Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0018991 (hemiplegia)
3,997 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Total body water (TBW) and total potassium (TBK) were measured in patients participating in a follow-up investigation of all acromegalic patients seen between 1956 and 1984. The results were compared with population-based estimates of TBK and TBW calculated from height (BH), weight (BW) age and sex, using data from a large number of healthy subjects (n = 476). The findings were compared with values obtained at diagnosis and were also related to growth hormone (GH) and IGF-I/SmC concentrations at follow-up. BW at follow-up was unchanged compared to BW at diagnosis and was 9.7 and 10.0 kg higher in males and females, respectively, than in healthy subjects of the same BH (BWnorm). Growth hormone concentration at follow-up correlated directly with excess extracellular fluid volume (ECW%) (P less than 0.001) and inversely with the ratio observed/predicted body fat (BF%) (P less than 0.001) as well as with BW/BWnorm (P less than 0.05). On the other hand, GH concentration did not correlate with excess body cell mass (BCM%) estimated from TBK. IGF-I/SmC concentration correlated with GH concentration at follow-up (P less than 0.001) and with ECW% (P less than 0.01) but not with BCM% or BF%. In 39 patients, data on body composition were also available at diagnosis. Of these, three males had developed gonadal insufficiency and their BCM had decreased markedly. One patient had suffered from hemiplegia. Five patients had not received any treatment. In the remaining 30 treated patients, those with a post-treatment GH concentration below 5 mU/l were normalized with respect to ECW and BF. BCM, however, was unchanged. In contrast, patients with GH concentration greater than or equal to mU/l displayed unchanged body composition. Furthermore, BH decreased significantly in successfully treated patients.
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PMID:Body composition in acromegaly: the effect of treatment. 262 48

The purpose of this study was to determine the prevalence of low serum insulin-like growth factor-I (IGF-I) and testosterone in men with poststroke hemiplegia. Serum concentrations of IGF-I, total testosterone, and free testosterone were compared in healthy young men, healthy old men, and old men with poststroke hemiplegia. A low IGF-I level, below the lower 2.5 percentile of the healthy young men, occurred in 85% of the healthy old men, and in 88% of the poststroke hemiplegic patients. When a low IGF-I was defined as a value below the lower 2.5 percentile of the healthy old men, the prevalence in the hemiplegic men was 5%. For total testosterone, a value below the lower 2.5 percentile in the healthy young men occurred in 78% of the healthy old men and in 79% of the stroke survivors. Low total testosterone, defined as a value below the lower 2.5 percentile of the healthy old men, occurred in 17% of the hemiplegic men. The results with free testosterone were similar. Compared with healthy young men, most healthy old men have low serum IGF-I and testosterone levels. Old hemiplegic men resemble healthy old men in their IGF-I levels, but they have more cases of severe hypogonadism (total tostosterone < 193ng/dL). Because correction of IGF-I and testosterone deficiencies in younger adults improves muscle strength, work capacity, and quality of life, treatment with human growth hormone and testosterone may be a useful adjunct to physical measures in the rehabilitation of selected hemiplegic stroke survivors.
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PMID:Hyposomatomedinemia and hypogonadism in hemiplegic men who live in nursing homes. 818 56