Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 24-year-old female was admitted to our hospital on Aug. 20 in 1986 because of blurred vision and right pupillary dilatation. She had sometimes noticed headache later than 1976, and blurred vision without headache several times a year later than 1983. She had been told her right pupil dilated when she had complained of blurred vision. Neurological examination revealed abnormal findings as follows; diminished sense of smell in the right side, anisocoria (R 8 mm, L 5 mm), bilateral hippus, hypesthesioalgesia in her right face, left trunk and left arm. The pupils were round and contracted promptly to light. Accommodation reflex and ciliospinal reflexes were normal. Neither blepharoptosis nor external ocular muscle paresis were observed. Deep tendon reflexes were normal. Planter responses were flexor. There was no meningeal irritative sign. No abnormal findings were obtained in blood and urine, chest X-p, brain enhanced CT scan, EEG, and cerebral angiography except for slight degree of anemia. Serum TPHA was negative. However, the cell count of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was 18/mm3 (Ly 100%) and decreased to 9/mm3 (Ly 100%) in nine days. Protein content and glucose level of CSF were normal. Pupils were not constricted by 0.125% pilocarpine instillation. Loss of smell and sensory disturbance disappeared within three days and her pupils became isocoric by five days after admission. The patients of episodic unilateral mydriasis without apparent cause had relatively same clinical features as "unilateral springing pupil" proposed by Hallett et al. (1970). Except for mydriasis, they had no abnormal findings of neurological and laboratory examinations.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Recurrent episodic unilateral mydriasis with pleocytosis in the cerebrospinal fluid--a case report]. 259 48

A series composed by 13 patients suffering Tuberculous Meningitis (TM) and Acquired Immunodeficiency Syndrome (AIDS) is reported. The characteristics of the disease are compared with those obtained from a control group. TM reached a frequency of 18% in the first 66 patients with AIDS and neurologic disorders attended by the authors. The male/female ratio was 12:1. There was lesser frequency of headache in the group with TM and AIDS, but there was a greater frequency of lymph nodes, anemia, leukopenia, hypergammaglobulinemia and elevated ESR that in the control group. These differences were statistically significative. Parabolic and hyperbolic correlations were found between the number of cells and the albumin or glucose concentration in the CSF (and also between the later two parameters) of the patients with TM and AIDS. The treatment was very efficacious, but the proper duration and the long-term results of the therapy are unknown due to the difficult follow-up.
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PMID:[Tuberculous meningitis and acquired immunodeficiency syndrome]. 263 55

A report is given of pregnancy in a tetraplegic patient. The main complications that patients who are suffering from tetraplegia have in pregnancy are urinary tract infection, anaemia, and complications of bed rest, as well as premature delivery and autonomic hyperreflexia. Autonomic hyperreflexia is provoked by stimuli such as distension of the bladder or of the rectum or stimulation of the cervix. In this syndrome bradycardia, arterial hypertension and headaches are associated. The major risk is of intra-ventricular haemorrhage in labour. The care of the pregnant tetraplegic patient requires the cooperation of the obstetrician, the anaesthetist and the nursing staff, as well as of the patient.
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PMID:[Tetraplegia and pregnancy]. 266 45

The treatment of severe anemia related to end-stage renal disease with recombinant human erythropoietin (r-HuEPO; EPOGEN, [epoetin alfa] AMGEN Inc, Thousand Oaks, CA) has been investigated in more than 1,500 hemodialysis patients worldwide. The goal of r-HuEPO therapy is to maintain the hematocrit level at 35%, with a recommended starting dose of 150 mg/kg of body weight, administered intravenously after each dialysis three times a week for 6 to 12 weeks. Hematocrit levels should be measured at least once a week and the dose adjusted in increments or decrements of 10 mg/kg to 25 mg/kg to keep the hematocrit level between 33% and 40%. Patients receiving r-HuEPO must be normotensive. A history of seizures has been cause for exclusion from clinical trials. Patients' iron status should also be adequate at the onset of therapy, which is defined as a serum ferritin level of 100 ng/mL or more, and a transferrin saturation of more than 20%. Iron status and BP must be carefully monitored, and abnormalities corrected with iron supplementation, ultrafiltration, or antihypertensive medication. The lack of controlled studies makes determination of the actual incidence of side effects difficult, but it appears to be minimal. Possible side effects of r-HuEPO therapy include hypertension, seizures, myalgia, malaise, headache, gastrointestinal distress, and injected conjunctiva. The major benefits of r-HuEPO therapy are reduced need for transfusion and marked improvement in quality-of-life parameters.
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PMID:Who should receive recombinant human erythropoietin? 266 84

Clinical details and present day problems encountered in 425 cases of falciparum malaria (PF) are reported. 10.11% had taken chloroquine prior to reporting to us. Parasitic count done in 23.05% cases lacked correlation with severity of disease. Pattern of fever varied markedly but 5.4% were afebrile throughout and presented only with bodyache and malaise. Apyrexial spell was noted in 5.64%. 28.70% had typical facial looks of anaemia and sallow complexion. Cerebral symptoms were noted in 3.05%. Other symptoms were severe headache 33.4%, pain abdomen 3.29%, gastroenteritis 5.64%, jaundice 2.58% and bronchitis in 7.50%. We encountered subconjunctival haemorrhages with purpura and/or urticaria in four cases, symptoms suggestive of shock lung in 3, pulmonary oedema in 2, severe anaemia (HB less than 4 g%) in seven pregnant ladies, extrapyramidal symptoms in follow up period in 5 and congenital malaria in 2 cases. 83.25% were cured with chloroquine and oxytetracycline. 8.47% (who deteriorated despite the above treatment) were treated with quinine for 6 days. 5.17% (with severe disease) were also given quinine as first line drug. 2.82% (unresponsive to chloroquine and oxytetracycline but with mild disease) were treated with pyrimethamine-sulphamezathine combination for 5 days. One case who did not respond to quinine was treated with quinidine. Recrudescence was seen in 3.67% of patients treated with chloroquine and oxytetracycline. There was no case with renal failure, haemolysis due to G6PD deficiency and black water fever. There was only one death (0.23%) in our series. Self-medication, haphazard therapy and the slogan "Fever may be malaria-take chloroquine" can lead to problems in falciparum malaria.
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PMID:Falciparum malaria--present day problems. An experience with 425 cases. 269 36

A total of 126 children with chronic idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura, including 35 splenectomized cases, were investigated in a long-term follow-up study, with regard to residual hematologic and immunologic abnormalities, complications and physical growth. Such hemorrhagic symptoms as petechiae, ecchymosis and epistaxis were still observed in about 22%-28% of the patients with a period of morbidity ranging from 3 to 15 years after onset. Residual thrombocytopenia below 150,000/microliters was found in 62% of patients within 5 years, 59% within 5 to 9 years and 57% within 10-14 years after onset. Other abnormalities were mild anemia, low serum level of IgA or IgM, positive antinuclear antibody, rheumatoid factor, and positive Coombs test in a small number of patients. Increased platelet-associated IgG was still obtained in patients with subnormal platelet counts whose morbid periods were 6 to 27 years after onset. Investigation of the patients by questionnaire revealed such complications as obesity, striae atrophicae, abdominal pain, headache, cataract, Perthes' disease, and cardiac complication in some patients. No apparent disturbances except for obesity were observed in their physical growth.
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PMID:Long-term follow-up study of children with chronic ITP. 275 63

A case of pseudotumor cerebri associated with iron deficiency anemia due to colon cancer is reported in a 37-year-old woman. Her initial symptoms were vomiting and severe headache. On physical examination, no lymph nodes and abdominal mass were palpable but marked anemia was noted in her skin and conjunctiva . Neurological examination revealed papilledema in her both eyes and stiff neck. There was no abnormal findings on CT scan on admission. Spinal puncture revealed CSF pressure as high as 620 mmH2O with normal cells, protein, sugar and chloride levels. Hematological examination revealed iron deficiency anemia and thrombocytosis. Angiography at third day revealed no sinus occlusion, but retention of contrast media was seen on the cortical vein of parietal lobe and right transverse sinus. Brain scintigram at sixth day revealed mild accumulation in left parietal lobe, so small venous infarction was suggested. There were two circumscribed stenotic lesions of right ascending colon in the barium enema, and right hemicolectomy was achieved. The pathological diagnosis was adenocarcinoma. The symptoms of pseudotumor cerebri was completely disappeared soon after the surgery together with resolution of anemia. She lives with no deficits now 1 year 3 months after surgery. In conclusion much attention is necessary to a patient of pseudotumor cerebri with iron deficiency anemia for the presence of cancer, because not only this central nervous system lesion is reversible and curable but also the cancer itself may be curable by surgery.
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PMID:[A case of pseudotumor cerebri associated with colon cancer]. 280 39

The clinical course and response to therapy of seven patients with cryptococcosis and AIDS were reviewed. One patient was still in the primary stage of cryptococcosis in AIDS, i.e. the stage that is characterized by the sole cultural detection of Cryptococcus neoformans in the respiratory tract. The other six patients were in the secondary stage, where C. neoformans can be detected from the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), blood, urine, faeces and other body sites. The main presenting features (headache, fever, nausea) were due to central nervous system involvement, although meningism and mental changes were rarely present, and CSF changes were very subtle. Treatment with amphotericin B and flucytosine was very effective, there being no more growth of fungi in cultures in most cases. Adverse reactions to the drugs used occurred frequently and consisted mainly of anaemia, hepatosis and fever. Diagnosis in the primary stage of cryptococcosis may improve the prognosis.
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PMID:Cryptococcosis in AIDS patients: observations concerning CNS involvement. 291 24

From March to August 1984, 26 patients with hereditary hemolytic anemia in northeastern Ohio developed acute, profound red cell aplasia. The patients included 14 males and 12 females 2 to 23 years old, with sickle cell anemia (20 cases), hemoglobin SC-disease (4 cases), sickle-beta-thalassemia (1 case), or hereditary spherocytosis (1 case). All had an acute onset of severe reticulocytopenia and anemia and prodromal symptoms of illness including fever, abdominal symptoms, headache, and arthralgias. Twenty-two received transfusions. Reticulocytosis occurred spontaneously within 2 to 14 days of presentation. In five acute-phase sera, 10(8) to 10(12) viral particles/mL were detected by electron microscopy. Human parvovirus B19 DNA was demonstrated in high concentration by hybridization in the same five acute-phase sera and in low concentration in sera of eight additional patients. The five highly viremic sera inhibited erythroid colony formation in vitro. B19-specific IgM was detected in sera of 24/26 patients, and B19-specific IgG in 21 of 22 patients tested. Our results indicate that human parvovirus B19 was the etiologic agent in this large epidemic of life-threatening acute red cell aplasia in patients with hereditary hemolytic anemia.
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PMID:Human parvovirus B19-induced epidemic acute red cell aplasia in patients with hereditary hemolytic anemia. 300 91

Some 200 cases of malaria are officially reported yearly in Switzerland. It is estimated that 2000-8000 Swiss travellers are infected by the anopheles mosquito annually, with 90% protected by chemoprophylaxis. An attack of malaria appears to have a better prognosis when the symptoms start in Africa, since treatment is initiated immediately, than in industrialized countries where the mortality is 1-4%. Failure to inquire into travel history is often responsible for the delay in initiating treatment. Severe falciparum malaria is treated by repeated slow quinine infusions followed by 1500 mg sulfadoxine, 75 mg pyrimethamine and 750 mg mefloquine (single dose). This adult dose corresponds to 3 tablets of Lariam and 3 of Fansidar (or 3 of Fansimef). The increase in chloroquine resistance among falciparum strains has led to the use of Fansidar for chemoprophylaxis, followed by the use of mefloquine when Fansidar resistance occurs. The dosage of mefloquine is 250 mg weekly (1 tablet Lariam) for 4 weeks, followed by 1 tablet every fortnight. Treatment is continued for 1 month after return. If the risk of transmission is low, chemoprophylaxis may be replaced by prescription of a reserve drug to be taken in case of fever and headache. A sulfadoxine-pyrimethamine-mefloquine combination (i.e. 3 tablets Fansimef) has been tested in this indication. Ineffective chemoprophylaxis may lead to atypical clinical syndromes, e.g. anemia, hepatosplenomegaly and jaundice, without episodes of fever. HIV positive subjects may risk travelling in tropical countries if they have undergone correct chemoprophylaxis.
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PMID:[Malaria in Switzerland]. 306 91


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