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)

A 14-year-old boy, suffering from acute lymphoblastic leukemia with meningeal involvement, was treated with intraventricular methotrexate and cytosine arabinoside, administered via an Ommaya reservoir (OR). Three months later, right occipital headache, vomiting, and lethargy appeared. Cerebrospinal fluid specimens showed increased proteins and a right frontal slow-wave focus was evident on the EEG recording. The computed tomography scan revealed white matter hypodensity within the right frontal and rolandic regions. After injection of medium contrast, an abscesslike hyperdensity appeared, surrounding both a well-placed cannula tip and the right frontal horn of the lateral ventricle. Brain swelling and shift signs were also evident. Nine cases of focal methotrexate leukoencephalopathy have been previously reported, and in six of these there was a misplaced OR cannula tip. The focal methotrexate leukoencephalopathy seems to be related to the neurotoxicity of the drugs administered, and may also exist with a well-placed OR cannula tip. Immediate removal of the catheter may be associated with a benign evolution.
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PMID:Transient focal leukoencephalopathy following intraventricular methotrexate and cytarabine. A complication of the Ommaya reservoir: case report and review of the literature. 220 Jun 10

Intracarotid BCNU (100 mg/m2) and cisplatin (60 mg/m2) were administered to 36 patients with malignant brain tumors recurrent or progressive after cranial irradiation. Courses of therapy were repeated at 4-6 week intervals. Of 23 evaluable patients with recurrent glioma, 9 (39%) had tumor regression by CT scan and 3 had stable disease. The median time to tumor progression for responding patients was 37 weeks. For all patients with primary tumors it was 14 weeks. Six of 9 patients with no prior chemotherapy had a response and 1 had stable disease. Of 14 patients who had received prior chemotherapy, 3 had a response and 2 had stable disease. Survival ranged from 9 weeks to 95+ weeks (median 34 weeks) from start of therapy. Six of 23 patients with primary tumors are alive 1 year or more following therapy. Four of 11 patients with brain metastases had a response and 2 had stable disease. Major neurologic toxicity of intracarotid BCNU and cisplatin appeared cumulative and consisted of reversible hemiparesis in 3% of 118 courses, TIA in 1%, expressive aphasia in 9%, lethargy in 3%, seizures in 12%, and reversible confusion in 1%. Retinal toxicity consisted of mild blurring of vision in 4 patients and ipsilateral blindness in 5 patients. Three of 22 patients who had received supraophthalmic infusion later developed evidence of leukoencephalopathy. Intracarotid BCNU and cisplatin appears to have modest increase in activity over intracarotid cisplatin alone (Cancer 54:794, 1984), however, neurologic and retinal toxicity may also be increased.
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PMID:Phase II trial of intracarotid BCNU and cisplatin in primary malignant brain tumors. 370 37

From 1972-1974, 228 children began treatment for acute lymphocytic leukemia and were prospectively assessed for neurologic complications. After CNS irradiation (2,400 rad) and intrathecal methotrexate (MTX), they received weekly intravenous maintenance therapy with MTX alone (40-60 mg/m2; 20 patients) or MTX (10-30 mg/m2) with other drugs (208 patients). Signs of leukoencephalopathy appeared in 11 children (nine without CNS leukemia) after 4-15 months of IV MTX alone, and included lethargy, seizures, spasticity, paresis, drooling, and dementia. Before or during the clinical onset, EEG frequencies slowed (all ten patients tested). Radionuclide scans showed periventricular accumulation of 99mTc (9/11 patients) and remained abnormal for greater than or equal to six months in eight patients. Cranial computed tomograms or neuropathology findings (five patients each) demonstrated leukoencephalopathy (nine patients) and radiation-related microangiopathy (ten patients). Severe neurologic and neuropsychologic dysfunctions were present in four long-term survivors.
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PMID:Progression of methotrexate-induced leukoencephalopathy in children with leukemia. 693 56

A six-year-old girl with non-Hodgkin's lymphoma who was treated with both intravenous (IV) and intrathecal (IT) methotrexate and developed brain damage secondary to the cytostatic drug is described. This patient displayed hypertension, hypothermia/hyperthermia, lethargy, deterioration and coma as clinical findings, and bilateral, focal white matter hyperintensities in the occipital lobes were seen in her magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Treatment-related leukoencephalopathy is one such adverse effect of IT methotrexate administration on the central nervous system and usually appears in a generalized form.
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PMID:Methotrexate-induced leukoencephalopathy. A case report. 750 68

A boy presented with hypertension, seizures, lethargy, headache, and occipital blindness. He improved with antihypertensive therapy. Other reported children with a similar distinctive clinical condition are compared with adults with a syndrome termed reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy. Because both gray and white matter are involved, we suggest that the name be changed to occipital-parietal encephalopathy syndrome.
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PMID:Occipital-parietal encephalopathy: a new name for an old syndrome. 930 87

Children with hypertension, seizures, lethargy, encephalopathy, headache, and occipital blindness are reviewed. After undergoing antihypertensive therapy, most children improve. Some patients have a similar syndrome associated with chemotherapy, transplantation, transfusion, or human immunodeficiency virus-1 (HIV-1) infection. These latter children can develop symptoms with only minimal or no discernible elevations in blood pressure and improve, in the case of cancer-associated encephalopathy, after discontinuing chemotherapy. The reported children with this distinctive clinical condition are compared to adults with reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome. Since both gray and white matter are involved, we had suggested previously that the name be changed to (reversible) occipitoparietal encephalopathy syndrome. However, reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy has been used in the adult population and probably should be employed in children for the sake of uniformity, since both children and adults have the same clinical presentation and presumably a similar pathophysiology for the encephalopathy syndrome. The diagnosis is confirmed by reversible posterior abnormalities seen on T2-weighted brain magnetic resonance imaging, and by the presence of either headache, altered mental status, seizures, or visual disturbances.
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PMID:Hypertensive encephalopathy, reversible occipitoparietal encephalopathy, or reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy: three names for an old syndrome. 1034 93

Reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome is a clinical-radiological phenomenon associated with headache, vomiting, lethargy, visual disturbances and seizures, concomitant with radiological abnormalities predominantly within posterior cerebral white matter due to cerebral edema. There are multiple triggers as acute hypertension, cancer, hematological disease, renal pathology, red cells transfusions and different drugs. We present two patients with reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy under treatment for acute lymphoblastic leukemia because of the probable association with vinca alkaloids.
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PMID:[Reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy: report of two cases after vincristine treatment]. 1835 42

Revisible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLS) is a syndrome defined predominantly by a characteristic pattern of MR images but heterogeneity and reversibility of the abnormalities is unclear. Three patients with characteristic neuroimaging of RPLS are described. Case 1. A 29-year-old woman underwent cesarean section 3 days before developing headache, visual disturbance, mild conscious deterioration and increased blood pressure. MRI on admission showed predominantly white matter edema bilaterally affecting the occipital, temporal and posterior parietal lobes. Lesions were iso-, hypointense on T1 weighted and hyperintense on T2 weighted and fluid-attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) images. Diffusion-weighted image (DWI) did not demonstrate hyperintensity in the same regions. She responded well to initial treatment and showed complete recovery. Case 2. A 67-year-old man had headache and visual disturbance after thromboendarterectomy of the left femoral artery. Initial DWI demonstrated hyperintensity in the occipital lobe. The patient had visual abnormality at discharge. Case 3. A 40-year-old woman with early gastric cancer had headache immediately after the injection of contrast material during abdominal computed tomography (CT) examination followed by generalized convulsion. On the third day, she had severe headache and vomiting. Her consciousness deteriorated to lethargy. CT showed marked brain edema, intracerebral hemorrhage, thin subdural hematoma and midline shift. External decompression and hematoma evacuation was performed. She had left hemianopia and left hemiplegia 1 month later. This report has important implications concerning the accurate early diagnosis of RPLS using MRI including DWI and its utility in prompting initial treatment. It should be noted that some cases demonstrating the characteristic neuroimaging pattern of RPLS do not attain full recovery and that surgical intervention is required in some cases.
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PMID:[Three cases demonstrating the characteristic neuroimaging of reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome]. 1851 60

A 14-year-old female had repeated vomiting, headache, abdominal pain, visual field deficit and lethargy at the onset of hypertensive encephalopathy. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) test revealed a high level of IgG and protein. MRI demonstrated no supratentorial cerebral lesions but hyperintense lesions were observed from the lower pons to the Th8 level of spinal cord and cerebellar cortex on T2 weighted and FLAIR images without contrast enhancement. The two antihypertensive drugs stabilized to control her blood pressure and improved her clinical symptoms. Reexamination of MRI and cerebrospinal fluid test also revealed clear improvement of the above abnormalities. The abnormal findings on abdominal CT and renography led us to suspect renal infarction. Abdominal angiography demonstrated multifocal stenoses of renal interlobar arteries, which were supposed to supply the renal infarcted regions. These suggested that the renal infarctions due to fibromuscular dysplasia caused systemic hypertension. There have been only two reports that demonstrated spinal cord lesions in reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLES). We report extensive spinal lesions on MRI and a high level of IgG in CSF at the subacute phase in a young female with RPLES associated with hypertensive (brainstem) encephalopathy.
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PMID:A case of hypertensive encephalopathy with extensive spinal lesions on MRI. 1973 90

Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) was originally used to describe a reversible, predominantly posterior leukoencephalopathy in patients who had renal insufficiency, hypertension, or who received immunosuppressive therapy. Since PRES is prevalent in children with kidney diseases, awareness and understanding of it is important for practicing pediatric nephrologists. A comprehensive approach to the diagnosis of PRES includes thorough determination of predisposing factors, clinical symptoms, and mandatory appropriate imaging. Unfortunately, the pathophysiology of PRES is still obscure and specificity of radiological examination has not yet been established. Two major predisposing factors, namely hypertension and calcineurin inhibitors, are well recognized. In addition, nephrotic syndrome is a common underlying condition for development of PRES. Frequent symptoms include altered consciousness (coma, stupor, lethargy, confusion), seizure, headache, and visual disturbance. Most of these symptoms usually develop abruptly and resolve within a few weeks after proper management. Cranial magnetic resonance (MR) imaging is the first-line modality of imaging studies for detecting PRES. Diffusion-weighted imaging with quantification of apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) values by ADC mapping may provide more accurate and specific images in the future.
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PMID:Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome in children with kidney diseases. 2155 18


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