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Query: UMLS:C0023380 (lethargy)
5,697 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The pathogenesis of the rare hypernatremia, usually described in the literature as "neurogenic" or "essential" hypernatremia, consists of defective thirst mechanism either alone or in combination with impaired osmoregulation of ADH release. As etiology, disturbances of the neoplastic, vascular and degenerative type and malformations in the hypothalamic area are known. In patients with the hypodipsia-hypernatremia syndrome, dysfunction of the anterior pituitary lobe, obesity, abnormal regulation of body temperature, psychomotor retardation and episodic muscular weakness are frequently encountered as additional abnormalities. A 6-year-old patient is described with hypodipsia-hypernatremia syndrome manifest for 3 years. Besides hypernatremia, hypodipsia and the relative insensitivity of the osmoreceptors regulating ADH release, elevated body temperature, polyphagia and obesity, partial hypothalamic-hypophyseal dysfunction, lethargy and psychomotor retardation are the principal findings. An inflammatory lesion or one occupying an intracranial space was not demonstrable until now. Under forced water intake and hypocaloric diet the patient has progressed well with nearly complete normalization of the hypernatremia, body temperature and obesity.
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PMID:Hypodipsia-hypernatremia syndrome. 42 94

A 24-year-old Italian male presented with a nephrotic syndrome in September 1984. In February 1985 renal biopsy showed amyloid disease with tubular atrophy and interstitial fibrosis. Edema was treated with furosemide, and cholchicine was started. Because he feared side effects of drug therapy, the patient stopped all medication by July 1985. Instead, he decided to restrict severely fluids in order to fight edema. In early November 1985 his family noted he was becoming increasingly lethargic. Two weeks later, on his admission to the hospital, he had a serum sodium concentration of 193 mmol/l and serum osmolality of 397 mosm/kg. Apart from mild mental status changes neurological examination was normal. The fluid deficit was slowly corrected. He was discharged three weeks later with normal serum electrolytes. This case demonstrates that (1) severe hypernatremia can present with mild neurological symptoms and (2) it can be survived provided that it develops slowly and is corrected cautiously.
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PMID:Excessive hypernatremia in a patient with renal amyloid disease. 194 55

A 3 year old boy who had glutaric aciduria diagnosed at 22 months of age was admitted with a history of lethargy, vomiting, and fever. He had been receiving glucose polymers as part of his dietary management. He was severely hypernatraemic, but after resuscitation and rehydration made a good recovery. The possible aetiology of his hypernatraemia is discussed.
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PMID:Glucose polymer regimens and hypernatraemia. 224 22

A 12-month-old girl with end-stage renal disease secondary to primary oxalosis was erroneously given an overdose of sodium chloride (400 mEq NaCl over 12 h) to treat hyponatremia. She became lethargic and hypotonic with signs of intracellular dehydration, and laboratory values revealed severe hypernatremia and hyperchloremia. Since hypernatremia was acute and development of intracellular idiogenic osmoles was presumably minimal, serum sodium was lowered rapidly over 14 h by hourly peritoneal dialysis using a commercial dialysate. This method of treatment proved to be safe and the patient survived without any short or long-term neurological sequelae.
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PMID:Rapid correction of acute salt poisoning by peritoneal dialysis. 315 38

Hypernatremia resulting in neurologic symptoms ranging from lethargy to coma, and with underlying lesions of cerebral hemorrhage and thrombosis, has been reported in human beings. Herein we report two cases of cerebral infarction with venous thrombosis in cynomolgus monkeys. Both animals were severely hypernatremic because of water deprivation, with serum sodium levels of 185 and 193 meq/liter, respectively. At necropsy, there were bilateral multiple hemorrhagic and malacic areas visible on the surface of the cerebrum and extending into the parenchyma, primarily involving the occipital lobes. These lesions were interpreted microscopically as infarcts because, in addition to hemorrhage and necrosis, multiple thrombi were present in small and medium-sized veins of gray matter and meninges. The pathogenesis of hypernatremia-induced cerebral lesions is believed to involve cellular dehydration that caused shrinkage of the brain. Because the vasculature of the brain is tightly adherent to the skull, this shrinkage results in tearing of blood vessels, with consequent hemorrhage and thrombosis.
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PMID:Cerebral infarction in two cynomolgus macaques (Macaca fascicularis) with hypernatremia. 881 42

We report two cases of stupor in which the patients were safely treated by electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) despite high risk conditions. Case 1 was a 72 year old schizophrenic woman who had developed catatonic stupor and had joint contractures as a complication of rheumatoid arthritis. Case 2 was a 52 year old woman who developed a stuporous state which was complicated by severe dehydration with hypernatremia. In both cases, psychotic symptoms were improved by ECT without event. Careful application of ECT seemed to be effective and safe even for stupor in high risk patients.
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PMID:Effective electroconvulsive therapy for stupor in the high risk patient: a report of two cases. 920 58

A 7-month-old infant presented to the emergency department with diarrhea, vomiting, and decreased activity. The infant was febrile, tachycardic, tachypneic, lethargic, and had a prolonged capillary refill. Initial serum sodium was 197 mmol/L. Ultimately, the infant was diagnosed with central diabetes insipidus complicated by severe dehydration secondary to rotavirus infection. A brief review of infant hypernatremia and its evaluation and treatment in the emergency department follows.
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PMID:Infant hypernatremia: a case report. 1090 64

Traumatic hypopituitarism was diagnosed in an 11-month-old male neutered cat. The presenting complaints were polydipsia, polyuria and lethargy of three months' duration. Craniocerebral trauma, as a result of a road traffic accident, had preceded the onset of clinical signs by six weeks. Neurological examination revealed right-sided mydriasis, reduced visual and tactile left forelimb placing reflexes and decreased proprioception in both the left fore- and hindlimb. Initial laboratory findings included hypernatraemia, hyperchloraemia, mild azotaemia, eosinophilia and isosthenuria. Low basal cortisol, thyroxine, thyroid-stimulating hormone and insulin growth factor-1 were noted. Subsequent to treatment with prednisolone, a water deprivation test confirmed the presence of central diabetes insipidus and therapy with synthetic antidiuretic hormone successfully ameliorated the polydipsia.
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PMID:Traumatic partial hypopituitarism in a cat. 1535 10

A previously healthy 30-day-old girl presented with seizures, irritability and inability to sleep for three days. Vitamin K was not given just after birth. She was lethargic. A multifocal clonic seizure was evident during examination. Anisocoria was diagnosed on eye examination. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed intracerebral hemorrhage, ventricular dilatation, and hematoma in the left temporofrontal region extending to the hypothalamus. Central diabetes insipidus was diagnosed by water deprivation due to dehydration and hypernatremia, and then desmopressin was added to phenobarbital. The possible mechanism of central diabetes insipidus in our patient is damage of vasopressin pathway resulting from compression of hemorrhage. An operation of ventriculoperitoneal shunt was also performed due to hydrocephalus. While she was symptom-free except for neurological sequel during routine control examinations after discharging from hospital, the parents said that she died, most probably from bronchopneumonia, at the age of 7.5 months. In conclusion, we emphasize that prophylactic vitamin K should be administrated to all babies just after birth, and infants with intracranial hemorrhage should carefully be monitored for central diabetes insipidus.
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PMID:Central diabetes insipidus following intracranial hemorrhage due to vitamin K deficiency in a neonate. 1630 78

Cerebral sinovenous thrombosis is a rare but potentially serious condition often occurring in children with nonspecific presenting features. Much remains to be learned about the long-term outcome of infants with cerebral sinovenous thrombosis. We report a series of four patients taken from a prospective database of neonates with sinovenous thrombosis who subsequently developed infantile spasms, three with hypsarrythmia on electroencephalography and one with multiple independent spike foci. The first patient presented at 2 weeks of age with hypernatremia, dehydration, and seizures. He was found to have extensive thrombosis and hemorrhagic infarction of the right basal ganglia. The second patient presented at 5 weeks of life and was found to have sagittal sinus thrombosis with bilateral intracranial hemorrhage. The third patient presented with seizures on day 1 of life and was found to have venous thrombosis involving the torcular, extending into the sagittal sinus. The fourth patient presented at 3 weeks with lethargy and seizures. He was diagnosed with bacterial meningitis and also had extensive sinus thrombosis. All patients developed infantile spasms at ages 9, 7, 11, and 10 months, respectively. This is the first report in the English literature describing infantile spasms as a possible outcome of sinovenous thrombosis in early infancy.
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PMID:Infantile spasms as an adverse outcome of neonatal cortical sinovenous thrombosis. 1656 76


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