associated with tiredness, dyspnea and dizziness even without treatment requires careful instruction of the patient about effects and side effects of the prescribed medication. The old WHO-guidelines (systolic BP greater than or equal to 160, diastolic BP greater than or equal to 95 mm mercury) should be maintained for diagnosis and treatment of hypertension. However antihypertensive therapy in patients over 80 years of age and in those with marginally elevated diastolic or solely elevated systolic pressure is controversial today.
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PMID:[Hypertension and old age]. 268 25


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