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Query: UMLS:C0015674 (chronic fatigue syndrome)
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Samples of cerebrospinal fluid from 112 cases of suspected meningitis were tested for the presence of C-reactive protein (CRP), using a qualitative and quantitative slide test. Bacterial meningitis was confirmed in 34 patients, based on CSF and blood culture results, and/or elevated CSF white blood cell (WBC) count and typical biochemical profile. There were 8 patients with early onset, and 3 who had received prior antimicrobial therapy among the 5 neonates, 23 children, and 6 adults with bacterial meningitis. Organisms recovered from CSF, and/or blood, included Haemophilus influenzae 14, Streptococcus pneumoniae 9, Streptococcus group B-5, Staphylococcus aureus 2, E. coli 2 and Klebsiella pneumoniae 1. Slide test was positive for CRP in 33 cases, giving a sensitivity of 97% which compared favourably with elevated CSF protein 33%, decreased CFS glucose 64.7% CSF glucose/blood glucose less than 1/2, 85%, raised CSF WBC 38.2%, raised CSF PMN 61.7%, CSF culture positive 88.2%, and CSF gram-positive 82.5%. Slide test was positive for CRP in 1 of 78 CSF samples negative for bacterial meningitis, giving a specificity of 98%. It was concluded that testing of CSF for CRP is a simple, rapid and accurate method for the laboratory diagnosis of bacterial meningitis, which is particularly appropriate for areas lacking adequate laboratory facilities.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid C-reactive protein in the laboratory diagnosis of bacterial meningitis. 389 17

The purpose of this review is to discuss recent literature data concerning the etiology and pathobiology in insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus as well as present our own experience from all children up to 15 years of age in Uppsala County, Sweden presenting with juvenile (type I) diabetes since 1976. Chronic enterovirosis is an emerging concept in apparently immunologically competent patients. By means of new serological and DNA-based methods, a persistent enteroviral (Coxsackie virus A, B and ECHO virus) infection can sometimes be demonstrated after an acute primary infection, which is often subclinical. There are several indications that these viruses can contribute to the development of illnesses with a pathogenesis as yet not fully understood, e.g. dilated cardiomyopathy, type I diabetes, and possibly some cases of the so-called chronic fatigue syndrome. In type I diabetes, many pieces of evidence including epidemiology, genetic analysis of the host susceptibility genes, cytokine analysis and new seriological evaluation suggest an infection to be the starting point for the beta cell destruction. These etiological agents most likely belong to the enteroviral group of picornaviruses. Later events may well involve all parts of the immune system launching a selective autoimmune 'suicidal attack' on the cells necessary for glucose homeostasis.
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PMID:Is juvenile diabetes a viral disease? 829 8

The nervous form of magnesium imbalance represents the best documented experimental and clinical aspects of magnesium disorders. The nervous form of primary magnesium deficit (MD) in the adult appears as the best descriptive model for analysis of the symptomatology, aetiology, physiopathology, diagnosis and therapy of the most frequent form of MD. Nervous hyperexcitability due to chronic MD in the adult results in a non-specific clinical pattern with associated central and peripheral neuromuscular symptoms, analogous to the symptomatology previously described in medical literature as latent tetany, hyperventilation syndrome, spasmophilia, chronic fatigue syndrome, neurocirculatory asthenia and idiopathic Barlow's disease. On encountering this non-specific pattern, the signs of neuromuscular hyperexcitability are of much greater importance. Trousseau's sign is less sensitive than Chvostek's sign, but their sensitivities are increased by hyperventilation (Von Bondsdorff's test). Examination of the precordial area will be conducted in order to search clinical stigmata of mitral valve prolapse (MVP) which is a frequent dyskinesia due to chronic MD (about a quarter to one-third of cases). The electromyogram (EMG) shows one (or several) trains of autorhythmic activities beating for more than 2 min of one of the three tetanic activities (uniplets, multiplets or 'complex tonicoclonic tracings') during one of the three facilitation procedures: tourniquet-induced ischaemia lasting 10 min. post-ischaemia lasting 10 min after the removal of the tourniquet and hyperventilation over 5 min. A repetitive EMG constitutes the principal mark of nervous hyperexcitability (NHE) due to MD. The echocardiogram (ECC) is the best tool for detecting MVP, the 2-dimensional ECC with pulsed Doppler being more accurate than time-motion ECC. The routine ionic investigations comprise five static tests: plasma and erythrocyte magnesium, plasma calcium and daily magnesiuria and calciuria. An evaluation of magnesium intake is desirable. Normal concentrations of magnesium in blood do not rule out the diagnosis of the nervous form of primary chronic MD. The histograms of MD group reveal Gaussian type magnesaemias with significantly lower means and the constituent elements can be individually hypo- (one-third of cases), normo- (about two-thirds of cases) and even, exceptionally, hyper-magnesaemic. The diagnosis of MD requires an oral magnesium load test. At physiological dose (5 mg of Mg/kg/day), oral magnesium is totally devoid of the pharmacological effects of parenteral magnesium. Corrections of symptomatology by this oral physiological magnesium load is the best proof that it was due to magnesium deficiency. In particular clinical forms, more sophisticated studies may be useful: standard and quantitative electroencephalograms, electropolygraphic studies of afternoon sleep, electronystagmography, optokinetic test, skin conductance reflex, psychometric inventories, standard or monitoring electrocardiogram, treadmill test, other static and dynamic investigations: e.g. ionized free Mg2+, lymphocyte Mg, brain Mg, cerebrospinal Mg, Mg balance, Mg parenteral load test, glucose load, and even radio-isotope study, the only one able to reveal intestinal magnesium hypersecretion. Nervous primary chronic MD progresses by phases of decompensation against a background of latency. Marginal magnesium deficiency, that is to say an insufficient magnesium intake which merely requires simple oral physiological supplementation, is fundamental in the aetiology of primary magnesium deficit. However a constitutional homeostatic lability of the nervous system or of magnesium metabolism such as belonging to the B35 type of HLA group must be involved. Part of the aetiology of this magnesium deficit is a magnesium depletion, where the disorder which induces magnesium deficit is related to a dysregulation of the control mechanisms of magnesium status which requires a more or less difficult
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PMID:Neurotic, neuromuscular and autonomic nervous form of magnesium imbalance. 936 38

Chronic fatigue syndrome is a clinically defined condition of uncertain aetiology. We compared 99Tcm-HMPAO single photon emission tomography (SPET) brain perfusion with dual-head 18F-FDG brain metabolism in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. Eighteen patients (14 females, 4 males), who fulfilled the diagnostic criteria of the Centers for Disease Control for chronic fatigue syndrome, were investigated. Thirteen patients had abnormal SPET brain perfusion scans and five had normal scans. Fifteen patients had normal glucose brain metabolism scans and three had abnormal scans. We conclude that, in chronic fatigue syndrome patients, there is discordance between SPET brain perfusion and 18F-FDG brain uptake. It is possible to have brain perfusion abnormalities without corresponding changes in glucose uptake.
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PMID:Comparison of SPET brain perfusion and 18F-FDG brain metabolism in patients with chronic fatigue syndrome. 986 23

The authors compared in a group of 118 patients with autoimmune thyroiditis and a positive antibody titre against ovaries the grade of fatigue with the presence of organ specific and non-specific autoantibodies in the peripheral blood stream, antibodies against EBV and CMV, immunoglobulin concentrations, biochemical parameters of the lipid metabolism, glucose tolerance, ion balance and melatonin and serotonin levels. Patients with autoimmune thyroiditis were differentiated according to the degree of fatigue into three groups: 38 with fatigue typical for CFS, 30 with occasional fatigue and 50 without the feeling of fatigue. Fatigue of the CSF type was characterized by a significantly higher incidence of autoantibodies against the adrenals and a higher cholesterol level. Increased fatigue of the patients was associated with a lower melatonin level, a higher serotonin level and a lower M/S ratio as compared with patients without fatigue. In other indicators no differences were found. Fatigue in CFS could be associated, similarly as in autoimmune endocrinopathies, with impaired immunoendocrine regulation. In autoimmune thyroiditis, regardless of the concomitant presence of fatigue, in addition to antibodies against thyroid peroxidase most frequently antibodies against the ovaries were detected.
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PMID:[The fatigue syndrome in autoimmune thyroiditis with polyglandular activation of autoimmunity]. 1035 48

We report a patient with cerebellar meningo-encephalitis by Epstein-Barr virus(EBV) in which the responsible lesions were detected by Gd-enhanced MRI. A 61-year-old woman with a history of liver cirrhosis and diabetes mellitus presented with cerebellar signs such as ataxia of the trunk, bilateral upper and lower extremities and slurred speech two weeks after the acute upper respiratory inflammation for several days. Serum IgM antibody(Ab) to EBV viral capsid antigen(VCA) was 1:10, Ab to EBV(VCA) IgG was 1:1280, Ab to early antigen diffuse and restricted (EADR) IgG was 1:40, Ab to EBV nuclear antigen (EBNA) was 1:80. Other viral antibody titers were not elevated significantly in serum. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressure was 195 mmH2O, containing 464 cells/mm3, protein 68 mg/dl and glucose 43 mg/dl. Only CFS Ab to EBV(VCA) IgG elevated significantly (1:16). In acute phase plain MRI was normal except for swelling of the cerebellar hemispheres while Gd-enhanced MRI showed a leptomeningeal enhancement of bilateral cerebellar hemispheres and of vermis disappeared within one month. A homogeneously enhanced lesion in the left dentate nucleus appeared one month after the onset of illness. This lesion had been detected on Gd-enhanced MRI for three months after clinical symptoms were improved. No abnormal finding was shown in the supratentorial region during the whole clinical course. In the literature, EBV encephalitis has a wide range of MR findings which may vary in a short period. We emphasize that frequent MR examinations including Gd-enhanced MRI is useful to evaluate inflammatory or demyelinating diseases in the posterior fossa.
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PMID:[A case of cerebellar meningo-encephalitis caused by Epstein-Barr virus(EBV): usefulness of Gd-enhanced MRI for detection of the lesions]. 1068 89

Campylobacter fetus subsp. fetus (C. fetus) is a gram-negative, curved, rod-shaped microaerophile, occasionally may cause meningitis or meningoencephalitis in humans. This report documents the case of 49-year-old man with lumbar spondylodiscitis and meningoencephalitis caused by C. fetus infection. On admission, the patient was delirious and severe inflammatory reactions were seen in his serum. Cerebrospinal fluid (CFS) revealed normal glucose concentration and moderate mononuclear leukocytosis. Campylobacter species, which was very difficult to be identified, was cultured from the blood and CSF. During his clinical course, the patient complained of severe back pain, and lumbar MRI showed low intensity in a T1-weighed image of the L4 and L5 vertebral bodies and high intensity in a T2-weighed image of the L4-5 disc. The patient was diagnosed with spondylodiscitis caused by C. fetus infection. Meningoencephalitis may have occurred as a secondary infection. Antibiotics were administered, and the patient's condition improved. To our knowledge, only a few cases of spondylodiscitis caused by C. fetus have been reported. A CSF glucose concentration in the normal range and mononuclear leukocytosis are atypical findings in patients with pyogenic meningitis. Therefore, neurologists must be fully aware of the possible symptoms and signs of C. fetus infection.
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PMID:[A case of meningoencephalitis and spondylodiscitis caused by Campylobacter fetus subsp. fetus infection]. 1235 51

Peritonitis remains an important cause of morbidity and technique failure in peritoneal dialysis (PD). Conventional peritoneal dialysate fluids (PDF) inhibit peritoneal leukocyte function in vitro and may thus adversely affect the immune response to peritonitis. New PDF have been designed with neutral pH, low glucose degradation product (GDP) contents, and bicarbonate as buffer. The present intravital microscopy study examined the effects of conventional and new PDF on leukocyte behavior in the peritoneal microcirculation of Wistar rats. The visceral peritoneum was superfused by a control solution (EBSS), a conventional (CAPD), or a new bicarbonate-buffered PDF with neutral pH and low GDP content (CAPD BicaVera). In addition, spent conventional and new PDF were tested. The number of rolling, adhering, and extravasated leukocytes and leukocyte rolling velocity were assessed at different time intervals after exposure to lipopolysaccharide (LPS) or cell-free supernatants of coagulase-negative staphylococci (CNS-CFS). Exposure to LPS or CNS-CFS dissolved in EBSS dramatically increased the number of rolling, adhering and extravasated leukocytes and decreased leukocyte rolling velocity. Superfusion by CAPD abolished the LPS- or CNS-CFS-induced leukocyte recruitment, whereas CAPD BicaVera had significantly fewer depressant effect. Spent PDF affected the leukocyte response in a similar way as fresh PDF. High lactate concentrations, GDP, and hypertonicity appeared to be mainly responsible for the inhibition of leukocyte recruitment. In conclusion, conventional PDF abolish in vivo leukocyte recruitment in response to potent inflammatory stimuli. Bicarbonate-buffered pH-neutral PDF with low GDP contents have fewer depressant effects and may therefore contribute to a better preservation of peritoneal host defense.
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PMID:Effects of conventional and new peritoneal dialysis fluids on leukocyte recruitment in the rat peritoneal membrane. 1270 98

BACKGROUND: Chronic fatigue syndrome (CFS) has no diagnostic clinical signs or diagnostic laboratory abnormalities and it is unclear if it represents a single illness. The CFS research case definition recommends stratifying subjects by co-morbid conditions, fatigue level and duration, or functional impairment. But to date, this analysis approach has not yielded any further insight into CFS pathogenesis. This study used the integration of peripheral blood gene expression results with epidemiologic and clinical data to determine whether CFS is a single or heterogeneous illness. RESULTS: CFS subjects were grouped by several clinical and epidemiological variables thought to be important in defining the illness. Statistical tests and cluster analysis were used to distinguish CFS subjects and identify differentially expressed genes. These genes were identified only when CFS subjects were grouped according to illness onset and the majority of genes were involved in pathways of purine and pyrimidine metabolism, glycolysis, oxidative phosphorylation, and glucose metabolism. CONCLUSION: These results provide a physiologic basis that suggests CFS is a heterogeneous illness. The differentially expressed genes imply fundamental metabolic perturbations that will be further investigated and illustrates the power of microarray technology for furthering our understanding CFS.
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PMID:Integration of gene expression, clinical, and epidemiologic data to characterize Chronic Fatigue Syndrome. 1464 39

Since their discovery, the safety of artificial sweeteners has been controversial. Artificial sweeteners provide the sweetness of sugar without the calories. As public health attention has turned to reversing the obesity epidemic in the United States, more individuals of all ages are choosing to use these products. These choices may be beneficial for those who cannot tolerate sugar in their diets (e.g., diabetics). However, scientists disagree about the relationships between sweeteners and lymphomas, leukemias, cancers of the bladder and brain, chronic fatigue syndrome, Parkinson's disease, Alzheimer's disease, multiple sclerosis, autism, and systemic lupus. Recently these substances have received increased attention due to their effects on glucose regulation. Occupational health nurses need accurate and timely information to counsel individuals regarding the use of these substances. This article provides an overview of types of artificial sweeteners, sweetener history, chemical structure, biological fate, physiological effects, published animal and human studies, and current standards and regulations.
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PMID:The potential toxicity of artificial sweeteners. 1860 21


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