Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (hyperphagia)
6,116 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two patients with fulminant amebic colitis with colon perforation and concomitant liver abscess were collected over the last 5 years. One patient underwent emergency laparotomy to treat amebic cecal perforation. Diverted ileostomy saved his life. The ileostomy was successfully reversed 6 months later. The other patient underwent 4 laparotomies with more invasive procedures in less than 1 month due to sequential complications of amebiasis. Colon resection with enterostomy miraculously allowed him to survive. In comparison with the latter, who underwent more aggressive surgery and experienced more catastrophic complications, the former with conservative surgery had a smoother clinical result. Thus, conservative operation for colon perforation due to amebiasis is recommended. Besides, thanks to the alertness of doctors, the favorable age of the patients, the advent of new antiamebic and antimicrobial agents, excellent hyperalimentation, the great improvement in medical facilities and postoperative care, the two critical patients eventually survived after several operations, and had a better outcome as compared with the high mortality rate of 87.5% in our hospital 2 decades earlier.
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PMID:Fulminant amebiasis: a clinical evaluation. 767 57

We describe a non-alcoholic diabetic patient with central pontine myelinolysis (CPM) and Wernicke encephalopathy (WE). A 69-year-old man developed consciousness disturbance after parenteral hyperalimentation for liver abscess and sepsis. Neurological examination revealed drowsiness and no articulation. MRI disclosed T2-hyperintense lesions in the dorsal medulla oblongata and dentate nuclei, and symmetric enhancement in the inferior colliculus. Thiamine treatment (1,000 mg/day, div) attenuated neurological deficits. Seven days later, WE-related lesions were markedly regressed and a central pontine T2-hyperintensity lesion appeared. Serum sodium levels were normal. Physicians should pay more attention to rapid development of normonatremic CPM under thiamine supplementation in non-alcoholic WE patients.
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PMID:Rapid development of central pontine myelinolysis after recovery from Wernicke encephalopathy: a non-alcoholic case without hyponatremia. 2272 98