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

In two patients, men aged 78 and 42 years respectively, an empty-sella syndrome was found. The first patient presented with chronic fatigue, in the second the empty sella was the late result of prior neurosurgery followed by external irradiation. Both suffered from panhypopituitarism. In both cases the diagnosis was confirmed following laboratory tests and MRI. Hormone-replacement therapy was found to provide adequate treatment. The course of the empty-sella syndrome is usually benign and with adequate hormone-replacement therapy a good quality of life is maintained.
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PMID:[Empty sella syndrome as the cause of panhypopituitarism]. 1475 Apr 53

Pheochromocytoma is a rare entity. When it presents during pregnancy, rapid recognition and diagnosis are crucial in order to avoid the maternal and fetal morbidity and mortality associated with severe, uncontrolled hypertension. Difficulties arise from the differential diagnosis of pre-eclampsia. We report two patients operated on for pheochromocytoma during pregnancy. The first patient developed new-onset hypertension in early pregnancy. Prior to presentation, there had been non-specific signs of endocrine disorder, namely a mild diabetes, but no hypertension requiring medication. The second patient sought medical care for irregular heartbeat, shortness of breath, and fatigue during the 6th week of pregnancy. She was found to be hypertensive; diagnostic evaluation revealed substantially increased catecholamine levels. The diagnosis was made by elevated urinary catecholamines and by MRI scan as well as ultrasonography, both of which demonstrated an adrenal mass. Both patients underwent surgical extirpation of the affected adrenal gland. The procedure was performed laparoscopically in the case of the second patient. Pre-operatively, both patients were pre-treated with alpha-blockade followed by secondary beta-blockade. Patient two also received methyldopa for control of hypertension. Both patients were readily weaned from antihypertensive medications post-operatively, with complete resolution of hypertension within a few hours. Each pregnancy progressed normally to term.
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PMID:Pheochromocytoma during pregnancy: laparoscopic and conventional surgical treatment of two cases. 1503 75

The relationship between performance on information processing efficiency measures and MRI-derived lesion volume including global and regional T2 and T1 lesion volumes was investigated in 20 patients with relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis (RRMS) and secondary progressive multiple sclerosis (SPMS). Processing speed, as measured by the Sternberg Memory Scanning Test, was significantly correlated with posterior fossa lesion volume and slowed reaction time in seven out of eight patients (six out of seven with SPMS) with any lesion volume in the posterior fossa suggesting a 'threshold effect'. Processing capacity as measured by the Salthouse Keeping Track Test was not significantly correlated with the MRI measures. Cognitive performance did not correlate with Expanded Disability Status Scale score, depression or fatigue, and patients performed within normal limits on tests of attention/concentration ability. The significant relationship between posterior fossa lesion volume and memory scanning speed in this study suggests that pathological damage in the posterior fossa may contribute to slowed cognitive processing and may be an important direction for future studies of cognitive function in multiple sclerosis. Lack of correlation of cognitive measures with the other MRI measures may be due to low lesion volume relative to other studies, sample composition, and limited pathological specificity of the MRI measures.
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PMID:Posterior fossa lesion volume and slowed information processing in multiple sclerosis. 1509 Apr 76

A 27-year-old woman was admitted to the hospital with a depression, anaemia and fatigue. She had come from Angola to the Netherlands as a refugee 2 years before this evaluation. As an explanation for her symptoms tropical infectious diseases of parasitic origin were considered, but no clues were found in this direction. The test for trypanosomiasis was considered to be suggestive for an infection in the past (persistent titre 1:200). She was discharged but readmitted 6 months later because of a deterioration of her clinical condition. Magnetic resonance imaging showed bilateral signal abnormalities within the white matter of the brain. On examination no neurological signs or abnormalities were found. Again, no definite diagnosis could be made and the patient was discharged. Because of a further deterioration of her clinical condition she was readmitted a short time later for the third time. On the MRI the white matter lesions had increased. The serum protein electrophoresis was markedly abnormal with an elevated IgM Level. Finally, at a repeated lumbar puncture mobile trypanosomes were found. The diagnosis of 'West African sleeping sickness' was made and the patient was treated with eflornithine. She recovered completely during the next 18 months.
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PMID:[Clinical reasoning and decision making in practice. A depressive foreign woman with symptoms of malaise]. 1545 26

Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) is characterized by a debilitating fatigue of unknown aetiology. Patients who suffer from CFS report a variety of physical complaints as well as neuropsychological complaints. Therefore, it is conceivable that the CNS plays a role in the pathophysiology of CFS. The purpose of this study was to investigate neural correlates of CFS, and specifically whether there exists a linkage between disturbances in the motor system and CFS. We measured behavioural performance and cerebral activity using rapid event-related functional MRI in 16 CFS patients and 16 matched healthy controls while they were engaged in a motor imagery task and a control visual imagery task. CFS patients were considerably slower on performance of both tasks, but the increase in reaction time with increasing task load was similar between the groups. Both groups used largely overlapping neural resources. However, during the motor imagery task, CFS patients evoked stronger responses in visually related structures. Furthermore, there was a marked between-groups difference during erroneous performance. In both groups, dorsal anterior cingulate cortex was specifically activated during error trials. Conversely, ventral anterior cingulate cortex was active when healthy controls made an error, but remained inactive when CFS patients made an error. Our results support the notion that CFS may be associated with dysfunctional motor planning. Furthermore, the between-groups differences observed during erroneous performance point to motivational disturbances as a crucial component of CFS.
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PMID:Neural correlates of the chronic fatigue syndrome--an fMRI study. 1524 Apr 35

A three-dimensional (3D) MRI-based computational model with multicomponent plaque structure and fluid-structure interactions (FSI) is introduced to perform mechanical analysis for human atherosclerotic plaques and identify critical flow and stress/strain conditions which may be related to plaque rupture. Three-dimensional geometry of a human carotid plaque was reconstructed from 3D MR images and computational mesh was generated using Visualization Toolkit. Both the artery wall and the plaque components were assumed to be hyperelastic, isotropic, incompressible, and homogeneous. The flow was assumed to be laminar, Newtonian, viscous, and incompressible. The fully coupled fluid and structure models were solved by ADINA, a well-tested finite element package. Results from two-dimensional (2D) and 3D models, based on ex vivo MRI and histological images (HI), with different component sizes and plaque cap thickness, under different pressure and axial stretch conditions, were obtained and compared. Our results indicate that large lipid pools and thin plaque caps are associated with both extreme maximum (stretch) and minimum (compression when negative) stress/strain levels. Large cyclic stress/strain variations in the plaque under pulsating pressure were observed which may lead to artery fatigue and possible plaque rupture. Large-scale patient studies are needed to validate the computational findings for possible plaque vulnerability assessment and rupture predictions.
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PMID:3D MRI-based multicomponent FSI models for atherosclerotic plaques. 1529 32

The objectives of the study are to describe and use a muscular model to compare spinal loads and muscles recruitments between an unbalanced subject (patient) and a normal volunteer. Data collection was performed and imputed into the muscular model: from sagittal X-rays, together with plantar foot pressure measurements, external loads for the L3/L4 level were calculated. Using MRI of the thoraco-lumbar region and muscular testing, a personalized muscular model was constructed. The main results are as follow: external loads for the unbalanced subject were higher because of the postural default, especially for flexion moment. Running the model, simulations showed a higher erector spinae group activation for the patient. This induced a significant difference in joint compression. Setting the maximum admissible stress of the extensor muscles of the patient to an equivalent level as the one found for the volunteer to maintain the posture, a second simulation was performed. Joint compression was reduced, but postero-anterior shear and flexion moment increased drastically. The model suggests that either the muscular system needed a stronger activation, yielding a higher joint compression and probably a muscle fatigue in such an activation level, or the spinal loads increased to a higher and probably dangerous level.
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PMID:Muscular modelling: relationship between postural default and spine overloading. 1545 54

Lumbar discogenic pain in the sense of an internal disc disruption (IDD) represents a nociceptive pain syndrome with the source of pain in the innervated outer third of the annulus. Such discs anatomically appear with almost normal contours. Neither clinical nor technical assessments have any diagnostic value, with the exception of MRI which has been shown, if present in symptomatic patients, to have a positive predictive value of up to 89 % to indicate a strong correlation to a painful grade 3 or 4 fissure. However, only the stimulation of a disc (controlled provocation discography) with a subsequent CT scan is of exclusive diagnostic value. As an underlying pathomechanism, a compression fracture of the superior subchondral endplate like a fatigue fracture is discussed. In this way, a deterioration of the homogeneous intradiscal stress distribution could occur with consecutive damage to the internal disc environment and the expression of a radial fissure. The clinical picture of discogenic pain is non-specific. It does not correlate with degenerative changes. It does not differ from any other back pain. Thus, it has to be differentiated from zygapophysial joint pain as well as from sacroiliac joint pain and muscular-ligamentous pain sources. In a single study of American workers, the prevalence of IDD was 39 %, rendering it one of the most important causes for patients with a specified source of back pain.
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PMID:[Lumbar discogenic pain]. 1561 53

Integrating electroencephalography (EEG) and functional magnetic resonance imaging (fMRI) data may help to optimize anatomical and temporal resolution in the investigation of cortical function. Successful removal of fMRI scanning artifacts from continuous EEG in simultaneous recordings has been reported. We assessed the feasibility of recording reliable visual evoked potentials (VEPs) during fMRI scanning using available artifact removing procedures. EEG during administration of visual stimuli was recorded using MRI-compatible 32-channel equipment in nine normal subjects (mean age, 23.9 +/- 2.5 years), with and without fMRI acquisition. fMRI scanning and cardioballistographic artifacts were removed after subtraction of averaged artifact waveforms. Consistency between VEPs waveforms and of P1 and N1 peak latencies and amplitudes in the two conditions was assessed. Good correlation was found between VEP waveforms (Pearson's correlation coefficient: r(P) between 0.76-0.94 across subjects; P < 0.0001) and between latency or amplitude of P1 and N1 peaks (latencies: r = 0.7, P < 0.035; amplitudes: r > 0.65, P < 0.05; Spearman rank correlation coefficient) in the two recording conditions. No significant differences were found between P1 and N1 parameters in the two conditions (Wilcoxon signed rank test). Consistent VEP waveforms, latencies, and amplitudes with and without fMRI scanning indicate that reliable VEPs may be obtained simultaneously with fMRI recording. This possibility might be helpful by shortening recording times and reducing variability from learning, habituation, and fatigue phenomena from separate recordings for the integration of event-related EEG and fMRI data.
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PMID:Visual evoked potentials may be recorded simultaneously with fMRI scanning: A validation study. 1567 79

Functional imaging studies have demonstrated a relationship between fatigue and altered cerebral activation patterns in multiple sclerosis patients, but no relationship between fatigue and brain atrophy has been demonstrated. We hypothesized that the subjective complaint of fatigue would predict the severity of destructive brain pathology. We assessed the relationship between fatigue and brain atrophy longitudinally in a cohort of 134 patients previously enrolled in a 2-year clinical trial of interferon beta-1a and re-evaluated 8 years after randomization into the trial. Brain atrophy was measured using the brain parenchymal fraction (BPF), and disability was measured using the Multiple Sclerosis Functional Composite at baseline, year 2 and year 8. Fatigue was measured using the Sickness Impact Profile's Sleep and Rest Scale (SIPSR) at baseline, year 2 and year 8. Linear regression analyses were used to assess the relationship between changes in fatigue and atrophy progression. Worsening fatigue on the SIPSR during the initial 2 years was significantly associated with progressive brain atrophy over the subsequent 6 years. The relationships between fatigue and brain atrophy were independent of changes in disability, mood, or other MRI characteristics. This suggests that the subjective complaint of fatigue is linked to destructive pathologic processes in RRMS patients.
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PMID:Association of fatigue and brain atrophy in multiple sclerosis. 1569 98


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