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)

Borrelia burgdorferi infection was diagnosed serologically in a dog with lethargy, stiffness, and anorexia. Treatment with ampicillin and chloramphenicol did not alleviate the signs. Azotemia, proteinuria, cylindruria, pyuria, and hematuria developed over a 3-month period. Antibody titer for B burgdorferi remained high (1:8,192) during this time. Renal histopathologic findings included severe, chronic, diffuse, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis and moderate chronic, multifocal, interstitial nephritis. Borrelia burgdorferi organisms were identified in renal tissue and in urine by results of immunofluorescent studies and bacteriologic culture, respectively.
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PMID:Renal lesions associated with Borrelia burgdorferi infection in a dog. 340 55

Rabbits were immunized i.v. or i.d. with sterile suspensions of disrupted Streptococcus mutans strain MT703 or K1R. Indirect immunofluorescence assays indicated that sera from four of 10 rabbits immunized i.d. contained antibodies reactive with monkey and human heart and kidney components; 19 of 24 rabbits immunized i.v. had antibodies reactive with these tissues. Heart-reactive antibodies were also detected by immunoelectrophoresis and indirect radioimmunoassay. These antibodies were absorbed well by cytoplasmic membranes, a whole cell extract, and an alkali extract of S. mutans but only weakly by intact bacteria. Between 6 and 8 weeks after the first i.v. administration of S. mutans vaccines, rabbits developed proteinuria and hematuria with subsequent weight loss and lethargy. Approximately 25% of the animals died from illness between the fifth and sixth month of immunization. In 13 of 15 rabbits, immune deposits of C3 and IgG, IgM, or IgA and fibrinogen were seen in kidneys within the glomeruli, basement membranes of the peritubular capillaries, and in the interstitium. In the heart, deposits were seen along the capillaries of the myocardium. In 8 of 14 rabbits, focal deposits of S. mutans antigen were detected in glomeruli and in the kidney interstitium. The kidneys showed gross pathologic and histopathologic changes. Most kidneys were pale and enlarged. Microscopic examination revealed hypercellularity of the glomeruli, presence of neutrophils, thickening of glomerular and tubular basement membranes, tubular atrophy, edema, and fibrosis of the interstitium. The kidney disease presented features of poststreptococcal glomerulonephritis. Microscopic examination of heart sections revealed mild perivascular infiltration by polymorphonuclear leukocytes and plasma cells in some of the rabbits.
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PMID:Serology and tissue lesions in rabbits immunized with Streptococcus mutans. 641 38

Renal impairment in sarcoidosis is usually due to hypercalcaemia and nephrocalcinosis but can also be caused by granulomatous nephritis or interstitial nephritis without sarcoid granulomata. A variety of types of glomerulonephritis have also been described in sarcoidosis but these rarely cause impaired renal function. Renal failure as an isolated manifestation of sarcoidosis is uncommon. A 66-year-old woman presented with a 1-year history of lethargy, polyuria and nocturia. Clinical examination was unremarkable and she had impaired renal function (urea 18 mmol/l (108 mg%) and creatinine 380 mumol/l (4.3 mg%)). As her kidneys were normal in size, she underwent renal biopsy, which revealed granulomatous interstitial nephritis. Reevaluation showed no other evidence of sarcoidosis and she had impaired urinary acidification and concentrating capacities. Therapy with corticosteroids produced a marked improvement in symptoms and renal function. This case confirms the view that granulomatous sarcoid nephritis is steroid sensitive and that full recovery can be expected provided interstitial fibrosis and scarring do not occur.
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PMID:Reversible renal failure due to isolated renal sarcoidosis. 646 14

A study of literature concerning Lyme borreliosis related to animals was done. In the research work the epidemiology, pathogenesis, diagnosis and treatment of horses, cattle and dogs affected with Lyme borreliosis have been discussed. The clinical signs of Lyme borreliosis in horses are: chronic weight loss, sporadic lameness, laminitis, low grade fever, swollen joints, muscle tenderness and anterior uvetitis. In addition to these clinical sings, neurological sings such as depression, behavioral changes, dysphagia and encephalitis can be seen in chronic cases. Cattle affected with acute Lyme borreliosis often show fever, stiffness, swollen joints and decreased milk production. Chronic weight loss, laminitis and abortion are also a possible outcome of borreliosis in cattle. An early infection of Lyme borreliosis in dogs may give evidence of inapetenca, lethargy, lyphadenopathy, and an acute onset of stiffness or pain while a recurrent intermittent nonerosive arthritis is a more advanced manifestation of canine Lyme borreliosis. Glomerulonephritis and tubular damage secondary to Borrelia burgdorferi infection have been reported to occur in normally infected dogs. In an endemic area atrioventricular heart block has also been reported. The underlying pathogenesis of Lyme disease is still unknown. The diagnosis of clinical Lyme borreliosis is difficult and it depends on a successful recognition of clinical signs, a history of possible exposures to the infection and on serologic testings. The therapy of Lyme borreliosis in animals is based upon the principal therapy of this disease in human medicine.
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PMID:[The importance of Lyme borreliosis in veterinary medicine]. 826 22

Two cases of anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody (ANCA)-associated necrotizing and crescentic glomerulonephritis are reported. A 12-year-old girl and a 10-year-old boy presented with polyarthritis, anaemia, haematuria, proteinuria, impaired renal function, anorexia, nausea, marked loss of weight and lethargy. The boy also had a vasculitic rash and anterior uveitis. Both children had diffuse cytoplasmic ANCA identified by indirect immunofluorescence and confirmed by specific enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay. Renal biopsies showed severe focal and segmental necrotizing glomerulonephritis with 100% crescents. They were treated with plasma exchange, prednisolone, cyclophosphamide and heparin. Within 1 month of commencing treatment, both had normal serum creatinine concentrations and ANCA was not detectable. Renal biopsies 6 weeks following commencement of treatment revealed quiescent disease, although up to 40% of glomeruli were sclerosed or had fibrous crescents. Following cessation of cyclophosphamide and heparin after 7 months and reduction in steroid dose, a biopsy at 10 months in the boy revealed quiescent disease, but the girl had recurrent disease associated with reappearance of a low titre of ANCA and small cellular crescents in 20% of the glomeruli. These cases reflect the potential usefulness of ANCA determination for categorizing paediatric patients, helping in the selection of therapy and as a possible marker of disease activity, similar to the experience in adults.
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PMID:Anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antibody-associated glomerulonephritis in children. 843 72

Most attempts at developing a model of autoimmune inner ear disease have focused on the immunization of healthy animals with cochlear tissue. We have chosen an alternate route of studying this entity utilizing the MRL-lpr/lpr (Lupus) mouse, an animal known to spontaneously develop multisystemic, organ nonspecific autoimmune disease. We report on the auditory pathology found in animals at early stages of this systemic disease. At the onset of clinical signs of illness (cachexia, weight loss, lethargy) animals were sacrificed and their cochleas and kidney prepared for morphologic analysis. Significant pathology was seen in the MRL/lpr animals involving the basal and middle turns of the cochlea which could not be correlated with the presence or degree of glomerulonephritis. Findings included outer and inner haircell degeneration, strial edema and degeneration, and an acellular infiltrate in the tunnel of Corti. Cochlear pathology was not found in control animals. Thus, at early stages of systemic disease, MRL/lpr mice manifest significant cochlear pathology not seen in control animals. The implications of these results with regard to the pathogenesis of these lesions as well as their clinical relevance are discussed.
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PMID:The MRL-lpr/lpr mouse: a potential model of autoimmune inner ear disease. 847 29

A 24-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of macroscopic hematuria with clotting. She had been well until two months before admission, when she experienced fever, arthralgia and lethargy and entered another hospital. Laboratory tests showed macroscopic hema-turia, anemia and mild renal dysfunction. Two weeks prior to admission, she had experienced an episode of macroscopic hematuria with clotting followed by severe anemia requiring blood transfusion. Because of the deterioration of her renal function, she was transferred to our hospital. Examinations to determine the source of bleeding from the urinary tract, including a renal arteriogram, were negative. Tests for c-anti-neutrophil cytoplasmic antigen (ANCA) and anti-glomerular basement membrane antibody gave negative results, whereas the test for p-ANCA was positive. Renal biopsy revealed crescentic glomerulonephritis with focal necrosis. Therefore, we diagnosed rapidly progressive glomerulonephritis (RPGN) due to ANCA-associated renal disease. As a result of methypre-dnisolone pulse treatment followed by oral steroid therapy, macroscopic hematuria disappeared with marked improvement of her renal function. We considered this patient to be a rare case of RPGN with blood loss through glomerular lesions resulting in severe anemia.
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PMID:[A case of crescentic glomerulonephritis with extensive hematuria resulting in severe anemia]. 885 33

The pathology associated with acute, chronic, and recrudescent Babesia gibsoni infections was characterized in a group of 6 naturally or experimentally infected, spleen-intact and splenectomized dogs. All experimentally infected dogs became acutely parasitemic, lethargic, anemic, thrombocytopenic, and hemoglobinuric. Anatomic lesions associated, with the disease included diffuse nonsuppurative periportal and centrilobular hepatitis, multifocal necrotizing arteritis, membranoproliferative glomerulonephritis, reactive lymphadenopathy, diffuse erythrophagocytosis, and extramedullary hematopoiesis. The density of CD3+ lymphocytes within the liver sinusoids was markedly increased. Aggregates of large mononuclear cells with immunohistochemical features of activated macrophages were demonstrated in the central veins of the liver. Kupffer cells throughout the hepatic sinusoids appeared hypertrophic and prominent. The density of sinusoidal T lymphocytes, macrophages in central veins, and the degree of Kupffer cell hypertrophy were greatest in the splenectomized dogs. Multifocal deposits of IgM antibody were immunohistochemically demonstrated within the walls of inflamed arteries and renal glomeruli. The results of this study suggest that intense immunostimulation resulting in activation and expansion of T and B lymphocyte populations, macrophage recruitment and activation, vasculitis, glomerulonephritis and anemia contribute to the pathology associated with B. gibsoni infections.
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PMID:Clinical, anatomic, and immunopathologic characterization of Babesia gibsoni infection in the domestic dog (Canis familiaris). 926 13

Signalment, clinical signs, and physical examination and clinicopathologic findings in dogs diagnosed with Hepatozoon canis parasitemia (n = 100) were compared with those in Hepatozoon-negative dogs (n = 180). A subset (n = 15) of Hepatozoon-positive dogs with unusually high (> 800 H canis gametocytes/microL of whole blood) parasitemia was compared with dogs that had low parasitemia (n = 85) and with Hepatozoon-negative dogs (n = 180). Hepatozoon-positive dogs significantly differed from Hepatozoon-negative dogs in body temperature, total red blood cell count, hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit, and platelet count. Dogs with high H canis parasitemia significantly differed from those with low parasitemia in hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit, and total neutrophil count. Clinical findings from dogs with high H canis parasitemia included emaciation, lethargy, hyperglobulinemia, hypoalbuminemia, and increased serum alkaline phosphatase and creatine kinase activities. Findings at necropsy included hepatitis, pneumonia, and glomerulonephritis associated with H canis schizonts and extensive parasitism of bone marrow, spleen, and lymph nodes. Low hemoglobin concentration, low platelet count, and concurrent parvovirus infection together represented the best predictor variables for Hepatozoon positivity in dogs presenting to the hospital.
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PMID:Retrospective case-control study of hepatozoonosis in dogs in Israel. 947 Jan 63

A 6-yr-old, 1.36-kg, intact female black-footed cat (Felis nigripes) was presented to the Veterinary Medical Teaching Hospital, University of Florida, with a history of depression, lethargy, and anorexia. Cardiac dysfunction and renal failure were diagnosed on the basis of antemortem and postmortem findings. At necropsy, heartworms (Dirofilaria immitis), glomerulonephritis, and endometritis were present. The glomerulonephritis could have been immune mediated and may have been associated with the heartworm infection or the chronic endometritis or both. Heartworm disease should be included in the list of differential diagnoses for any exotic cat housed outdoors in an endemic heartworm region that dies peracutely or has suggestive gastrointestinal or respiratory signs. Heartworm prophylaxis and annual serologic testing in exotic cats housed outdoors in heartworm endemic regions are recommended.
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PMID:Heartworm (Dirofilaria immitis) disease and glomerulonephritis in a black-footed cat (Felis nigripes). 973 37


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