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Query: UMLS:C0018681 (headache)
56,091 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Methyl bromide (MeBr) is used as an insecticide fumigant. Four deaths and three recent hospitalizations have resulted from exposures to MeBr in Dade County, FL. Six cases occurred during burglaries of tented houses over a nine-month period. In four lethal exposures, the symptoms of nausea, vomiting, and malaise preceded fulminant respiratory failure. Two of these also had seizures, delirium, and agitation. Serum or plasma bromide ion levels ranged from 40 to 583 mg/L. Pulmonary edema, hyaline membranes, and hemorrhagic alveolitis were present at autopsy along with varying degrees of cerebral edema. The nonlethal exposures resulted in symptoms of conjunctival irritation, headache, or nausea. Plasma bromide concentrations varied between 17.5 and 321 mg/L. Methyl bromide characteristics, use, morbidity, and mortality in Florida during the past 25 years are reviewed. Remedies for illegal entry are proposed.
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PMID:Death and injury caused by methyl bromide, an insecticide fumigant. 661 79

A 32-year-old farmer had signs and symptoms of dinitrophenol poisoning after crop spraying with a herbicide containing derivatives of 2,4-dinitrophenol. Dinitrophenol causes toxicity by the uncoupling of oxidative phosphorylation in the mitochondria of cells throughout the body. In man the classic syndrome consists of lassitude, malaise, headache, increased perspiration, thirst, and dyspnea which may progress to hyperpyrexia, profound weight loss, respiratory failure, and death. Because dinitrophenol compounds are widely used, it is likely that some patients with unexplained fever have unrecognized dinitrophenol poisoning. Prompt recognition of the clinical manifestations of toxicity is vital for appropriate therapy. We describe a method for detection of dinitrophenol in plasma and urine.
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PMID:Dinitrophenol poisoning: a diagnosis to consider in undiagnosed fever. 705 60

The Toxic Syndrome (TS) caused by ingestion of adulterated rapeseed oil in Spain is a new disease of multisystemic character whose aetiology and pathogenesis remains unknown. The most prominent pathological feature is a peculiar non-necrotizing vasculitis, that affects mainly the intima and involves vessels of every type and size in practically every organ. The TS begins with an acute clinical picture with pleuropneumopathy, fever, headaches, exanthems and eosinophilia. In these early clinical phases the main pathological findings were observed in the lungs and consisted of intense pulmonary interstitial oedema with scanty inflammatory mononuclear infiltrates. Ultrastructural study revealed hydropic degeneration of pneumocytes types I and II with desquamation of type I. The patients in this phase died of respiratory failure, later deaths were due to thromboembolic complications. Later still the patients developed a neuromuscular syndrome, sclerodermiform skin lesions and severe weight loss and died predominantly of infectious complications and respiratory failure. The anatomopathological picture in the peripheral nerves was that of inflammatory neuropathy with a lymphocytic perineuritis that led to perineural fibrosis with secondary axonal degeneration. The muscle presented an interstitial inflammatory myopathy at first followed by a neurogenic muscular atrophy. The skin lesions in the late phases consisted in dermal or dermal and subdermal fibrosclerosis, with vasculitis of the small arteries in the lower dermis. The salivary glands and pancreas showed vasculitis and interstitial inflammation which progressed to interstitial fibrosis and parenchymal atrophy.
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PMID:Pathology of a new toxic syndrome caused by ingestion of adulterated oil in Spain. 715 66

A 71-year-old woman was admitted with the chief complaint of headache, lumbago and slight fever. Computerized tomographic (CT) scan demonstrated a large soft tissue mass with multiple cystic necrosis in the right adrenal region. The plasma norepinephrine concentration was excessive and serum levels of neuron-specific enolase (NSE), calcitonin and parathormone were elevated. MIBG scintigraphy showed a high uptake in the same region. Under the diagnosis of pheochromocytoma without distant metastasis, right adrenalectomy was performed. The tumor was removed en bloc with right kidney and a part of the liver because of inflammatory adhesion. The histological examination revealed benign pheochromocytoma. After the operation, norepinephrine and calcitonin decreased to normal but the levels of NSE and PTH remained high. One year after operation, chest X-ray revealed multiple lung metastases and after 1.5 years she died of respiratory failure. Autopsy revealed multiple lung and bone metastases and a liver metastasis, parathyroid glands showed hyperplasia but the thyroid gland showed no abnormal change. This clinical course suggests that serum NSE might be a useful tumor marker for differentiating malignant pheochromocytoma from benign one, and this tumor producing calcitonin caused secondary hyperparathyroidism.
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PMID:[A case of malignant pheochromocytoma with high levels of serum neuron-specific enolase (NSE) and calcitonin]. 780 42

Haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) is an acute disease caused by Hantavirus and clinically characterised by abrupt onset of fever, various haemorrhagic manifestations and transient renal and hepatic dysfunction. We retrospectively reviewed 63 cases of HFRS in children from 13 different hospitals in Korea who presented over a 15-year period. The age of the patients ranged from 7 to 15 years, with a male to female ratio of 8 to 1. Fifty-four (86%) patients were 10 years or older. On admission, 24 (38%) were in the febrile phase and 35 (56%) were in the oliguric phase. Fever (100%) abdominal pain (91%), headache (76%) and vomiting (73%) were the most common symptoms. Backache, subconjunctival haemorrhage and hypertension were also noted in about one-third of patients. Hypotension was documented in only 7 (11%) patients. Leucocytosis (> 10,000/mm3) and thrombocytopenia (< 150,000/mm3) were noted in more than two-thirds of patients. Elevated blood urea nitrogen and serum creatinine was observed in 94% by the 7th (median) day of illness. Elevated aspartate aminotransferase and/or alanine aminotransferase were found in more than two-thirds of patients. Renal biopsy was performed in 12 patients and revealed various stages of acute tubular necrosis with occasional interstitial cell infiltration and oedema. Only 2 showed evidence of interstitial haemorrhage. Eleven patients required 1-3 days of dialysis and the remaining patients required only conservative management. Three (5%) patients died of shock, respiratory failure and pulmonary haemorrhage. All other patients recovered without sequelae. Although childhood cases were much less common than adults, clinical and laboratory findings were in general similar between children and adults.
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PMID:Haemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome in Korean children. Korean Society of Pediatric Nephrology. 781 97

A 56-year-old male suffered from primary rhabdomyosarcoma on the left internal thoracic wall, which was treated by chemotherapy, and local irradiation following biopsy. Four months after the diagnosis, he suddenly complained of headache and left paresthesia occurred followed by generalized convulsion and left hemiplegia. CT scan revealed a high density mass in the right parietal lobe. The patient was referred to our department and underwent emergency evacuation of the hematoma together with tumor removal. The pathological specimen showed spindle or oval-like cells with hypercellularity and some mitotic figures. Immunohistochemical study demonstrated that many cells were positive for desmin and myoglobin, which is specific to myogenic tumor. These characteristics were compatible with those of the primary thoracic lesion, and a diagnosis of metastatic rhabdomyosarcoma was made. Five weeks after the craniotomy, the metastatic brain tumor recurred in the same site and also in the bilateral occipital lobes. Although radiotherapy to the brain decreased the tumor size, the patient died of respiratory failure eleven and a half months after the initial diagnosis. Sarcomas metastasizing to the brain are rare and only 16 cases of rhabdomyosarcoma metastasizing to the brain have been reported so far. Recent advances in chemotherapy, however, have been able to show the increased incidence of sarcoma metastasis to the brain. Therefore, the necessity of follow-up CT scan for sarcoma patients of long survival is to be stressed, even if the patient shows no neurological symptoms.
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PMID:[Brain metastasis of rhabdomyosarcoma with intratumorous hemorrhage: a case report and literature review]. 825 24

A 20-year-old man who looked after a pack of hounds was admitted with a short history of headache, fever, haemoptysis and muscle cramps. Investigations showed type I respiratory failure with diffuse pneumonitis, pyogenic meningitis and raised liver enzymes. Leptospirosis was suspected and treated with the appropriate antibiotics leading to a full recovery. The diagnosis was confirmed by a titre of I/2560 to Leptospira icterohaemorrhagiae. The case illustrates an unusual presentation of this infection and argues for early antibiotic treatment.
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PMID:Leptospirosis presenting as atypical pneumonia, respiratory failure and pyogenic meningitis. 830 21

Beginning in May 1993, cases of acute illness characterized by fever, myalgias, headache, and cough, followed by rapid development of respiratory failure, have been reported to the New Mexico Department of Health (NMDOH), Arizona Department of Health Services (ADHS), Colorado Department of Health (CDH), and Utah Department of Health (UDH). This report presents preliminary findings from an ongoing investigation of this problem, which suggest this illness is associated with a previously unrecognized hantavirus.
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PMID:Outbreak of acute illness--southwestern United States, 1993. 850 13

Since May 1993, the New Mexico Department of Health, the Arizona Department of Health Services, the Colorado Department of Health, the Utah Department of Health, the Indian Health Service (IHS), and CDC, with the assistance of the Navajo Nation Division of Health, have been investigating an outbreak of acute illness characterized by a prodrome most commonly including fever, myalgias, headache, and cough, followed rapidly by respiratory failure. Preliminary laboratory findings have suggested this outbreak is associated with infection with a hantavirus or a closely related agent. This report updates the ongoing investigation of this outbreak.
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PMID:Update: outbreak of hantavirus infection--southwestern United States, 1993. 850 18

Listerial brainstem encephalitis is a rare disease. Only 62 cases have been reported previously; all were in adults, only 8% of whom were immunosuppressed. The disease has a characteristic biphasic course: a nonspecific prodrome of headache, nausea or vomiting, and fever lasting for several days is followed by progressive asymmetrical cranial-nerve palsies, cerebellar signs, hemiparesis or hypesthesia, and impairment of consciousness. Neck stiffness was initially present in only 55% of the cases described thus far. Studies of cerebrospinal fluid often revealed only mild abnormalities. Cultures of cerebrospinal fluid and blood were positive in 41% and 61% of cases, respectively. Respiratory failure occurred in 41% of cases. Initial computed tomography of the brain often gave normal results; magnetic resonance imaging better demonstrated brainstem abnormalities. Overall mortality was 51%. All untreated patients died. When treatment with ampicillin or penicillin was initiated early, the rate of survival was > 70%; however, neurological sequelae developed in 61% of survivors.
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PMID:Brainstem encephalitis (rhombencephalitis) due to Listeria monocytogenes: case report and review. 850 61


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