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Query: UMLS:C0023380 (
lethargy
)
5,697
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We have established an improved model of fulminant hepatic failure in dogs. Buthionine sulfoximine is used to inactivate glutathione synthesis, and small increments of acetaminophen are given intravenously to maintain the plasma level at approximately 200 micrograms/ml for 20 hr. This regimen produces severe liver injury along with many of the features seen in humans with acetaminophen poisoning. The first sign of impending liver failure is hypoglycemia. This occurs about 15 hr into the experiment and requires treatment with a continuous infusion of glucose. Between 15 and 20 hr, serum ALT activity begins to rise, indicating the onset of liver necrosis. Over the following 15 to 20 hr ALT activity continues to rise and is accompanied by an increase in bilirubin, a prolongation of the prothrombin time and the development of fetor hepaticus. Thirty to 48 hr after the initial acetaminophen dose, the animals begin to exhibit symptoms of
encephalopathy
and progress from
lethargy
to the inability to maintain posture and then coma, seizures and death. Liver biopsy specimens obtained at several stages throughout the study showed progressive necrosis, ultimately resulting in the complete destruction of zones 2 and 3.
...
PMID:An improved model of acetaminophen-induced fulminant hepatic failure in dogs. 173 38
Seventy-six patients with neurologic complications of cat-scratch disease are discussed.
Encephalopathy
occurred in 61, while 15 had either cranial or peripheral nerve involvement. The average age of the patients with
encephalopathy
was 10.6 years (range, 1 to 66 years), and almost twice as many males as females were affected in contrast to patients with uncomplicated cat-scratch disease, in which the ratio was almost equal. Fever was not documented in 50% of patients with
encephalopathy
and only 26% had temperatures higher than 39 degrees C. Convulsions occurred in 46% and combative behavior in 40%.
Lethargy
with or without coma was accompanied by variable neurologic signs. Results of laboratory studies, including imaging of the central nervous system, were inconsistent and nondiagnostic. Biopsy tissue from 14 patients showed histopathologic findings compatible with cat-scratch disease. The "English-Wear bacillus" was demonstrated by the Warthin-Starry stain in 10 of 14 skin or lymph node specimens. Of the 15 patients without
encephalopathy
, two children with facial nerve paresis displayed cranial nerve symptoms and/or signs, 10 patients had cat-scratch disease neuroretinitis, and three women had peripheral neuritis. All 76 patients recovered within 12 months; 78% recovered within 1 to 12 weeks. There were no neurologic sequelae. Treatment consisted of control of convulsions and supportive measures. Commonly used antibiotics administered to more than half of the patients were apparently ineffective.
...
PMID:Cat-scratch disease. Acute encephalopathy and other neurologic manifestations. 184 21
The influenza B virus mouse model of Reye's syndrome was studied to learn more about the
encephalopathy
in Reye's syndrome. One to 3 days after intravenous influenza B/Lee virus, Balb/c mice became
lethargic
, seized and lapsed into a fatal coma. Wide-spread cerebral edema without inflammation developed 1-3 days after virus inoculation. Swollen astrocytic foot processes containing increased glial fibrillary acidic protein were located around capillaries. Viral particles were not seen by electron microscopy and complete viral replication did not occur. Immunohistochemical studies demonstrated influenza B viral antigen within many endothelial cells but not within other brain cells. Qualitative (Evans blue dye) and quantitative (percent brain water and technetium -99 pertechnetate) studies of the blood-brain barrier demonstrated abnormalities. This model reproduced many clinical, virologic and pathologic features of the Reye's syndrome
encephalopathy
. In addition, a non-permissive viral infection of brain endothelial cells occurred which may be important in the pathogenesis of the mouse
encephalopathy
and may participate in the
encephalopathy
of Reye's syndrome.
...
PMID:The influenza B virus mouse model of Reye's syndrome: clinical, virologic and morphologic studies of the encephalopathy. 216 26
Three patients had neurologic signs due to isopropyl alcohol (IPA) intoxication. Over a several-week period, a known alcoholic developed apathy, confusion, ataxia, and hyperreflexia. During this period, there was no ethanol available to him, and he denied use of other intoxicants. He was found
stuporous
in the hospital after drinking IPA and admitted to IPA abuse during the preceding weeks. Two other men were admitted in a stupor after large ingestions of IPA. Intoxication with IPA has two different presentations: stupor in a known alcoholic and
encephalopathy
of unknown cause in individuals who hide their addiction. Ethanol, methanol, IPA, and ethylene glycol intoxications are associated with different clinical and laboratory findings.
...
PMID:Isopropyl alcohol intoxication. 198 19
The neurologic symptoms in human shigellosis have often been attributed to Shiga toxin, although its exact role has not been determined. By use of a [3H] thymidine-labeled HeLa cell assay, cytotoxic activity was demonstrated in stool but not cerebrospinal fluid or serum from five patients with shigellosis presenting with seizures or
encephalopathy
. Bacterial isolates produced 16.0-88.2 CD50 (50% cytotoxic dose) of cytotoxin/mg of protein. The toxin activity in stool and the cytotoxic activity of the isolates were not neutralized by antiserum to purified Shiga toxin. DNA hybridization studies showed that Shigella isolates from these patients lacked the structural genes for Shiga toxin. The cytotoxin produced was also distinct from Shiga-like toxins I and II. Sonicates of the Shigella strains injected intraperitoneally into mice caused
lethargy
and lethality. The toxin activity was heat-labile and sensitive to trypsin, indicating that its active component is protein. Ultrafiltration and gel filtration chromatography showed a molecular mass of 100-125 kDa. Thus Shiga toxin production is not essential for the development of neurologic manifestations of shigellosis; other toxic products may play a role.
...
PMID:The association of Shiga toxin and other cytotoxins with the neurologic manifestations of shigellosis. 232 46
Mice injected intracerebrally with infectious influenza virus (60 hemagglutinin units) developed
lethargy
, seizures, comas, and died 2 to 5 days postinfection. As early as 6 h after infection, the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) in these animals was infiltrated with polymorphonuclear cells, mononuclear leukocytes, and large granular lymphocytes. Potent natural killer (NK) cell activity was observed for both CSF and spleen cell populations over the same period. This NK cell activity correlated with interferon (IFN) levels in the CSF and serum. Treatment of lethally infected mice with either anti-IFN alpha-IFN beta or anti-ganglio-n-tetraoglyceramide antiserum ameliorated the disease, reduced mortality, and effected changes in the relative proportions of inflammatory cell populations infiltrating the CSF. The possible significance of IFN and NK cell activity in the development of this influenza virus-induced
encephalopathy
is discussed.
...
PMID:Influenza virus-induced encephalopathy in mice: interferon production and natural killer cell activity during acute infection. 243 Nov 59
School performance testing was completed at 8 years of age on 145 children who had had neonatal
encephalopathy
associated with birth asphyxia as term infants and on a comparison peer group of 155 children. The prospectively identified clinical categories of
encephalopathy
for the neonates were 56 mild (hyperalertness, hyperexcitability), 84 moderate (
lethargy
, hypotonia, suppressed primitive reflexes), and 5 severe (stupor, flaccidity, absent primitive reflexes). The mortality rate to 8 years of age was 13%. The incidence of impairment, which included cerebral palsy, blindness, cognitive delay, convulsive disorder, and severe hearing loss, was 16% among those assessed at 8 years (75% of survivors). Intellectual, visual-motor integration, and receptive vocabulary scores, as well as reading, spelling, and arithmetic grade levels for those with moderate or severe
encephalopathy
, were significantly below (p less than 0.01) those in the mild
encephalopathy
or peer comparison groups. Predictors of reading performance for the study group included category of
encephalopathy
, birth weight for gestational age, native language, and mother's educational level (multiple R = 0.58). Nonimpaired survivors of moderate
encephalopathy
were more likely to be more than one grade level delayed than were children from the peer group (reading 35% vs 15%, spelling 18% vs 8%, arithmetic 20% vs 12%, p less than 0.01). Thus children who had moderate and severe neonatal
encephalopathy
are at risk for physical and mental impairment and reduced school performance. Children with mild
encephalopathy
had school performance scores similar to those of their peers.
...
PMID:School performance of survivors of neonatal encephalopathy associated with birth asphyxia at term. 246 89
We reviewed the clinical histories and autopsy records of 35 pediatric patients (ranging in age from 9 months to 18 years) who underwent orthotopic liver transplantation using ciclosporin and corticosteroids for immunosuppression. At the time of death, 19 children (54%) had
encephalopathy
, 16 (46%) were
lethargic
or in coma, 10 (29%) had seizures, and 10 were normal. Neuropathological lesions were found on postmortem examination in all 35 patients. Vascular lesions such as infarction, ischemia, thrombosis, and hemorrhage were the most common neuropathological findings (86%) followed by infectious processes (29%). Candida albicans (2 patients) and Aspergillus fumigatus (3 patients) were the only offending organisms identified, both causing meningoencephalitis. Alzheimer type II astrocytes, a characteristic feature of chronic liver disease, were the single most common autopsy finding (69%). Central pontine myelinolysis was seen in 3 children and basilar artery thrombosis affected 1 child. Neurological complications and their subsequent neuropathology are a significant cause of morbidity and mortality after pediatric liver transplantation. Vascular insults, electrolyte abnormalities, and infections that involve the central nervous system are directly related to liver function and the immunosuppression necessary to maintain graft viability. Only with continued observation after surgery combined with rapid medical and surgical treatment can we hope to improve the prognosis following liver transplantation in the pediatric population.
...
PMID:Neuropathology of pediatric liver transplantation. 248 84
D-Lactate-associated
encephalopathy
is a rare clinical syndrome characterized by dizziness, ataxia, confusion, headaches, memory loss,
lethargy
, and aggressiveness which may progress to frank but reversible coma. It occurs in patients with profound dysfunction of the short-bowel syndrome and is believed to result from massive carbohydrate malabsorption with resultant over-production of D-lactate and other organic anions by the colonic flora. Extremely elevated serum levels of D-lactate (but not L-lactate) confirm the diagnosis, but currently D-lactate is not clearly established as the putative neurotoxin. We describe a patient who repeatedly developed D-lactate
encephalopathy
after surgical removal of nearly the entire jejunum and ileum. Markedly elevated D-lactate serum levels were documented during an encephalopathic episode. Potential pathophysiologic mechanisms and the treatment rationale are discussed.
...
PMID:D-lactate-associated encephalopathy after massive small-bowel resection. 276 Apr 34
Triphasic waves (TWs) are a distinctive, but nonspecific, EEG pattern found in metabolic encephalopathies and a variety of other neurologic conditions. The prognostic value of TWs was studied in 30 patients with altered state of consciousness. Patients were either comatose (18 patients) or very
lethargic
(12 patients). Triphasic waves were the dominant EEG pattern, present for at least 35% of the tracing. The etiology of their underlying
encephalopathy
was multiple metabolic derangements (12 patients), hepatorenal syndrome (5 patients), renal failure (4 patients), hypoxic
encephalopathy
(4 patients), hepatic failure (3 patients), hyponatremia (1 patient), and hypoglycemia (1 patient). Patients were followed up to 22 months. Fifty percent of the subjects died within 30 days of recording TWs. The overall mortality was 77%. Seven patients (23%) have survived, but only three patients (10%) are neurologically normal. In conclusion, TWs occur most often in patients with metabolic encephalopathies, cannot be used to distinguish different diagnostic entities, and indicate a poor prognosis for survival.
...
PMID:Prognostic significance of EEG triphasic waves in patients with altered state of consciousness. 279 20
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