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)

Carbamazepine is being used more frequently in the U.S. as an initial agent of choice to treat generalized tonic-clonic, mixed, and partial seizures with complex symptomatology. Carbamazepine is extensively metabolized in the liver; however, there is little information available on its pharmacokinetics in patients following surgery or myocardial infarction, or in those with liver disease. We report a case of a patient who attained toxic carbamazepine serum concentrations (ranging from 18.2 to 21.5 micrograms/mL) two days after cardiothoracic surgery and an intraoperative myocardial infarction, and experienced lethargy, diplopia, dysarthria, diaphoresis, and horizontal and downgaze nystagmus. These alterations in serum carbamazepine concentration normalized ten days after surgery. They may have been due to a combination of changes in protein binding and decreased elimination due to altered intrinsic hepatic clearance. With carbamazepine achieving a more prominent place in anticonvulsant therapy, the influence of various procedures and disease processes on the pharmacokinetics and pharmacodynamics of carbamazepine, as well as the clinical consequences of such changes, need further investigation.
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PMID:Toxic carbamazepine concentrations following cardiothoracic surgery and myocardial infarction. 226 Mar 36

The therapeutic responses of seven children with Wilson's disease who presented with neurological disease were evaluated. Neurological abnormalities comprised intellectual deterioration in 7, conduct disorder in five, dystonia in three, choreoathetosis in three, seizures in one and hemiparesis in one. Lethargy and weight loss were present for several months in 6 children. Four children had clinically demonstrable liver disease which was fatal in two. Electroencephalography performed in two children was normal. Computed tomography (CT) of the brain in three children showed cerebral atrophy in all and areas of low attenuation in the basal ganglia which resolved on treatment in one. All patients were treated with penicillamine but, in four, triethylene tetramine (TETA) was substituted because of adverse effects. Neurological abnormalities in these patients were reversible.
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PMID:Neurological abnormalities in Wilson's disease are reversible. 356 99

Although Wilson's Disease is a treatable disorder, 9 of 15 cases referred with undiagnosed liver disease in the present series died in 3 to 53 days of admission. We have reviewed these cases to identify features that would allow earlier diagnosis and improvement in management. The presenting symptoms were lethargy and malaise (11 cases), jaundice (11), abdominal pain (9), and deteriorating school performance (4). At diagnosis, all fatal cases had jaundice and ascites, while only one of the 6 survivors had ascites and two had jaundice. Evidence of hemolysis was found in 3 fatal cases and 5 survivors. Serum bilirubin concentrations, aspartate transaminase, and prolongation of prothrombin time were significantly more abnormal in the fatal cases (p less than 0.01) as compared with the survivors. Cirrhosis was present in all fatal cases and in 2 of the 6 survivors. Wilson's Disease must be excluded in children presenting with frank liver disease as well as those with hemolytic anemia, persisting lethargy, abdominal pain, or deteriorating school performance.
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PMID:Wilson's disease in childhood. Variability of clinical presentation. 661 55

We examined the thyroid status of 58 patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) using total serum thyroxin, thyroid hormone binding ratio, free thyroxin index, serum TSH, antithyroglobulin, and antimicrosomal antibodies. Seven patients were known to be hypothyroid prior to the diagnosis of PBC. Six additional patients were found to have biochemical evidence of hypothyroidism. The prevalence of hypothyroidism was 12% if we include only those six PBC patients with newly diagnosed hypothyroidism or 22% if we include all 13 patients. Five of the 58 patients had evidence for an elevation of thyroid hormone binding capacity. Three hypothyroid patients had normal total thyroxins with low thyroid hormone binding ratios. Two euthyroid patients had elevated total T4s with low thyroid hormone binding ratio and normal FTI. The prevalence of positive antimicrosomal antibodies was 34%, including 11 euthyroid PBC patients. The prevalence of positive antithyroglobulin antibodies was 20% including five euthyroid patients. There was no association between HLA DR3 or DR5 and the patients with hypothyroidism and/or antithyroid antibodies. Because fatigue, lethargy, and anorexia as well as hypercholesterolemia are common features of both hypothyroidism and PBC, patients with PBC should be screened for evidence of thyroid dysfunction. Thyroid disease may precede the diagnosis of PBC by several years. Therefore, the development of cholestatic liver disease in a patient with known autoimmune thyroiditis should arouse suspicion of PBC.
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PMID:Increased incidence of hypothyroidism in primary biliary cirrhosis. 662 57

Haemochromatosis is one of the most common inborn errors of metabolism. In prospective epidemiological studies the frequency of haemochromatosis is 0.0037 (76/20333 subjects) for homozygotes which corresponds to a gene frequency of 0.061 and a frequency of heterozygotes of 0.115. Abnormality in liver function tests, weakness and lethargy, skin hyperpigmentation, diabetes mellitus, arthralgia, impotence and ECG abnormalities are the most frequent findings and symptoms at diagnosis. In recent years about 50% of patients were detected without having liver cirrhosis and 20% of patients did not have any symptoms and pathology except iron overload. Survival analyses in long-term studies showed that in the absence of cirrhosis and diabetes, iron removal by phlebotomy therapy prevents further tissue damage and guarantees a normal life expectancy. Patients with massive and long-lasting iron overload had a worse prognosis than those with less severe iron excess. Iron removal in general ameliorated liver disease, weakness and cardiac abnormalities, and also prevented the progression of endocrine alterations. Therapy, however, did not influence insulin-dependent diabetes. Most deaths in patients with hereditary haemochromatosis were caused by liver cancers which often occurred many years after complete iron removal. In patients with haemochromatosis, liver cirrhosis, cardiomyopathy, and diabetes mellitus are also significantly more frequent causes of deaths when compared with the general population. Further strategies have to evaluate the design of screening programmes in order to diagnose more patients in the precirrhotic and asymptomatic stage.
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PMID:Clinical spectrum and management of haemochromatosis. 788 Nov 58

A 15-year-old mare mule was presented with a 2-month history of weight loss, lethargy, and anorexia. Clinicopathologic abnormalities were consistent with liver disease. Repeated urinalysis revealed hyposthenuria, but water intake and a water deprivation test were normal, suggesting adequate renal function. Ultrasonography revealed pulmonary, hepatic, and renal masses. Cytologic and histologic examination of pulmonary aspirates and hepatic biopsies, respectively, revealed polygonal neoplastic cells with many mitotic figures, the cells having the characteristics of adenocarcinoma. Necropsy confirmed a primary renal adenocarcinoma with metastasis to liver, lung, lymph nodes and the opposite kidney.
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PMID:Metastatic renal adenocarcinoma in a mule. 841 57

The purpose of this investigation was to evaluate the significance of enzymatic and biochemical analyses in the classification of chronic inflammatory liver disease and to evaluate the prognosis of these diseases. Chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis were diagnosed by histopathological examination in 79 dogs. Decreased appetite and lethargy were the most common owner complaints (46/79). Vomiting and, or, diarrhoea were reported in 27/79 dogs. Ascites was the most common clinical sign (43/79), whereas icterus was a more unusual finding demonstrated in 16/79 dogs. Liver cirrhosis was diagnosed most frequently, in 33/79 dogs, followed by chronic progressive hepatitis (22/79), chronic cholangiohepatitis (13/79), and chronic non-specific hepatitis (11/79). Hypoalbuminaemia was the most consistent biochemical aberration in liver cirrhosis (25/26) and in chronic progressive hepatitis (13/18). These diseases also showed normal to mildly increased concentrations of serum alanine aminotransferase (ALT) and serum gamma-glutamyl transferase (GGT) and a moderate to marked increase of serum alkaline phosphatase (ALP) and fasting serum bile acid (SBA) concentrations. As expected, icterus and markedly elevated ALT, ALP, GGT and SBA levels were demonstrated in chronic cholangiohepatitis. In this disease hypoalbuminaemia was shown in 6/12 dogs, whereas in dogs with chronic non-specific hepatitis, mean SBA and albumin concentrations were normal. In liver cirrhosis the prognosis was poor, with 94 per cent of the dogs dead within one week of established diagnosis. For dogs with the other types of chronic hepatitis the prognosis was more favourable with the mean survival time ranging from 21.1 to 36.4 months.
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PMID:Diagnosis and prognosis of chronic hepatitis and cirrhosis in dogs. 892 20

"Sickness behaviors" such as lethargy, fatigue, and malaise occur commonly in patients with cholestatic liver diseases and contribute significantly to the morbidity associated with these diseases. However, the cause of these symptoms is unknown. Interleukin-1beta (IL-1beta) released within the brain has been implicated in the genesis of a number of "sickness behaviors," including malaise and lethargy. Therefore, we investigated whether experimental cholestatic liver disease caused by bile duct resection (BDR) in rats is associated with enhanced central sensitivity to IL-1beta-induced "sickness behaviors." The central infusion of IL-1beta at a dose that produced an insignificant decrease in locomotor activity in control rats produced a striking reduction in locomotor activity in cholestatic rats. The anorectic response to central IL-1beta infusion was similar in cholestatic and noncholestatic animals and did not parallel our locomotor activity findings. Therefore, cholestatic liver injury is characterized by augmented central responsiveness to IL-1beta with respect to a decrease in locomotor activity. These findings may explain, at least in part, the high incidence of symptoms such as fatigue, malaise, and lethargy that occur in cholestatic patients and may open novel future avenues for their treatment.
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PMID:Augmented interleukin-1beta-induced depression of locomotor activity in cholestatic rats. 982 20

Intrahepatic cholestasis is characterized by a decrease in bile flow in the absence of overt bile duct obstruction, resulting in the accumulation of bile constituents in the liver and blood. Various etiological factors have been incriminated including drugs, total parenteral nutrition, sepsis, pregnancy, graft-versus-host disease and systemic disorders such as sarcoidosis, amyloidosis and Hodgkin's disease. The pathogenesis of cholestasis is unclear and several mechanisms have been hypothesized, without convincing evidence that any of these play a role in clinical cholestasis. Despite the uncertainty about the pathophysiology of intrahepatic cholestasis, several forms of therapy have been employed. Ursodeoxycholic acid may relieve pruritus and lethargy, and in some cases may modify disease progression. If cholestasis persists, supportive therapy is important to maintain optimal physical and nutritional well-being. In patients with advanced liver disease associated with hepatocellular failure, liver transplantation is the only viable option.
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PMID:Intrahepatic cholestatic syndromes: pathogenesis, clinical features and management. 1043 57

Amiodarone is a class III antiarrhythmic drug used in dogs with dilated cardiomyopathy and ventricular tachyarrhythmias. Hepatopathy is one of the more commonly reported adverse effects of amiodarone use in people. We describe 4 dogs that developed hepatopathy associated with amiodarone administration; 2 dogs also developed neutropenia. Three dogs had clinical signs of anorexia and lethargy; 1 did not show signs until impaired liver function had developed. Clinical signs or biochemical abnormalities developed 1.5-8 months after amiodarone treatment was started. Clinical signs resolved within 2 weeks of discontinuing amiodarone, but biochemical abnormalities did not resolve for 6-8 weeks. The delay between onset of liver disease and overt clinical signs suggests that serial evaluation of liver enzyme activities following amiodarone use in does is important.
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PMID:Hepatopathy in 4 dogs treated with amiodarone. 1066 24


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