Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0015674 (chronic fatigue syndrome)
2,978 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The authors present the results of an autopsy of a 67-year-old Japanese man with POEMS/Takatsuki/Crow-Fukase syndrome (P/T/CFS) diagnosed in 1972. Each component of the syndrome was gradually recognized after the resection of lumbar vertebral solitary plasmacytoma in 1967. The patient died in 1989 of generalized infection and renal failure. Autopsy revealed in the vertebral canal between the fifth and seventh thoracic vertebrae dorsal pachymeningeal fibrosis, with prominent amyloid deposition that oppressed the spinal cord. This condition was consistent with the final neurologic manifestation of the patient, bilateral motor and sensory disturbance below the sixth thoracic level. Myelopathy remained clinically unnoticed because neurologic disturbance had begun as peripheral polyneuropathy. Normocellular marrow with heterogeneously scattered lambda light chain-positive plasma cells and degeneration of the myelinated fibers of sciatic nerve also were observed. This is the first report of focal spinal amyloidosis associated with P/T/CFS.
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PMID:Report of a patient with POEMS/Takatsuki/Crow-Fukase syndrome associated with focal spinal pachymeningeal amyloidosis. 164 21

Four patients with a chronic fatigue syndrome experienced five episodes of acute renal insufficiency associated with high-dose (500 mg/m2) intravenous acyclovir administered intravenously as one-hour infusions. Nephrotoxicity developed despite precautions to avoid volume contraction. Examination of the urinary sediment of three patients by polarizing microscopy showed birefringent needle-shaped crystals within leukocytes. In the most severely affected patient, a serum creatinine concentration of 8.6 mg/dl developed and the patient underwent percutaneous renal biopsy that revealed foci of interstitial inflammation without tubular necrosis. Urine, blood, and renal tissue levels of acyclovir were high. One patient was rechallenged with low-dose intravenous acyclovir and the four patients later received oral acyclovir, all without adverse effect. The combined data from these patients support crystalluria and obstructive nephropathy as a mechanism of acyclovir-induced renal failure in humans. This experience emphasizes the importance of maintaining adequate hydration during high-dose acyclovir therapy.
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PMID:Acyclovir-induced renal failure. Clinical course and histology. 337 77

Fungi have long been known to affect human well being in various ways, including disease of essential crop plants, decay of stored foods with possible concomitant production of mycotoxins, superficial and systemic infection of human tissues, and disease associated with immune stimulation such as hypersensitivity pneumonitis and toxic pneumonitis. The spores of a large number of important fungi are less than 5 microm aerodynamic diameter, and therefore are able to enter the lungs. They also may contain significant amounts of mycotoxins. Diseases associated with inhalation of fungal spores include toxic pneumonitis, hypersensitivity pneumonitis, tremors, chronic fatigue syndrome, kidney failure, and cancer.
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PMID:Fungal spores: hazardous to health? 1042 89

Exercise prescription principles for persons without chronic disease and/or disability are based on well developed scientific information. While there are varied objectives for being physically active, including enhancing physical fitness, promoting health by reducing the risk for chronic disease and ensuring safety during exercise participation, the essence of the exercise prescription is based on individual interests, health needs and clinical status, and therefore the aforementioned goals do not always carry equal weight. In the same manner, the principles of exercise prescription for persons with chronic disease and/or disability should place more emphasis on the patient's clinical status and, as a result, the exercise mode, intensity, frequency and duration are usually modified according to their clinical condition. Presently, these exercise prescription principles have been scientifically defined for clients with coronary heart disease. However, other diseases and/or disabilities have been studied less (e.g. renal failure, cancer, chronic fatigue syndrome, cerebral palsy). This article reviews these issues with specific reference to persons with chronic diseases and disabilities.
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PMID:Physical activity for the chronically ill and disabled. 1099 24

Essential thrombocythemia and polycythemia vera are both chronic progressive myeloproliferative disorders of insidious onset. If the excessive production of red cells and/or platelets is controlled, patients with these disorders may have prolonged survival. However, the clinical course of these patients can be complicated by a variety of events, including thrombotic episodes, bleeding episodes, arthropathies, pruritus, weakness, weight loss, neurologic impairment, erythromelalgia, fever, abdominal pain, and the life-threatening consequences of progression to myelofibrosis and/or acute leukemia. Effective control of hematopoiesis by phlebotomy or a variety of therapeutic agents has resulted in a reduction or elimination of many of these clinical events, but has not altered the evolution to myelofibrosis or acute leukemia. Use of each of these therapeutic strategies is also associated with a range of adverse events. Monitoring overall survival or a reduction in the frequency of clinical events has previously served as a means of assessing the results of these therapeutic interventions. Quality-of-life instruments have not been applied in a systematic fashion to the evaluation of outcomes in patients with these chronic myeloproliferative disorders. Quality-of-life assessments evaluate not only the state of well-being of a patient that results from an assessment of the individual's ability to perform everyday activities, which are reflective of physical, psychological, and social well-being, but also patient satisfaction with the control of disease and/or treatment-related symptoms. Quality-of-life instruments have been used to assess the clinical course of patients suffering from a variety of disorders, ranging from cancer to renal failure to chronic fatigue syndrome. Information about quality-of-life outcomes can contribute to the evaluation of variations in dose and timing of administration of therapeutic agents. It is possible that the side effects of a particular therapy may outweigh the disease regression achieved with a particular therapy. In the future, quality-of-life instruments may prove useful in prospectively evaluating therapeutic end points in patients with essential thrombocythemia and polycythemia vera.
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PMID:Quality of life issues in patients with essential thrombocythemia and polycythemia vera. 1209 51