Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0023380 (lethargy)
5,697 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In order to determine the relationship of cerebral blood flow (CBF) to the clinical outcome of head injury, serial determinations of CBF were performed by the intravenous Xenon technique in 24 patients. The patients were of mixed injury severity and were classified into four groups depending on the neurological exam at the time of each CBF study. All eight patients who were lethargic on admission demonstrated increases in their minimally depressed CBF as they improved to normal status. Eleven patients in deep stupor or coma ultimately recovered. Ten of these patients initially had moderate to profound decreases in CBF which improved as recovery occurred. The single exception was an adolescent whose initial CBF was high but became normal at recovery. Five comatose patients died. In four of these, already depressed CBF fell even lower, while one adolescent with initially increased CBF developed very low CBF preterminally. The data presented in this report demonstrated a good correlation between CBF and clinical outcome. In every one of the adult survivors, depressed CBF increased as the patient recovered to normal status. All adults who died showed a deterioration of CBF as the neurological status worsened. The only exceptions were two adolescents who initially showed high CBF values. In the adolescent who died, CBF dropped to low levels while in the survivor a normal CBF was achieved. Thus in adults a traumatic brain injury was associated with depressed CBF which increased with recovery or decreased further with deterioration while the reaction to injury was quite different in the younger brain.
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PMID:Correlation of cerebral blood flow with outcome in head injured patients. 90 87

Twenty-one patients developed acute renal failure in association with nontraumatic rhabdomyolysis and myoglobinuria. The illness followed an overdose of ethanol, heroin, or other depressant drug in 18 patients. Lethargy or coma was present in 17 patients and muscle swelling in 11. Evidence of rhabdomyolysis included markedly elevated creatine phosphokinase, myoglobinuria, and aldolase in blood. Initial biochemical findings were similar to those of acute renal failure due to other causes, but the abnormalities were exaggerated. There was a disproportionate rise in serum creatinine concentration in relation to serum urea nitrogen concentration. Profound hyperuricemia was present in most patients. Transient hypercalcemia developed during the diuretic phase in 5 patients. One patient died. We conclude that nontraumatic myoglobinuria with acute renal failure is not infrequent and may occur after an overdose of ethanol or heroin. The disease has good prognosis despite severe hypercatbolism and untreated profound hyperuricemia.
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PMID:Acute renal failure due to nontraumatic rhabdomyolysis. 93 19

Clinical experience seems to indicate two separate types of entry to coma. Some patients follow a pathway characterized by confusion, hallucinations, mumbling delirium, myoclonic jerks, and seizures. The author has called this sequence of symptoms the high road to coma and hypothesized that its basic underlying pathophysiology involves increased neuronal firing rates. Other patients develop somnolence, lethargy, obtundation, and unresponsiveness without seizures or muscle twitches. This low road to coma involves either anatomical compression of the midbrain reticular formation or a metabolic or toxic disorder characterized by membrane stabilization and decreased neuronal excitability.
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PMID:Two roads to coma: the Scottish hypothesis. 94 May 9

Severe conjugate downward eye deviation of several days' duration in a lethargic patient with subarachnoid hemorrhage and of several weeks' duration in a comatose patient with hypoxic encephalopathy occurred in the absence of structural pretectal lesions. Persisting downgaze in a stuporous or comatose patient does not necessarily indicate anatomic pretectal damage.
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PMID:Sustained downgaze deviation. Two cases without structural pretectal lesions. 94 4

An experimental model of clinical liver failure, using total devascularization of the liver is described in the pit. The survival time was 1495 +/- 75 (SEM) minutes. Clinically the pigs showed a uniform course. They became lethargic after eight to ten hours and following a period of increasing drowsiness they became comatose. The immediate cause of death was cardio-vasculary collaps. The ammonium ion concentration in the blood increased to 696 +/- 57 umol/l and in cerebrospinal fluid to 664 +/- 57 umol/l. Cerebrospinal fluid glucose concentration was significantly decreased.
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PMID:Total devascularization of the Liver: an experimental model of acute liver failure. 106 34

One hundred seventeen patients undergoing cardiac operations over a two-year period were studied. Electroencephalograms were recorded preoperatively, in the recovery room (up to 12 hours following operation), 24 hours later, and further as required. Operative and anesthesia data were correlated with EEG findings. All patients had normal EEGs preoperatively. This unusual occurrence may largely reflect the absence of congenital heart disease and the small number of valvular lesions in our patients. Prognosis was not significantly influenced by age. Bypass time appeared directly related to outcome by group but not individually. Hypotension prior to pumping occurred most often and mean blood loss was greatest in the patients who had abnormal EEGs in the recovery room with progressively worsening patterns until death. In the recovery room many patients were awake, while others were either drowsy, lethargic, or asleep. Some were comatose. The level of consciousness was not as prognostic as was the EEG. The pattern of EEGs in the first few postoperative days is more important than any single record by itself. All those who showed progressive deterioration in the first two or three days died shortly thereafter.
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PMID:Prognostic value of electroencephalography in cardiac surgery. 111 50

After the regaining of consciousness and awareness in the strange environment of an intensive care unit, an injured child is exposed to a situation of extreme psychological impact. This situation, in addition to a probably organically changed reactivity, is liable to provoke a particular, abnormal psychic response. The abnormal reaction can follow the pattern of a feigned-death response and thus mimic an organic coma vigile (apallic state). The resulting psychoreactive stuporous state ("Sleeping Beauty syndrome") may lead to a misjudgement of the recovery degree and may delay early rehabilitation. With the help of a representative case, the clinical manifestation, course, and treatment of this reactive juvenile syndrome are presented. The interaction of physiogenic and psychogenic factors responsible for some psychiatric sequelae during the early period after head injury is emphasized.
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PMID:Recovery of children after severe head injury. Psychoreactive superimpositions. 116 90

Three new cases of methyl bromide poisoning (leakage from a fire extinguisher) are reported. Two of these were characterized, after an initial period of coma and myoclonic status, by an action myoclonus. Electrical data are presented. A follow up of 4 and 8 years allowed to study the effect of drugs, two of which (clonazepam and baclofene) being pecularly contributive. The third patient outlived for 5 years in a stuporous state with myoclonus. The anatomical findings consisted mainly of a necrosis of both inferior colliculi with gliosis in the upper brain stem reticular formation and moderate changes in the dentate and pontine nuclei. Their significance is discussed in view of physiological and experimental knowledge.
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PMID:[Methyl bromide poisoning. 3 cases, 1 fatal. Neruopathological study of one case of coma with myoclonus followed for 5 years]. 119 82

Interferon (IFN) related neurotoxicity includes somnolence and confusion, fatigue, lethargy, psychiatric symptoms, conceptual disorganization, neurological deficits, cortical blindness, coma and, rarely, death. The neurologic syndromes seem to be more common in elderly patients, following intramuscular or intravenous administration, at higher doses of frequent injections of IFN-alpha and in primary renal cell carcinoma. The duration of the treatment was not strongly related to neurotoxicity. Computed tomography findings were non-specific and included atrophy or periventricular lucencies. Electroencephalograph studies demonstrated a generalized increase in slow wave activity which returned to normal after cessation of treatment. Behavioral and mental changes in patients treated with IFN are warning signs, and indicate the need to withdraw treatment.
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PMID:Neurotoxicity of interferon-alpha. 128 26

Plasma ammonia level (PAL) was studied in 43 cases of acute leukemia (AL). PAL was 39.21 +/- 26.2 mumol/L in normal controls and 38.8 +/- 16.6 mumol/L in leukemic patients before chemotherapy. High PAL was found in 40 cases after chemotherapy. Six cases showed clinical manifestations due to severe hyperammonemia, including dizziness, lethargy, confusion, coma and mental changes of various degree, and there was also respiratory alkalosis. After ammonia-trapping therapy, 4 of the 5 patients recovered. The authors believe that high PAL is not uncommon after chemotherapy in leukemic patients. Respiratory alkalosis and unexplained mental and neurologic changes following intensive chemotherapy are useful clues for the diagnosis of hyperammonemia syndrome. Early diagnosis and treatment with ammonia-trapping may improve the rates of remission and survival.
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PMID:Plasma ammonia in patients with acute leukemia. 128 71


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