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)

Rhinocerebral mucormycosis is a rare and fatal deep fungus infection occurring in debilitated patients. Its reports have been recently increased because of the increase of such conditions as uncontrolled diabetics, leukemia, and cancer. A 60-year-old male suffering from continuous headache and fever was diagnosed as meningitis, and repeated culture of cerebrospinal fluid was negative. Antibiotic therapy was ineffective. CT scan revealed brain abscess in the right frontal lobe and bone defect over the right posterior ethmoidal sinuses. Both maxillary and ethmoidal sinuses were operated on 38 years ago. The patient was suspected to have rhinologic brain abscess. We intended to remove the source of infection in the right posterior ethmoidal sinuses beneath the base of the skull and to repair the defect of dura mater. The operation was tried on the 6th hospital day. There was a cyst in the posterior ethmoidal sinuses and an intact denuded dura mater over the cyst. The causative organism was not detected by smear test, bacteriological and fungal culture. He relapsed into lethargy, and died on the 21st hospital day due to the vast cerebral infarction. Autopsy revealed rhinocerebral mucormycosis. The literature on this disease was also reviewed and discussed.
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PMID:[Phinocerebral mucormycosis--report of a case]. 229 52

Rhino-orbital-cerebral mucormycosis is a disease that is frequently fatal. A 39-year-old man with diabetic ketoacidosis was referred to the authors' ophthalmic service with fever, orbital apex syndrome in the right eye, lethargy, and a black eschar in the palate. He was treated with systemic and local (intraconal) amphotericin B and his ketoacidosis was controlled; exenteration was not performed. Biopsy of the palate proved mucormycosis. Eighteen months later the patient was still alive and had a blind, anatomically preserved right eye with ptosis and intact extraocular muscle function without proptosis or pain. The authors propose this alternative means of treatment to achieve higher doses of the drug at the site of infection and better cosmetic and psychological results.
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PMID:Intraconal amphotericin B for the treatment of rhino-orbital mucormycosis. 885 37

Mucormycosis is a rare opportunistic infection caused by fungi belonging to Mucorales order. The infection usually starts in the middle or inferior nasal meatus and then spreads to the paranasal sinuses and the orbit. Then it reaches the brain through the ethmoid and the orbit apex and can lead to lethargy, paralysis, and death. The majority of cases of rhinocerebral mucormycosis are diagnosed in patients with immunologic and metabolic disorders. Early diagnosis is fundamental, and so is medical therapy with amphotericin B along with surgical toilet of the compromised tissues. This article presents and discusses the management of 3 cases of rhinocerebral mucormycosis with different onsets, progressions, and outcomes.
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PMID:Management and outcomes of three cases of rhinocerebral mucormycosis. 2186 61

A 4-yr-old male captive hooded seal (Cystophora cristata), previously diagnosed as hypothyroid, died after a 3-wk period of lethargy and inappetance despite treatment that included intramuscular administration of antibiotics and multivitamins. Gross pathologic findings included extensive muscle necrosis over the left flank, an underlying necrotic iliac lymph node, two necrotic pulmonary masses and a necrotic bronchial lymph node. Routine cultures yielded a number of bacterial isolates and a heavy pure fungal growth from the necrotic iliac lymph node; wet preparations of which revealed sporangiophores typical of Mucor sp. Histopathology of necrotic muscle, pulmonary lesions and bronchial and iliac lymph nodes revealed necrosis with a marked pyogranulomatous and eosinophilic inflammatory cell infiltrate and fungal hyphae consistent with a Zygomycete species. This is believed to be the first report of systemic mucormycosis in a pinniped likely to have originated from an injection site reaction.
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PMID:Systemic mucormycosis in a hooded seal (Cystophora cristata). 2294 18