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)

We examined the thyroid status of 58 patients with primary biliary cirrhosis (PBC) using total serum thyroxin, thyroid hormone binding ratio, free thyroxin index, serum TSH, antithyroglobulin, and antimicrosomal antibodies. Seven patients were known to be hypothyroid prior to the diagnosis of PBC. Six additional patients were found to have biochemical evidence of hypothyroidism. The prevalence of hypothyroidism was 12% if we include only those six PBC patients with newly diagnosed hypothyroidism or 22% if we include all 13 patients. Five of the 58 patients had evidence for an elevation of thyroid hormone binding capacity. Three hypothyroid patients had normal total thyroxins with low thyroid hormone binding ratios. Two euthyroid patients had elevated total T4s with low thyroid hormone binding ratio and normal FTI. The prevalence of positive antimicrosomal antibodies was 34%, including 11 euthyroid PBC patients. The prevalence of positive antithyroglobulin antibodies was 20% including five euthyroid patients. There was no association between HLA DR3 or DR5 and the patients with hypothyroidism and/or antithyroid antibodies. Because fatigue, lethargy, and anorexia as well as hypercholesterolemia are common features of both hypothyroidism and PBC, patients with PBC should be screened for evidence of thyroid dysfunction. Thyroid disease may precede the diagnosis of PBC by several years. Therefore, the development of cholestatic liver disease in a patient with known autoimmune thyroiditis should arouse suspicion of PBC.
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PMID:Increased incidence of hypothyroidism in primary biliary cirrhosis. 662 57

Rickets is a common and paradoxical feature of infantile malignant osteopetrosis and results from the inability of osteoclasts to maintain a normal calcium-phosphorus balance in the extracellular fluid. Despite a markedly positive total body calcium balance, rickets arises when the serum calcium x phosphorus product is insufficient to mineralize newly formed chondroid and osteoid. In five children with malignant infantile osteopetrosis, there were clinical, radiographic, biochemical, and histologic findings of rickets. Characteristic biochemical abnormalities included hypocalcemia, hypophosphatemia, and elevated levels of serum acid phosphatase, alkaline phosphatase, c-terminal parathyroid hormone, and 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin D. The urinary calcium/creatinine ratio was markedly depressed. The serum calcium x phosphorus product was below 30 in all children at the time the rickets was diagnosed, and above 40 by the time the rickets had resolved. Baseline bone density measurements were markedly elevated in all children (> 5 standard deviation above normal) and showed even significant increases (> 7 SD) when the rickets was treated with vitamin D and calcium. The children showed marked clinical improvement, decreased lethargy, increase in mobility and activity, and stimulation of appetite, without any additional adverse hematologic or neurologic effects. The rickets was reversible in all children: in one by HLA-identical sibling bone marrow transplantation and in four by physiologic doses of vitamin D and calcium. The parathyroid and renal responses to hypocalcemia were appropriate, but glucocorticoids, used in treating the hematologic complications of the disease, may have blunted the intestinal response to maximal vitamin D stimulation. This latter blockade can be overcome by increasing dietary calcium. By liberalizing rather than by restricting calcium and phosphorus intake, hypocalcemia can be minimized, phosphorus metabolism can be improved, and rickets can be cured.
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PMID:Osteopetrorickets. The paradox of plenty. Pathophysiology and treatment. 839 71

A 37-year-old woman with chronic myelogenous leukemia underwent allogeneic bone marrow transplantation with CD8-depleted marrow from an HLA-identical sister. On day 43 post-transplant, the patient developed a headache and became lethargic and tremulous. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain showed abnormal meningeal and superficial parenchymal enhancement anteriorly. The spinal fluid had an elevated protein level with normal glucose and a neutrophilic pleocytosis. At autopsy, Toxoplasma meningoencephalitis was seen. On review of the literature, headache and confusion at 1-2 months post-transplant are common presenting signs of central nervous system toxoplasmosis. The predominance of neutrophils in the spinal fluid in this patient probably reflects the meningeal component of the infection and is an unusual finding. The presentation of toxoplasmosis in marrow transplant recipients is quite pleomorphic, and a definite diagnosis is difficult to obtain antemortem. Empiric therapy with pyrimethamine and sulfadiazine should be considered for marrow transplant recipients with neurologic deficits for which there is no other apparent etiology.
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PMID:Leptomeningeal toxoplasmosis after allogeneic marrow transplantation. Case report and review of the literature. 845 99

Cytolytic and helper T cells recognize small peptide fragments of protein antigens that are intracellularly processed and delivered to the cell surface in conjunction with HLA molecules. In mice, peptide vaccines can protect against lethal virus infections and tumor challenges. To test whether epitope peptides derived from a human tumor antigen can induce immune responses in patients, a vaccine was prepared consisting of an HLA-A1-restricted epitope of the antigen MAGE-3 mixed with a pan-class II epitope peptide PADRE and emulsified with incomplete Freund's adjuvant. Eighteen patients with resected stages III and IV melanoma at high risk for relapse were vaccinated subcutaneously with increasing doses of the MAGE-3 vaccine ranging from 100 to 2,000 micrograms per injection four times, each 4 weeks apart. The purpose of the phase I trial was to assess the toxicity, tolerability, and immune responses to the vaccine. The vaccine was not toxic, with only one case of grade III lethargy, and most patients complaining of grade I or II local pain, swelling, and tenderness at the injection sites. Peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC) were collected from most patients prior to and after vaccination and used for assessment of global levels of immunity prevaccination, and to measure immune responses to the MAGE-3 and PADRE peptides prior to and after vaccination. Significant defects in global immunity shown by anergy to DTH skin testing in 7 of 16 patients and decreased proliferation to PHA (phytohemagglutinin) and CASTA, a Candida albicans protein extract, were observed. Seven of nine patients showed an increased response to PADRE after restimulation in vitro. Five of 14 patients at doses from 100 to 2,000 micrograms demonstrated an immune response to MAGE-3 by cytolysis of MAGE-3-specific target cells. Release of gamma interferon by T cells from 8 patients at the 100, 1,000, or 2,000 micrograms dose was measured after vaccination, and only two of eight patients showed an increase indicating augmented antigen-specific immunity. These data suggest that immune responses can be detected against PADRE and MAGE-3 in vaccinated melanoma patients, albeit with a low frequency of effector cells.
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PMID:A phase I trial of an HLA-A1 restricted MAGE-3 epitope peptide with incomplete Freund's adjuvant in patients with resected high-risk melanoma. 1054 59

Permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus (PNIDDM) is a rare form of IDDM with unclear etiology and pathogenesis. We determined the incidence and prevalence rates and studied the clinical and biochemical features of PNIDDM in the Sultanate of Oman. The mean incidence rate during the study period from January 1989 to December 1994 was 1.788 +/- 0.82 per 100,000 live births per year. At the end of December 1994 the prevalence rate was 2.4 per 100,000 children below the age of 5 years. They constituted 41.6% of all cases of IDDM in this age group. Diarrhoea, fever, lethargy, poor feeding and failure to thrive were the most common presenting symptoms. Dehydration and tachypnoea were the most common signs. All patients who developed IDDM during the neonatal period had intrauterine growth retardation and 4.5 presented with diabetic ketoacidosis (plasma glucose 37 +/- 9 mmol/L, pH 7.12 +/- 0.1). Hypertriglyceridemia was a constant feature (19.4 +/- 4.8 mmol/L). They were products of consanguineous marriage with significantly high prevalence of IDDM and NIDDM in their family members. None of the infants had clinical or immunological evidence of congenital viral infection. Three of the five children had HLA-DR2, the diabetes resistance alleles. C-peptide secretion was absent during and after metabolic control of hyperglycemia in all the studied infants and none had circulating islet cell antibody at presentation or during the first year after diagnosis. Despite marked growth retardation at birth, there was a significant improvement of growth after initiating insulin therapy. Four of the 5 patients had normal developmental milestones, one had mild developmental delay following a severe and prolonged attack of hypoglycemia. None of the patients had exocrine pancreatic deficiency. In summary, the very high rate of parental consanguinity, occurrence in both sexes and in two siblings in the same family, absence of islet cell antibodies and the presence of HLA-DR2 loci in 3/5 of patients suggest that PNIDDM is a different disease process to standard IDDM in childhood and an autosomal recessive mode of transmission.
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PMID:Permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus: epidemiology, mode of presentation, pathogenesis and growth. 1079 84

Neurological complications may occur following intensive chemotherapy and hematopoietic cell transplantation. Postirradiation somnolence syndrome has been observed in children with acute lymphoblastic leukemia who received central nervous system preventive therapy with 1800-2400 cGy cranial irradiation. The authors report a 16-year-old boy with chronic myelogenous leukemia in chronic phase, who developed symptoms compatible with the somnolence syndrome (SS) 6 weeks following HLA-matched unrelated bone marrow transplantation (BMT). The preparative regimen consisted of 1200 cGy total body irradiation (TBI), cytosine arabinoside and cyclophosphamide. The patient developed lethargy and low-grade fever, with intermittent rhythmical delta activity in electroencephalograph. He recovered spontaneously without specific therapy 3 weeks after developing symptoms. This is the first report describing that as low as 1200 cGy TBI can induce SS in a child. After allogeneic BMT, some patients develop neurological symptoms. The authors suggest that somnolence syndrome should be included in differential diagnosis in these patients.
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PMID:Somnolence syndrome in a child following 1200-cGy total body irradiation in an unrelated bone marrow transplantation. 1098 70

Reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome (RPLS) was described by Hinchey and colleagues in 1996. The disorder occurs predominantly in patients with acute hypertension and/or on pharmacological immunosuppression. We report a 6-year-old male with cerebral X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy who received an HLA-matched unrelated bone marrow transplant (BMT). Cyclosporine was used as graft-versus-host disease prophylaxis. At 55 days post-BMT, his cyclosporine concentrations were high for several days and the concentration was still high on day 70 (353 microg/L). He presented 83 days post-BMT with new onset of headache, lethargy, acute visual loss and focal seizures. He was not hypertensive. MRI of the head revealed signal changes that now extended more peripherally into the subcortical and cortical regions of the occipital and temporal lobes. The patient's cyclosporine was stopped for 5 days. The patient's vision returned to normal and his headaches and lethargy resolved with no further seizures 3 weeks later. Follow-up MRI of the head 2 months later showed almost complete resolution of the cortical signal abnormalities. It is important to consider RPLS in patients with cerebral adrenoleukodystrophy who present with acute neurological deterioration. Attention to the pattern of white matter and the presence of cortical grey matter involvement on neuroimaging is important for the diagnosis. When appropriate management is initiated, that is controlling hypertension when present and discontinuing or reducing the dose of offending immunosuppressive agents, the acute neurological symptoms will usually resolve.
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PMID:Reversible posterior leukoencephalopathy syndrome in a child with cerebral X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy treated with cyclosporine after bone marrow transplantation. 1460 98