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 report a 54-year-old man with vitamin B12 deficiency myelopathy limited to the upper extremity region. He was well until October, 1995, when he had an onset of exertional dyspnea and general fatigue. Then he noted tingling sensation in bilateral upper extremities in March, 1996. He had undergone total gastrectomy due to gastric ulcer 15 years ago. Neurological examination revealed superficial and vibratory sensory loss in the upper extremities distal to elbows, and pseudoathetoid movement of the left fingers. Otherwise neurological examination was unremarkable. Laboratory examination revealed macrocytic anemia, and low serum vitamin B12. However, serum folate was within the normal range. In SEP studies, median nerve stimulation evoked peripheral N9 and N13 potentials, but not cortical N20 one. Posterior tibial nerve stimulation elicited normal responses. MEP, VEP, needle EMG, and nerve conduction studies gave normal findings. T2-weighted MRI showed high signal intensity lesions at the C1-Th1 level in the posterior column, especially in the cuneate fascicles. The gracile fascicles were spared. This is a very rare case of myelopathy due to vitamin B12 deficiency presenting only sensory disturbances in both upper extremities. The lesions limited in the cuneate fascicle were confirmed by electrophysiological, and neuroradiological examinations.
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PMID:[Myelopathy due to vitamin B12 deficiency presenting only sensory disturbances in upper extremities: a case report]. 916 47

Stress fractures are ubiquitary and most often caused by the subject's activities. In the past they occurred mostly in recruits, but today they are frequent in sportsmen. Stress fractures most frequently occur in the lower limbs, especially in the distal leg. We reviewed 32 injuries observed January, 1993, to June, 1995, and found that 25% of them had been misdiagnosed as stress fractures: in the cases where the diagnosis was correct, fatigue fractures (32%) were less frequent than insufficiency fractures (68%) and occurred in young subjects (mean age: 24 years), usually sportsmen (2/3 of cases). Insufficiency fractures may occur in people aged 8 to 81 years (mean: 61 years) and in subjects with metabolic disorders (45.5%). Considering the injury biomechanics and the patient history and symptoms, these lesions appear a rather uncommon event, whose radiologic diagnosis must be confirmed by clinical findings, since radiology mostly (81.6% of cases) showed only the repair process, rather than the fracture itself. The radiologic patterns were classified into three groups: the fracture margin was not shown in 70% of cases (group I), where however intraperiosteal reaction and/or soft tissue effusion were found; bone fracture was shown in 3 cases (group II) and fracture sequels in 4 (group III), where bone thickening (3 cases) or abnormal consolidation (1 case) was found. There are several synonyms of "stress fracture" and confusion is increased because stress lines and other not necessarily abnormal signs such as Park or Harris lines, reinforcement or calcification lines, are often grouped together with stress fractures. Only accurate clinical examination and laboratory findings permit to distinguish fatigue from insufficiency stress fractures and the latter are also very difficult to differentiate from pathologic fractures. The differentiation of fatigue from insufficiency fractures, originally made by English speaking authors, may be confusing because the definition "pathologic fractures" should be reserved only to focal injuries while in the past it included also insufficiency fractures. Thus, only (bone) fatigue injuries in patients exercising intensely and constantly should be considered stress fractures. Conventional radiography is an indispensable tool and MRI is used in selected cases where the former method is negative and in the patients needing early mobility to go back to work. If radiographic findings are questionable for metastases, nuclear medicine is the method of choice and CT and/or MRI may be indicated as second-line diagnostic imaging tools.
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PMID:[Clinico-radiologic considerations on "stress fractures" of the leg]. 922 7

The side-effects and complications of posteroventral pallidotomy are analysed in 138 consecutive patients who underwent 152 pallidotomies. Transient side-effects, lasting less than three months, appeared in 18% of the patients, that is, 16.5% of the surgical procedures. Long term complications, lasting more than 6 months, were noted in 10% of the patients, that is, 9.2% of the surgical procedures. Sixteen complications occurred alone or in various combinations in 14 patients and included fatigue and sleepiness (2), worsening of memory (4), depression (1), aphonia (1), dysarthria (3), scotoma (1), slight facial and leg paresis (2) and delayed stroke (2). Complications such as dysarthria and paresis could be attributed to MR- or CT-verified pallidal lesions lying too medially and encroaching on the internal capsule. Two of the patients with deterioration in memory had some memory impairment before surgery, and the aphonic patient had dysphonia preoperatively. The study suggests that stereotactic MRI and careful impedance monitoring and macro-stimulation of the posteroventral pallidum area should be sufficient for minimizing the risk of complications; the stereotactic lesion should be centered within the posterior ventral pallidum without involvement of internal capsule. It is concluded that pallidotomy is a safe procedure if performed on cognitively alert patients, and it seems that both the incidence and especially the severity of complications are lower for posteroventral pallidotomy than for thalamotomy.
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PMID:The side-effects and complications of posteroventral pallidotomy. 923 12

This trial tested the assumed efficacy and safety of external beam-radiotherapy combined with daily administration of low dose cisplatin (CDDP) (ERCLC therapy) for patients with glioblastoma multiforme (GBM). Thirty adult patients with supratentorial GBM received daily postoperative treatment with low dose intravenous CDDP (4-6 mg/m2) administered 30 minutes before external irradiation. In 10 patients, intraoperative radiotherapy (IORT) following surgery was given prior to ERCLC therapy. Tumor response on MRI, interval to tumor progression, survival, and toxicities were analyzed. None of the patients showed a tumor response to ERCIC therapy. Overall, the median time to tumor progression was 6 months with a 1-year tumor progression-free rate of 26.7% and a 2-year rate of 0%. The median survival time was 15 months with a 1-year survival rate of 69.9% and a 2-year rate of 31.5%. The survival rate of patients with IORT was better than that of those without IORT, however, there was no significant difference. Anorexia associated with nausea occurred in 70% and general fatigue in 10.0%. Leukopenia and thrombocytopenia occurred in 26.7% and 33.3%, respectively. However, none of the patients had to be withdrawn from therapy due to these toxicities. Other toxicities were not observed. This clinical study showed that daily administration of low dose CDDP did not enhance tumor response to irradiation for GBM on MRI. Regarding toxicity, however, ERCLC therapy was well tolerated. Although this trial did not provide sufficient data to determine whether ERCLC therapy was effective for GBM due to the small number of patients, additional clinical trials of this therapy may be warranted because that the survival rate in this study was equal to the better results recently reported for newly diagnosed GBM.
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PMID:Clinical trial of external beam-radiotherapy combined with daily administration of low-dose cisplatin for supratentorial glioblastoma multiforme--a pilot study. 926 43

Interferon gamma (IFN-gamma) and tumor necrosis factor alpha (TNF-alpha) are proinflammatory cytokines which may be involved in the pathogenesis of MS. IFN-alpha counteracts many of the proinflammatory actions of IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha. We treated 20 patients with relapsing-remitting (RR) MS with 9 MIU of recombinant IFN-alpha-2a (rIFN-alpha) (n = 12) or placebo (n = 8) intramuscularly every other day for 6 months. Clinical exacerbations or new or enlarging lesions at serial MRI occurred in 2/12 rIFN-alpha-treated and in 7/8 placebo-treated patients (P < 0.005). Only one new MRI lesion was detected in the rIFN-alpha group, while 27 new or enlarging lesions were detected in placebo group (P < 0.01). Baseline lymphocyte IFN-gamma (19.10 +/- 7.12 U ml-1) and TNF-alpha (18.05 +/- 5.34 pg ml-1) production significantly decreased to 3.03 +/- 0.66 (P < 0.04) (for IFN-gamma) and to 5.78 +/- 0.90 (P < 0.04) (for TNF-alpha) after rIFN-alpha treatment. IFN-gamma and TNF-alpha production was unchanged in the placebo group. rIFN-alpha was tolerated without drop-outs or serious side-effects, but fever, malaise, fatigue (interfering with daily activities in two patients) and leukopenia frequently occurred. High-dose chronic systemic rIFN-alpha might reduce clinical and MRI signs of disease activity in RRMS. The changes in cytokine production suggest that the effect is probably mediated by a down-regulation of proinflammatory cytokine.
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PMID:Interferon alpha treatment of relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis: long-term study of the correlations between clinical and magnetic resonance imaging results and effects on the immune function. 934 96

Twenty relapsing-remitting (RR) clinically definite MS patients were treated with 9 MIU intramuscular recombinant interferon alpha-2a (rIFNA) (Roferon-A, Roche) (n = 12) or placebo (n = 8) every other day for 6 months and followed up for a further 6 months after stopping treatment. Numbers of active lesions at MRI and of patients with clinical-MRI signs of disease activity and lymphocyte interferon gamma production, which were decreased during treatment, returned to values similar to baseline and placebos after stopping treatment. rIFNA chronic therapy seems therefore needed in order to maintain drug efficacy. Side effect profile was monitored, too, for over 1 year in the same 20 patients plus 25 additional RR MS patients. Besides the typical side effects of type I interferon therapy (fever, fatigue, depression, lymphopenia, hepatic enzyme elevation), occurrence of serum autoAbs was noted in 30% patients (in 60% antinuclear and in 80% antithyroid autoAbs). In two patients rIFNA treatment was stopped, in one case for antithyroid autoAbs and hypothyroidism, in the other for antinuclear autoAbs and a five-fold increase of ALT. A careful monitoring of serum autoAbs and of signs of thyroid or liver damage must always precede and accompany longterm type I IFN therapy.
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PMID:Long term recombinant interferon alpha treatment in MS with special emphasis to side effects. 934 19

In BOLD fMRI a detailed analysis of the MRI signal time course sometimes shows time differences between different activated regions. Some researchers have suggested that these latencies could be used to infer the temporal order of activation of these cortical regions. Several effects must be considered, however, before interpreting these latencies. The effect of a slice-dependent time shift (SDTS) with multi-slice acquisitions, for instance, may be important for regions located on different slices. After correction for this SDTS effect the time dispersion between activated regions is significantly decreased and the correlation between the MRI signal time course and the stimulation paradigm is improved. Another effect to consider is the latency which may exist between perception and stimulus presentation. It is shown that the control of perception can be achieved using a finger-spanning technique during the fMRI acquisition. The use of this perception profile rather than an arbitrary waveform derived from the paradigm proves to be a powerful alternative to fMRI data processing, especially with chemical senses studies, when return to baseline is not always correlated to stimulus suppression. This approach should also be relevant to other kinds of stimulation tasks, as a realistic way of monitoring the actual task performance, which may depend on attention, adaptation, fatigue or even variability of stimulus presentation.
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PMID:Latencies in fMRI time-series: effect of slice acquisition order and perception. 943 Mar 53

A 31-year-old woman with a five year history of seizures complained of worsening fatigue and attention deficits. At age 26, neuroradiological imaging studies had shown a small, non-enhancing hypodense lesion involving the left frontobasal and subcallosal region. Follow-up CT and MRI images showed that the lesion had not changed. A stereotactic biopsy showed a dysembryoplastic neuroepithelial tumor (DNT). The lesion was subtotally resected and the diagnosis of DNT was fully confirmed. However, the distinction between oligodendroglioma, ganglioglioma, focal dysplastic cerebral cortex, and DNT was only possible with knowledge of the clinical and neuroradiological data.
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PMID:Case of the month: May 1997--a 31 year old woman with seizures, fatigue and attention deficits. 945 79

Dorsal fusion with the internal fixator has become the standard treatment of instabilities and deformities of the thoracolumbar spine. With our new device, the modular spine fixator (MSF), which has been specially designed for short-distance instrumentations, we have increasingly been treating unstable injuries of the thoracolumbar spine by one-level stabilization. Prerequisite is an accurate evaluation of the indication, including CT and MRI to assess the involvement of the intervertebral disc and the ligamental structures. The operative technique differs in some details from the procedure in more-multi-level instrumentations, especially concerning the application of the pedicle screws. The instrumentation is always combined with posterior allogenic bone grafting. Since the beginning of 1993 we also perform anterior autogenic transpedicular bone grafting. Between January 1991 and July 1995, 57 one-level stabilizations with the MSF were performed. Of the 57 patients operated on 39, 27 men and 12 women, with an average age of 41 years, have had a clinical and radiographic follow-up examination so far, on average, 27 months after the accident. Seventeen patients were completely free of pain and 17 patients (were only) sensitive to weather changes or had minor pain during great physical stress. Five patients had pain even during slight physical stress or at rest. The preoperatively measured Cobb angle was 15.1 degrees on average, after the operation 5.2 degrees, and at the time of the follow-up examination amounted to 8.1 degrees. The patients' range of motion was normal. Only five minor complications have been seen. No implant fatigue failure has been noted in this series. We derive from these results that, for correct indications, one-level stabilization can be performed successfully and should be firmly established in the operative treatment of unstable fractures of the thoracolumbar spine.
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PMID:[Monosegmental internal fixator instrumentation and fusion in treatment of fractures of the thoracolumbar spine. Indications, technique and results]. 948 May 58

A 16 year old boy with epilepsy and learning difficulties is reported. At 3 years of age he was diagnosed with common acute lymphoblastic leukaemia, and received therapy according to the UK protocol, UKALL VIII. This included prophylactic CNS radiotherapy and chemotherapy. He did not develop CNS leukaemia, and complete remission was achieved. At age 7, he began to experience lethargy and learning difficulties, especially problems with hand-writing, concentration and memory. Furthermore, he began experiencing atypical absence seizures, which were provoked by concentration at times of tiredness. EEG showed bilateral non-specific abnormalities, with some epileptiform features. Over the following 9 years, several anti-epileptic drugs were prescribed. Although with the changes in therapy initial remissions have been achieved, the seizures have, each time, continued to relapse. At age 12, EEG was very abnormal, showing frequent generalized slow or sharp waves. At age 13, MRI revealed multiple discrete small high-intensity lesions in the subcortical white matter of both hemispheres. Problems with lethargy, concentration and memory persist and although multiple anti-epileptic drugs have been prescribed, seizures continue to occur almost daily.
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PMID:Leukoencephalopathy after CNS prophylaxis for acute lymphoblastic leukaemia. 966 10


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