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Query: UMLS:C0023380 (
lethargy
)
5,697
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 52-year-old man had a prolonged history of nondeforming migratory polyarthritis and a short episode of pericarditis preceding the onset of bilateral vitreitis and
retinitis
. The clinical course was characterized by progressive deterioration of vision, increasing
lethargy
, and dementia, leading to coma and death from pneumonia (21 months later). No intestinal manifestations were recorded. Both eyes, which were removed postmortem, disclosed numerous PAS-positive macrophages throughout the inner retina and vitreous. Electron microscopic studies of the macrophages displayed intracytoplasmic, degenerating, rod-shaped bacteria and membranous structures identical to those seen in the intestine, brain, heart, and other tissues of patients with Whipple's disease. Clinicians should include Whipple's disease, and reticulum cell sarcoma, in the differential diagnosis of patients with bilateral
retinitis
and vitreitis, especially if these disorders are associated with CNS manifestations.
...
PMID:Ocular involvement in Whipple's disease: light and electron microscopic observations. 7 12
A 4-year-old female German Shepherd Dog was examined to determine the cause of ataxia, progressive head tilt, anorexia,
lethargy
, and weight loss of 3 weeks' duration. A vestibular syndrome, generalized lymphadenopathy, bilateral uveitis, and chorioretinitis with complete detachment of the left retina were detected. Abnormal clinicopathologic findings were isosthenuria and hyperglobulinemia. The non-functional left eye was enucleated and fungal organisms resembling Aspergillus spp were identified on histologic examination. Microbial culture of a urine sample yielded Acremonium sp, which was initially considered a contaminant. The dog was considered to have systemic aspergillosis and was treated with itraconazole for 7 months, until it was euthanatized because of persistent vomiting and anorexia. Postmortem examination revealed multisystemic pyogranulomatous and necrotizing inflammation of the myocardium, pericardium, liver, and kidneys; and granulomatous splenitis, lymphadenitis,
retinitis
, endometritis, and meningoencephalitis. Fungal culture of affected organs yielded Acremonium sp. These findings indicated that Acremonium spp can be pathogenic and should not be ignored when cultured.
...
PMID:Systemic mycosis caused by Acremonium sp in a dog. 825 22
Lesions are described in farmed Penaeus monodon affected with a previously unreported, fatal disease, 'peripheral neuropathy and retinopathy' (PNR). Outbreaks, associated with minor to heavy mortalities, occurred in 22 of 25 ponds on a farm in eastern Australia during the mid to late 1998/99 growout period. Moribund prawns, 5 to 26 g mean body weight, gathered at pond edges and were typically reddish in colour,
lethargic
, with mild to moderate epibiotic fouling and 1 or more partially amputated appendages. Histologically, there was mild to severe, focal to diffuse degeneration and necrosis of axons and their sheaths, together with associated glial cell apoptosis, in peripheral nerve fibres. Of the 3 appendage types examined systematically, these pathognomonic lesions were most common and severe in proximal antennal nerves and less common and severe in distal antennal nerves, antennular nerves and pereiopod nerves. Mild to severe, acute to chronic
retinitis
, associated with degeneration and necrosis of retinular cells and their axons, was also present in most clinically affected prawns. Transmission electron microscopy revealed moderate to large numbers of intracytoplasmic rod-shaped, helical nucleocapsids and enveloped virions, morphologically consistent with a yellow head-like virus, in putative glial cells in the antennal nerve, in the fasciculated zone of the eye and in putative sensory nerve cells of antennules. Immunohistochemical examination revealed lesions, but not histologically normal tissues, in peripheral nerves, eyes, lymphoid organ and vas deferens that consistently stained positively for a yellow head-related virus. The findings strongly suggest that a yellow head-related virus such as the Australian gill-associated virus (GAV) is causally associated with PNR. It is likely that PNR was not recognised during earlier investigations of mid-crop mortalities of farmed P. monodon in eastern Australia because appropriate peripheral nerves and eyes were not routinely examined histologically.
...
PMID:Fatal, virus-associated peripheral neuropathy and retinopathy in farmed Penaeus monodon in eastern Australia. I. Pathology. 1269 Nov 89