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Query: UMLS:C0023380 (
lethargy
)
5,697
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Reye's syndrome
is a potentially devastating neurologic illness seen predominantly in children following a viral prodrome. The cause is unknown. The clinical history and laboratory presentation are stereotypical and easy to recognize if the clinician considers the diagnosis. Neurologic dysfunction is characterized by
lethargy
, obtundation, persistent vomiting, agitated delirium, and coma. Death is secondary to severe cerebral swelling with elevation of intracranial pressure. Although no specific therapy has been clearly demonstrated to be superior in terms of outcome, most clinicians have adopted a management scheme aimed at lowering and controlling the elevated ICP. We have described the management protocol in use at the Children's Hospital of Philadelphia. The protocol is summarized in the Appendix for the convenience of the reader.
...
PMID:Management of Reye's syndrome. 391 81
Clinicians and nurses should obtain a history of antecedent illness occurring within 2 weeks of the onset of vomiting. Ninety percent of school-age children will give a history of an antecedent illness (varicella or influenza-like respiratory illness) within 1 week of the onset of vomiting. The vomiting of
Reye's syndrome
is usually persistent, lasting for 24 to 96 hours before the onset of serious brain signs. We believe that any child with the history of flu or chickenpox within 1 week of the onset of vomiting, which lasts for more than 12 hours, and is unusually severe or is associated with
lethargy
, should have an SGPT (alanine aminotransferase). This laboratory measure is clearly elevated in most cases of
Reye's syndrome
.
...
PMID:Management of Reye's syndrome: need for early diagnosis and intravenous treatment of stage I non-comatose cases. 402 67
Mice intravenously injected with concentrated infectious influenza B/Lee/40 virus (LD50 = 6400 hemagglutinin units) developed
lethargy
, seizures, coma, and death 1 to 3 days later. The cerebrospinal fluid cell count was normal. Serum glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase levels increased 19-fold and plasma ammonia levels elevated 2.6-fold over control values. Serum bilirubin levels remained normal. Microvesicular fatty metamorphosis developed in the liver, whereas the brain showed mild cerebral edema without inflammatory changes. Viral propagation did not occur in liver or brain, but viral hemagglutinin, neuraminidase, and probably nucleoprotein antigens were produced in hepatocytes. Many of the clinical, biochemical, and pathologic features of the mouse illness are similar to those seen in
Reye's syndrome
.
...
PMID:Experimental influenza B virus toxicity in mice. A possible model for Reye's syndrome. 629 39
A patient is described who was admitted with a condition similar to the
Reye syndrome
at the age of 9 months. Hypoglycemia, hyperammonemia, hepatomegaly, and
lethargy
were present. The plasma concentrations of free and acylcarnitine were extremely low and the urine contained excessive amounts of dicarboxylic acids. Extensive biochemical and histological investigations of biopsied liver and muscle led to the diagnosis of systemic carnitine deficiency. The patient was put on oral carnitine treatment, upon which he remained clinically well. A prolonged fasting test during this treatment gave abnormal results: there was no ketonemia, but an increase of omega-oxidation of fatty acids. In spite of the treatment the liver and muscle carnitine content remained below normal.
...
PMID:Systemic carnitine deficiency: benefit of oral carnitine supplements vs. persisting biochemical abnormalities. 646 48
In five spontaneous outbreaks, sixty-four BALB/cByJ mice developed Reye's-like syndrome 4 to 33 days after introduction into mouse rooms known to harbor a variety of indigenous murine viruses. The clinical course lasted 24 hours and consisted of progressively deteriorating consciousness and hyperventilation, usually leading to death. Mice killed and necropsied while
stuporous
or comatose had serum ammonia levels of 2524 +/- 179 versus 66 +/- 8 micrograms/dl for control BALB/cByJ mice. Necropsy findings included swollen, diffusely pale yellow livers with panlobular microvesicular fatty change, pale renal cortices with epithelial fat droplets of the proximal convoluted tubules, and Alzheimer type II astrocytosis of the neocortex, corpus striatum, hippocampus, and thalamus. In three of the five outbreaks involving 66% of affected animals, mice had active coronaviral enteritis. Electron microscopic changes in hepatocytes, neocortical astrocytes, and neurons were similar to or identical with those described for the acute phase of
Reye's syndrome
in man. The epizootiology of these outbreaks and the apparent synchrony between
Reye's syndrome
-like illness and the stage of intestinal coronavirus infections in some of these outbreaks suggest that one or more naturally occurring murine viruses were of etiologic significance.
...
PMID:Spontaneous Reye's-like syndrome in BALB/cByJ mice. 648 84
Vomiting,
lethargy
and metabolic acidosis were the main initial symptoms of metabolic disease in a 1 month old girl. Her older sister had died from a similar disease, considered to be
Reye's syndrome
, at an age of 15 months. The urine of the present case contained 2-methylcitric acid, 3-hydroxypropionic acid, N-propionylglycine, 2-hydroxy-3-methylbutyric acid, N-tiglylglycine, 3-hydroxyvaleric acid and glutaric acid. These metabolites are all known to be associated with propionyl-CoA accumulation. Free propionic acid was not detected in the urine. In addition, the urine contained 3-oxo-2-methylvaleric acid and 3-hydroxy-2-methylvaleric acid, probably formed by condensation of two molecules of propionyl-CoA. The identity of these metabolites was confirmed by synthesis. An elevated urinary concentration of maleic acid and fumaric acid was another constant abnormality. The activity of propionyl-CoA carboxylase in leucocytes was about 20% of the normal activity. The girl was teated with a low-protein diet since the diagnosis was made at an age of 1 month, and her psychomotor development was satisfactory at an age of 2 1/2 years. She had a few episodes of acidosis during infections.
...
PMID:Propionyl-CoA carboxylase deficiency: case report, effect of low-protein diet and identification of 3-oxo-2-methylvaleric acid 3-hydroxy-2-methylvaleric acid, and maleic acid in urine. 731 94
We report the case of a boy 5 years old we admitted to our PICU with signs of impending hepatic failure (hypertransaminasemia, hyperammonemia, prolonged PT) following mild upper respiratory infection and irrepressible vomiting. We observed no neurological abnormalities excepting slight
lethargy
; on the contrary, EEG findings showed severe diffuse slowing and high-voltage Delta activity. Our diagnosis of
Reye's syndrome
was later confirmed by liver biopsy. Clinical and electrophysiological signs recovered after 48-72 hours and no explication was found for this anomalous
Reye's syndrome
presentation. Further studies are needed for understanding the basis of neurological involvement of stage I
Reye's syndrome
.
...
PMID:[Clinical-instrumental dissociation in a case of Reye's syndrome]. 770 45
The non-benzodiazepine anxiolytic, panadiplon, was discontinued from clinical development due to evidence of hepatic toxicity in human volunteers that was not predicted by rat or monkey preclinical development studies. The present study was conducted to examine potential toxicity in the rabbit. Three groups of female rabbits were administered vehicle, 10 mg/kg per day or 20 mg/kg per day of panadiplon by oral gavage for 14 days. Animals in the 20 mg/kg group lost weight, and 6/10 developed a profound
lethargy
. Hepatic toxicity was observed in treated animals, evidenced by dose- and time-related increases in serum transaminase activities, gross hepatic lesions and multifocal centrilobular necrosis. Hepatic microvesicular steatosis was evident in treated animals; lipid analysis revealed a 123% increase in hepatic triglyceride. A time-dependent increase in serum triglyceride levels was observed in the high-dose group beginning on day 4. Hepatic glycogen was reduced, and histochemical examination revealed the reduction to be heterogeneous across the lobule with some areas showing a complete absence of glycogen. One rabbit in each drug-treated group showed mild hypoglycemia at day 12, and 4/10 rabbits in the high-dose group showed hyperglycemia at days 12-14. We conclude that panadiplon produced a microvesicular steatosis and hepatic toxicity in the rabbit. The observed toxicity resembled a
Reye's syndrome
-like toxicity produced by a variety of mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation inhibitors.
...
PMID:Induction of a hepatic toxic syndrome in the Dutch-belted rabbit by a quinoxalinone anxiolytic. 774 May 46
This article describes the metabolic investigations to be applied in any clinical situation consistent with a late acute form of inborn error of metabolism: unexplained coma with or without focal neurological manifestations, recurrent vomiting with
lethargy
, episodes of ataxia with or without behaviour disorder, fits of psychiatric troubles. In each of these situations, careful medical history is of major importance searching for previous clinical manifestations such as episodes of coma, ataxia or vomiting, anorexia, failure to thrive, developmental delay, all very suggestive of metabolic disorder. The association of neurological symptoms and abnormal hepatic tests is also of great value and must not lead to the diagnosis of
Reye's syndrome
without considering a metabolic defect of fatty acid oxidation, urea cycle, respiratory chain, or Wilson's disease. When looking for an etiological origin, it is mandatory to collect all the biological information at the same time, also knowing that metabolic abnormalities may be mild and transitory, and that many of them are non specific (metabolic acidosis, hyperlactacidemia, hyperammonemia, hepatic tests disturbances) being encountered in collapsus, shock and multiple organ failure syndrome.
...
PMID:[Diagnosis of metabolic coma in children]. 784 29
Influenza viruses rarely cause acute encephalopathy. Post-influenzal encephalitis, which occurs a few weeks after recovery from influenza is thought to be an autoimmune process associated with demyelination and vasculopathy. It has been suggested that Economo
lethargic
encephalitis followed by postencephalitic Parkinsonism was associated with the influenza A epidemic of 1918 (Spanish flu). The incidence of
Reye's syndrome
has markedly decreased due to the avoidance of salicylates in the treatment of influenza or varicella. One inactivated flu vaccine is thought to have caused Guillain Barre syndrome due to molecular mimicry between viral protein and myelin, which triggered autoimmune responses. The persistence of influenza virus genes in neural cells as one of the causes of chronic degenerative diseases of the central nervous system by inducing apoptosis of the host cells is yet to be proven.
...
PMID:Influenza virus and neurological diseases. 931 61
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