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Query: UMLS:C0020505 (hyperphagia)
6,116 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Candida albicans arthritis is uncommon. Although occasional instances of meningitis, osteomyelitis, endocarditis, pneumonia, and extensive visceral involvement due to Candida species have been reported, only 7 documented cases of arthritis caused by Candida albicans are found in the literature. The present case was an infant with a gastroschisis defect of the abdominal wall, who required multiple surgical procedures, prolonged antibiotic therapy, and parental intravenous hyperalimentation. Following a blood stream infection with Candida albicans, septic arthritis of the left knee developed. Treatment with intravenous Amphotericin-B over a 6-week period was successful in eridicating the infection. The child is completely well 9 months after discharge from the hospital. Factors which may predispose patients to infection by Candida albicans include prolonged antibiotic therapy. corticosteroids, generalized debilitation, malnutrition, parental hyperalimentation, and immunosuppressive therapy. Amphotericin-B therapy may be associated with considerable toxicity including azotemia, hepatic dysfunction, and hematologic abnormalities. The therapeutic regimen of Amphotericin-B is effective but a 6-week course of antifungal therapy may be necessary to eradicate septic arthritis of Candida albicans. Surgical drainage is probably indicated only for recent infections.
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PMID:Candida arthritis. A case report and review of the literature. 80 14

A randomized evaluation of 44 malnourished patients, wherein 24 were used as controls and 20 received immediate postoperative parenteral hyperalimentation, indicated that five days of nutritional therapy had no notable effect on the morbidity and mortality experienced by the malnourished patients, in comparison to a third, nonmalnourished group of similar patients. Although central venous nutrition was safely administered without complications immediately after cardiac operations, clinical efficacy of this therapy could not be demonstrated. The inability to establish a dose-response relationship, and hence administer the "optimum" amount of nutrients, may have accounted for the negative results reported. Although preoperative malnutrition is associated with a poorer result after cardiac surgery, postoperative repletion of nutrients appears to be ineffective in reversing this relationship.
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PMID:Malnutrition in cardiac surgical patients. Results of a prospective, randomized evaluation of early postoperative parenteral nutrition. 81 56

The effect of a deficiency of calories and/or nitrogen on protein metabolism in the rat was investigated. During the 5 days of the study, the rats received all nutrients except water via intravenous hyperalimentation. Four diets were used: I) 1.25 g amino acids, 12.5 g glucose/day; II) 1.25 g amino acids/day; III) 1.25 g glucose/day; and IV) 12.5 glucose/day. The rate of protein synthesis in heart, lung, muscle, kidney, and liver was estimated by a modification of the technique of Garlick et al. (The diurnal response of muscles and liver protein synthesis in vivo in meal-fed rats. Biochem. J. 136: 935-945, 1973) except that [15N]glycine was used as the tracer. Heart and lung protein synthesis was depressed by both caloric and nitrogen restriction. Muscle protein synthesis was only significantly affected by omission of calories from the diet. Kidney nitrogen content increased with the amino acid diets and decreased with the nitrogen-deficient diets. The major response of the liver to a dietary deficiency was to lose nitrogen via an increase in the rate of liver protein catabolism.
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PMID:Effect of nitrogen and calorie restriction on protein synthesis in the rat. 81 8

Forty-seven cancer patients were selected for study based on their candidacy for hyperalimentation. Each patient received selected skin test antigens intradermally in the forearm prior to the initiation of hyperalimentation, and at 7-day intervals throughout treatment with either chemotherapy, radiation therapy or surgery. Of 23 patients who received chemotherapy, 17 initially had negative skin tests. Thirteen of these patients had positive skin tests after an average of 11.4 +/- 5.5 days of hyperalimentation. Response to chemotherapy occurred only in hyperalimentation. Response to chemotherapy occurred only in those patients whose skin tests were positive, and conversion of skin test reactivity to positive occurred before clinical regression of metastatic disease. No patient who received radiation therapy developed or retained positive skin test reactivity, although nutritional repletion was considered satisfactory in each patient. Surgical patients whose skin tests converted to positive or remained positive preoperatively had an uncomplicated postoperative recovery, whereas 2 of 4 patients whose skin tests remained negative expired postoperatively. Absence of established delayed hypersensitivity in the cancer patient who is treated with chemotherapy or surgery is probably secondary to generalized malnutrition, and established cell-mediated immunity can be restored by proper nutritional repletion.
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PMID:Effect of intravenous hyperalimentation on established delayed hypersensitivity in the cancer patient. 82 Feb 90

Two groups of patients suffering from advanced neoplastic disease were fed parenterally for a period ranging from 1 to 16 weeks. The parameters considered were: weight change, serum albumin level, lymphocyte transformation test and serum immunoglobulin level. There were 23 patients in one group and 21 patients in the other. Regimens included for group I: saline solution (1000-1500 ml), glucose (100-150 g) and amino acids (15-30 g) per day; for group 2: 40-50 Cal/kg per day (dextrose about 15 g/kg per day), about 2 g of amino acids/kg/day and about 40-50 ml water/kg/day. In addition, 13 patients underwent both treatments sequentially. All the Group I patients lost weight (1.3 kg/week); while out of 23 patients in Group 2, 15 gained weight, 2 remained unchanged and 6 continued to lose weight, but to a lesser rate than before hyperalimentation (the average weight gain was 1.1 kg/week). Serum albumin levels decreased in 19 out of 25 patients in Group I and increased in 14 out of 26 patients of Group 2. Initial values of the lymphocyte blast transformation test were very low in both groups of patients, and an increase was observed only in patients treated by hyperalimentation. The increase was more evident in patients who were not under antiblastic treatment. Changes in serum immunoglobulin levels were not significant. The authors conclude that malnutrition plays a very important role in neoplastic cachexia and can be improved by parenteral hyperalimentation. Although it is possible that in the near future hyperalimentation and conventional neoplastic therapies will play complementary roles in treatment of advanced neoplastic disease, malnutrition is still the specific indication for intravenous hyperalimentation.
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PMID:[Parenteral hyperalimentation in patients with advanced neoplastic disease (author's transl)]. 82 82

The purpose of the paper is to demonstrate the usefulness of total parenteral hyperalimentation in a lactant, 4 months old patient with ulcerative colitis. At admission the lactant had diarrhea, dehydratation, anemia, malnutrition, and edema in the ankles. Proctoscopy and barium enema, and rectal biopsy were typical of ulcerative colities. Treatment included steroids and azulfidine. Evolution was poor and signs of perforation appeared. Total intravenous hyperalimentation was used and after one month the diarrhea disappeared and the patient gained weight. Ulcerative colitis is rare in lactants and usually appeares a chronic diarrhea. The diagnosis should be based on radiology, endoscopy, and biopsy. Parenteral hyperalimentation is the only treatment that permits to keep the colon at total rest while simultaneously maintaining nutrition.
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PMID:[Ulcertive colitis: clinical picture and treatment with total parenteral nutrition in a newborn]. 82 75

Five cases of malignant duodenocolic fistula seen at the Massachusetts General Hospital in the past thirty years are reviewed. Rarely encountered, these lesions are characterized by diarrhea, weight loss, abdominal pain, anemia, and sometimes feculent vomiting. Barium enemas are more likely to demonstrate the fistula tract than upper gastrointestinal series. Nutritional deficiencies may be profound, and the use of preoperative hyperalimentation is encouraged. Operations that accomplish only bypass of the fistula are of minimal palliative value, and the fistula should be divided or resected if possible. When feasible, wide resection is the procedure of choice, and a fourteen year survival is reported after this operation.
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PMID:Malignant duodenocolic fistulas. 86 13

Mammalian response to injury essentially is that of tissue repair and re-epithelialization. The most important component of repair tissue is collagen, and after injury collagen turnover is greatly increased. Collagen biosynthesis is initiated by nuclear DNA of fibroblasts; the steps in biosynthesis are complex but studies of collagen biosynthesis may eventually have clinical potential. Normally, wound healing lasts for up to 2 years but nutritional and metabolic factors, such as malnutrition, delay healing; hyperalimentation would likely be beneficial under these conditions. Other factors that influence wound healing are the oxygen tension in tissues, the hemodynamic status, and the effects of substances such as cortisone, vitamins A and C, and zinc.
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PMID:Some aspects of wound healing research: a review. 109 Mar 54

In form of a survey report the author enters the modern knowledge and opinions concerning the etiopathogenesis of diabetes. Endogenic (hereditary) and exogenic (above all hyperalimentation and malnutrition, deficient muscular conditioning) factors act together. To the functional capacity and functional reserve of the B-cell a central importance is ascribed. The author particularly deals with the possibility of a bihormonal disturbance and with the metabolic syndrome as well as a differentiation into the two most important types of diabetes is performed. As to several problems the results of the Karlsburg team are cited.
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PMID:[Etiopathogenesis of diabetes mellitus today (continuation)]. 122 44

Three young adults advanced pulmonary tuberculosis due to delay of therapy were reported. In case 1 and 3, their delays resulted from difficulty in diagnosis, in case 2, from neglecting medical counseling. Each cases revealed bilateral diffuse shadows on chest roentgenograms on admission, which were typical shadows of advanced pulmonary tuberculosis. Malnutrition might contribute to the development of the diseases, which were improved by anti-tuberculosis therapy and hyperalimentation therapy. These cases were suggested some clinical problems characteristic of pulmonary tuberculosis of young adults.
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PMID:[Three cases of young adults advanced pulmonary tuberculosis due to patient's and doctor's delay]. 129 81


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