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

A young man with severe multiple injuries following a motorcycle accident was admitted with head and mandible fractures, coma, fracture dislocation at C5-C6 resulting in total leg paralysis, partial paralysis of the right arm and intercostal muscles, and closed chest injury with possible pulmonary contusion. On the fourth day he developed fulminating mediastinitis and massive empyema, and was found to have a ruptured esophagus. Recovery became possible with surgical drainage of the pleural cavity and mediastinum, proximal and distal decompression of the esophagus, antimicrobial therapy, irrigation of the pleural cavity, complete intravenous hyperalimentation, and infusions of salt-poor albumin. The patient was discharged after 95 days, and 7 months after injury is neurologically intact except for a partial right wrist drop. This rare esophageal rupture should be suspected in any chest injury patients, especially those characterized by extreme cyanosis, dyspnea, shock, and prostration incompatible with thoracic cage injury.
...
PMID:Rupture of the thoracic esophagus from blunt trauma. 59 47

A case is presented in which a unique combination of events occurred as a complication of subclavian vein catheterization. Extravasation of intravenous hyperalimentation solution occurred, resulting in mediastinitis and venous obstruction of the jugulosubclavian confluence bilaterally. Bilateral chylothorax resulted which was successfully managed by conservative means. The methods used and the rationale for their employment are discussed.
...
PMID:Chylothorax: a complication of subclavian vein catheterization and parenteral hyperalimentation. 81 71

A 51 year-old male was admitted because of abrupt hematemesis and loss of consciousness. Emergency endoscopy depicted a giant esophageal ulcer on the left side extending from the middle intrathoracic region to the lower intrathoracic region. Esophagography, performed on the second day of admission, revealed a huge cavity (10 cm x 7 cm) filled with contrast medium resulting from a rupture in the ulceration. His state of shock improved with conservative therapy and no severe mediastinitis was noted. The drainage from the cavity into the lumen of the esophagus was considered to be acceptable from esophagography and an endoscopic examination. Secondary to his stable condition and continuous drainage, this patient was treated conservatively throughout his clinical course. The patient was given intravenous hyperalimentation (IVH) until the 25th hospital day and was medicated with broad spectrum-antibiotics. On the 21st hospital day the size of the esophageal cavity was markedly decreased (7 cm x 2 cm). Only small irregular mucosa was noted on the esophagogram taken 6 weeks after admission. Six months after the onset, an X-ray examination revealed complete healing of the spontaneous esophageal rupture with no recurrence.
...
PMID:A case of spontaneous esophageal rupture treated with conservative therapy. 315 Oct 26

We describe an unusual case of pyrexia of unknown origin in a patient undergoing autologous bone marrow transplantation for metastatic breast cancer. The fever was due to extravasation of lipid-containing hyperalimentation fluid from a migrated central venous catheter into the mediastinum, resulting in mediastinitis and pleurisy. The fever persisted despite broad-spectrum antibiotics and amphotericin B, and finally responded to steroids.
...
PMID:Acute mediastinitis secondary to leakage of parenteral nutrition from a migrated central venous catheter in a patient undergoing autologous bone marrow transplant. 873 12

A 55-year-old female consulted her family physician because of pharyngeal discomfort after eating a fish. She underwent rigid fiberscopy and was pointed out a fish bone. Family physician failed to extract the bone and the patient was referred to our hospital. However, there was no fish bone in the esophagus when she underwent second rigid fiberscopy. After eight days she complained of dyspnea and was referred to our hospital again. Chest X ray film showed marked enlargement of the mediastinum and she was diagnosed as acute mediastinitis. She underwent mediastinal drainage by thoracotomy. So tiny perforation was found in cervical esophagus by endoscopy that primary suture was not done. After two months' follow up with intravenous hyperalimentation, there was still esophageal perforation. She underwent the second operation of primary closure with reinforcement using sternocleidomastoid muscle. Two weeks after the second operation esophagogram still showed a fistula. So she received injections of alprostadil and factor XIII. One month after the injections esophagogram showed a diverticulum without leakage.
...
PMID:[Acute mediastinitis due to esophageal perforation--a case report]. 965 31