Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0023380 (
lethargy
)
5,697
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two infants with
lethargy
, vomiting, convulsions, coma and marked metabolic acidosis were found to have very high concentrations of methylmalonic acid in their serum and urine. In vitro studies of fibroblasts demonstrated that the infants had different variants of methylmalonic acidemia.Vitamin B(12) was given in two different forms at 1 month of age and at 12 months of age. Each trial continued for 4 months but neither infant showed a clinical or biochemical response.In both infants hyperglycinemia, neutropenia and thrombocytopenia developed during acute metabolic crises only.
Hypoglycemia
was found in patient 2. Hyperammonemia was severe in patient 2 during acute crises but never appeared in patient 1. When clinically well, both infants continued to excrete abnormal amounts of methylmalonic acid in the urine and both had persistent compensated metabolic acidosis.Marked hyperuricemia developed in patient 1 at 18 months of age and led to progressive renal failure. Allopurinol therapy was necessary to keep the uric acid concentration within the normal range. Renal function returned to normal, as indicated by a marked increase in the renal clearance of creatinine and uric acid.Patient 1 is physically and mentally retarded, and has moderate hypotonia, hepatomegaly and persistent vomiting. Patient 2 has developed normally.The urine concentrations of methylmalonic acid in the four parents were normal.
...
PMID:Methylmalonic acidemia: 6 years' clinical experience with two variants unresponsive to vitamin B12 therapy. 3 17
Overnight metabolic studies in 39 poorly controlled insulin-treated diabetic patients aged 9 to 66 years showed
hypoglycaemia
(blood-glucose less than 2 mmol/1) in 22 patients; it lasted 3 h or more in 17. Hypoglycaemic symptoms were very mild or absent, but 19 patients had other features of overtreatment with insulin. These included
lethargy
, depression, night sweats, morning headaches, fits (3 patients), glycogen-laden hepatomegaly (3), and acquired tolerance to high doses of insulin (mean 1 u/kg/24 h). The best clinical clue to recurrent nocturnal
hypoglycaemia
was the intermittent occurrence of symptoms, however "mild" and infrequent these appeared to be. Reduction of insulin by a mean of 25% in these patients (without change of species) did not result in loss of overall control; 1 patient with recurrent ketoacidosis was stablished on 40% of his initial dose. It is difficult, sometimes impossible, to achieve good overnight control with conventional once or twice daily insulin therapy. Since patients readily become tolerant of low blood-glucose levels, reliance on urine tests and symptoms of
hypoglycaemia
as a guide to dosage easily produces a spiral of overtreatment.
...
PMID:Unrecognised nocturnal hypoglycaemia in insulin-treated diabetics. 8 75
Extensive water, sodium, chloride, bicarbonate, and potassium losses occur in the diarrheal calf. The water loss is entirely from the extracellular space. In severe cases, hypovolemic shock occurs with the blood volume decreased by as much as one-half. Acidosis, which results from fecal bicarbonate loss, lactic acidosis, and renal dysfunction, results in tissue buffering, which in turn causes the efflux of cellular potassium ions. Although there is a total body potassium deficit, plasma potassium concentration is increased. This, in conjunction with an intracellular deficit, causes weakness,
lethargy
, and potassium cardiotoxicosis resulting in death.
Hypoglycemia
also contributes to the weakness and
lethargy
seem as calves become moribund. These losses from the body and shifts in fluids and electrolytes must be understood to develop the most effective rationale for supportive therapy.
...
PMID:Pathophysiologic changes due to coronavirus-induced diarrhea in the calf. 21 8
Reye's syndrome in infancy is not a well-defined entity and is infrequently diagnosed. Eight infants 6 months of age or younger had a prodromal viral illness followed by the rapid onset of
lethargy
, seizures, and coma, resulting in the diagnosis of Reye's syndrome. All had abnormal results of liver function tests including elevations of blood ammonia level. Three patients had pathological studies that confirmed fatty visceral infiltration. The data on these patients, as well as a review of the literature, indicate that the most prominent clinical findings in Reye's syndrome in infancy include marked respiratory abnormalities with tachypnea and apneic episodes; frequent occurrence of seizures in the early stages of the illness; and
hypoglycemia
in most cases. A strong socioeconomic bias was noted in these patients, with the infants coming primarily from lower socioeconomic, urban environments, while older children with Reye's syndrome have been observed to be predominantly middle-class and from suburban or rural areas.
...
PMID:Reye's syndrome in infancy. 68 88
One infant with congenital hypertrophic pyloric stenosis developed severe
hypoglycemia
with
lethargy
, irritability, cyanosis, and convulsions in the immediate postoperative period after Fredet-Ramstedt pyloromytomy. A likely hypothesis for this mechanism has been reported as hepatic glycogen depletion secondary to malnutrition. Any infant with malnutrition, from whatever cause, should be assumed to have glycogen depletion, and repletion should be started and continued with all intravenous fluids given during the preoperative period.
Hypoglycemia
should be suspected when an infant develops any unusual or unexplained symptoms or findings in the immediate postoperative period. Prompt and intensive treatment with intravenous hypertonic glucose infusion must be begun and continued until blood glucose determinations remain at a safe level with oral feedings alone.
...
PMID:Postoperative hypoglycemia in congenital hypertrophic pyloric stenosis. 111 56
A 43-year-old man who presented parkinsonism due to pontine and extrapontine myelinolysis was reported. Late in February, 1990, the patient presented suffered from a flu-like illness and was seen at a community hospital. Physical finding showed the pigmentation on the whole body and hypotension, and laboratory examination revealed severe electrolyte imbalance (serum sodium 100 mEq/l, serum potassium 6.9 mEq/l, serum chloride 68 mEq/l) and
hypoglycemia
(postprandial serum glucose 78 mg/dl). Given these results, adrenal failure was strongly suspected. Prompt correction of electrocyte imbalance was performed by the infusion of sodium chloride, and four days later the serum sodium level reached 131 mEq/l. On the other hand, the patient was noticed
lethargic
and showed parkinsonism i.e., rest tremor, cog-wheel rigidity, and hypokinesia. Fourteen days after the onset of neurological abnormalities, the patient was referred to our hospital for further evaluation of parkinsonism. Additionally, neurological examination revealed dysphagia, mutism and positive pyramidal tract sign. On admission brain computed tomography was unremarkable, but on the 14th hospital day it showed low density area in the pons. Brain magnetic resonance imaging also showed a striking increase in T2-weighted signal from the pons, the midbrain, and the bilateral thalamus. Based on these findings, a diagnosis of parkinsonism due to pontine and extrapontine myelinolysis was made, and levodopa therapy was started. After the initiation of levodopa therapy, improvement of tremor, rigidity, and hypokinesia ensued with marked functional benefit, and the patient was discharged on the 49th hospital day. Levodopa was stopped three weeks after discharge but, all neurological abnormalities were not recurrent.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of parkinsonism due to pontine and extrapontine myelinolysis]. 130 Feb 56
A 9-month-old sexually intact male longhair cat was examined because of
lethargy
, anorexia, cold intolerance, and failure to thrive since acquisition at an early age. Clinical signs of disease were less pronounced when the cat was fed a low-protein diet. Anemia,
hypoglycemia
, low total CO2 content, and hyperammonemia were detected. The cat was euthanatized. Urine obtained immediately before euthanasia contained a large amount of methylmalonic acid. Total serum cobalamin concentration was low. Hepatic methylmalonic-CoA mutase activity, with and without the addition of coenzyme adenosylcobalamin, was consistent with a cobalamin deficiency. Methylmalonic acidemia secondary to a putative defect in cobalamin absorption was diagnosed.
...
PMID:Cobalamin deficiency associated with methylmalonic acidemia in a cat. 150 Mar 7
Management of accidental overdosage with oral hypoglycemic agents in toddlers may be difficult when the history of ingestion is overlooked. We report a 21-month-old girl who presented with
lethargy
and generalized seizures 12 hours after ingestion of an unknown number of glibenclamide pills. The blood glucose on admission was 0.5 mM/l. Symptoms resolved promptly after an intravenous bolus of glucose. Metabolic and infectious causes of
hypoglycemia
were ruled out. The parents denied drug ingestion initially, but further investigation revealed that she had ingested several glibenclamide pills used by her diabetic father 12 hours prior to admission. This case illustrates the problem involved in diagnosis and management of accidental drug overdosage in children when no such history is elicited and symptoms are delayed.
...
PMID:[Overdosage of glibenclamide presenting with lethargy and seizures in a child]. 142 74
Medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency is a potentially fatal metabolic disease, which is characterized by non-ketotic
hypoglycemia
and
lethargy
. The disease manifests itself by periodic attacks in connection with infections and periods of fasting, or suddenly as unexpected child death or "near miss". Characterization of a prevalent disease-causing mutation (G985) in the MCAD gene has increased the diagnostic possibilities, since 75% of all patients with MCAD deficiency are homozygous for the mutation. Analysis for this mutation in genomic DNA from a bloodspot on a PKU-card constitute today a certain and specific diagnosis for the disease in 75% of all cases. In the remaining 25% the mutation analysis is supplemented with urine metabolite studies by gas chromatography/mass spectrometry, and with measurements of enzyme activities in cultured skin fibroblasts. The disease is today considered more common than previously anticipated, since the incidence of patients with MCAD enzyme deficiency in Denmark is estimated to 1/27,000 newborns, or two new cases annually. The relationship between the enzyme defect (gene defect) and the clinical expression of the disease is a main subject for the clinical research in the disease at present, because less than 10% of all patients with the gene defect are diagnosed. This applies not only to Denmark but also to other countries.
...
PMID:[Medium chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency: a life-threatening defect of fatty acid oxidation]. 153 77
Galactosemia in newborns and infants is associated with the following symptoms: jaundice, hepatomegaly, failure to thrive, feeding difficulties,
hypoglycemia
, convulsions,
lethargy
, amino-aciduria, cataracts, hepatic cirrhosis, ascites, and mental retardation. If the preliminary evaluation indicates galactosemia, there is high risk for E. coli sepsis and death. Strong consideration should therefore be given for early antibiotic therapy in infants with suspected galactosemia in spite of the absence of clinical signs or symptoms of sepsis.
...
PMID:Association of Escherichia coli sepsis and galactosemia in neonates. 156 28
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>