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)

Risperidone is an atypical antipsychotic used in the treatment of several psychiatric disorders in both children and adults. We present two patients with hydrocephalus and learning difficulties who were admitted to the neurosurgical unit with a suspected cerebrospinal fluid shunt malfunction and raised intracranial pressure. They had both been commenced on risperidone for the treatment of aggressive outbursts. Twelve days after commencing risperidone, the first patient developed symptoms of headache, nausea, vomiting, drowsiness, lethargy and two episodes of collapse. The second patient presented with similar symptoms 4 days after his risperidone dose was increased. An unnecessary shunt exploration was averted in both cases when it was noted that the side-effect profile of risperidone mimicked exactly those of shunt malfunction. Discontinuation of the drug resulted in complete resolution of all symptoms within 72 h. Many patients with shunted hydrocephalus have associated developmental disorders that may warrant treatment with risperidone. Clinicians should be aware of the potential symptom overlap between shunt malfunction and risperidone side-effects in these patients.
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PMID:Side-effects of risperidone therapy mimicking cerebrospinal fluid shunt malfunction: implications for clinical monitoring and management. 1209 77

One-patient, randomized, double-blind, controlled trials (N-of-1 RCTs) have traditionally been used to assess the efficacy of treatment. At the Drug Safety Clinic, Toronto, this methodology is used to evaluate adverse effects related to medication use, specifically when the symptoms are vague and are in response to more than one medication. Two patients are described with histories of drug allergies to multiple medications; as well, guidelines for conducting N-of-1 trials are summarized. The first patient had a history of prolonged periorbital and generalized weakness lasting up to one week after exposure to a variety of drugs. Because of the ambiguous results of local anesthetic skin testing, an N-of-1 trial was performed using lidocaine without preservative. Two short-lived episodes of blepharospasm and lethargy were observed with placebo; no subjective or objective reaction occurred with active drug. The second patient had a history of prolonged weakness and drowsiness after exposure to many medications; she had been told that she was allergic to all drugs with a benzene ring. During the first N-of-1 trial, generalized weakness was observed with 10 mg of dimenhydrinate and all four placebo doses. During the second N-of-1 challenge using codeine, no unwarranted reactions occurred with either active or placebo drug. Traditional testing of these patients to disprove the clinical symptoms is often difficult because of the anxiety level associated with the patients' past experiences. N-of-1 trials provide a useful alternative for the management of patients with nonspecific symptomatology attributed to drug ingestion.
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PMID:Confirming false adverse reactions to drugs by performing individualized, randomized trials. 1242 52

In 19 surgically treated patients with sleep-disordered breathing for whom electroencephalograms could be recorded before and after surgery, and in 10 patients who suffered from daytime lethargy as assessed using the Epworth Sleepiness Scale (ESS) score, correlations between the stages of sleep before surgery and the ESS score and apnea-hypopnea index (AHI) were evaluated, and changes in AHI and the stages of sleep after surgery were examined. Neither the preoperative severity of AHI nor the ESS score showed an association with the stages of sleep. The improvement in the quality of sleep tended to be greater as the percentage improvement in the ESS score increased.
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PMID:Comparison of the state of sleep in patients with sleep-disordered breathing before and after surgical treatment. 1273 43

Clinical data adequate for analysis were available in 386 laboratory-confirmed cases of arthropod-borne encephalitis - 38 St. Louis and 348 western equine. Consistently observed symptoms varied with the age of the patient. Symptoms that occurred in a high proportion of patients in each age group were:LESS THAN ONE YEAR OF AGE: Fever and convulsions. (None had the St. Louis disease.)ONE THROUGH FOUR YEARS: Fever, headache, vomiting, drowsiness, irritability, restlessness, nuchal rigidity, tremor, and sometimes convulsions. FIVE THROUGH FOURTEEN YEARS: Headache, fever, and drowsiness. Sometimes the disease progressed no further, but if it did, nausea, vomiting, muscular pain, photophobia and limitation of neck and back flexion often were noted; and sometimes convulsions and intention tremors. FIFTEEN YEARS AND OLDER: Drowsiness, lethargy, malaise, fever, stiffness at the back of the neck and, almost always, severe intractable occipital headache associated with nausea, disturbance of vision, photophobia and vertigo. The extreme difficulty of differential diagnosis on the basis of clinical observation was indicated by the wide range of diagnoses made in these cases before the invading organism was identified by laboratory studies.
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PMID:The 1952 outbreak of encephalitis in California; differential diagnosis. 1306 16

Levetiracetam (LEV) is the most recently licensed antiepileptic drug (AED) for adjunctive therapy of partial seizures. Its mechanism of action is uncertain but it exhibits a unique profile of anticonvulsant activity in models of chronic epilepsy. Three randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled trials enrolling 904 patients with refractory partial epilepsy have demonstrated the efficacy of LEV as adjunctive therapy, with a responder rate (> or = 50% reduction in seizure frequency) of 28-41%. Long-term efficacy studies suggest retention rates of 60% after one year, with 13% of patients seizure-free for six months of the study and 8% seizure-free for one year. Adverse effects of LEV, including somnolence, lethargy and dizziness, were generally mild and the frequency of incidents was not significantly different between the active treatment and placebo groups in clinical trials. LEV has no clinically significant pharmacokinetic interactions (PKI) with other AEDs, or with commonly prescribed medications. Preliminary data suggest that LEV has efficacy in primary generalised epilepsy and further randomised trials are under way. The combination of potent antiepileptic properties with a relatively mild adverse effect profile makes LEV an attractive adjunctive therapy for partial seizures.
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PMID:Levetiracetam: a new therapeutic option for refractory epilepsy. 1452 64

In 1916, von Economo first described encephalitis lethargica (EL), a CNS disorder presenting with pharyngitis followed by sleep disorder, basal ganglia signs (particularly parkinsonism) and neuropsychiatric sequelae. Since the 1916-1927 epidemic, only sporadic cases have been described. Pathological studies revealed an encephalitis of the midbrain and basal ganglia, with lymphocyte (predominantly plasma cell) infiltration. The EL epidemic occurred during the same time period as the 1918 influenza pandemic, and the two outbreaks have been linked in the medical literature. However, von Economo and other contemporary scientists thought that the 1918 influenza virus was not the cause of EL. Recent examination of archived EL brain material has failed to demonstrate influenza RNA, adding to the evidence that EL was not an invasive influenza encephalitis. By contrast, the findings of intrathecal oligoclonal bands (OCB) and beneficial effects of steroid treatments have provoked the hypothesis that EL may be immune-mediated. We have recently seen 20 patients with a similar EL phenotype, 55% of whom had a preceding pharyngitis. The patients had remarkable similarity to the historical descriptions of EL: sleep disorder (somnolence, sleep inversion or insomnia), lethargy, parkinsonism, dyskinesias and neuropsychiatric symptoms. CSF examination commonly showed elevated protein and OCB (75 and 69% respectively). Investigation found no evidence of viral encephalitis or other recognized causes of rapid-onset parkinsonism. MRI of the brain was normal in 60% but showed inflammatory changes localized to the deep grey matter in 40% of patients. We investigated the possibility that this phenotype could be a postinfectious autoimmune CNS disorder, and therefore similar to Sydenham's chorea. Anti-streptolysin-O titres were elevated in 65% of patients. Furthermore, western immunoblotting showed that 95% of EL patients had autoantibodies reactive against human basal ganglia antigens. These antibodies were also present in the CSF in four patients tested. By contrast, antibodies reactive against the basal ganglia were found in only 2-4% of child and adult controls (n = 173, P < 0.0001). Rather than showing polyspecific binding, these antibodies bound to common neural autoantigens of molecular weight 40, 45, 60 and 98 kDa. Regional tissue comparisons showed that the majority of these autoantigens were specific to or enriched in CNS tissue. Immunohistochemistry with secondary staining localized antibody binding to neurons rather than glial populations. Further investigation is required to determine whether these antibodies affect neuronal function (i.e. whether they are pathogenic anti-neuronal antibodies). Histopathology in one case demonstrated striatal encephalitis with perivenous B- and T-lymphocytic infiltration. We believe an EL-like syndrome is still prevalent, and propose that this syndrome may be secondary to autoimmunity against deep grey matter neurons.
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PMID:Encephalitis lethargica syndrome: 20 new cases and evidence of basal ganglia autoimmunity. 1467 31

Rhabdoid tumors of the brain are rare with an invariable dismal prognosis despite treatment. This is the case of a 3 year old boy who presented lethargy, somnolence, nausea, vomiting, and headaches one week prior to hospitalization. A posterior fossa tumor with hydrocephalus was noted on a head computed tomography (CT) scan. A ventriculoperitoneal shunt was placed with subsequent gross total tumor resection. Pathology findings were those of a rhabdoid tumor. The histopathology, immunohistochemistry and ultrastructure of this unusual pediatric cerebral neoplasia is discussed.
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PMID:Rhabdoid tumor: an unusual pediatric brain tumor. 1476 7

In a clinical review of 50 cases of western equine and 16 cases of St. Louis encephalomyelitis in humans it was noted that fever, headache, lethargy, drowsiness, tremor and stiffness of the neck were the most frequent signs or symptoms initiating the illness. The great majority of patients recovered without residual effect. These two diseases of the central nervous system can only be differentiated on an immunological basis but may be suspected during seasonal periods in geographical areas where these virus infections are known to exist. Neuropathological studies were done in four cases of human western equine and two cases of St. Louis encephalomyelitis. The primary point of attack by the virus is the cell body, the lesions being concentrated in the striate body, diencephalon, the brain stem and cerebellum. All histo-anatomical findings (nerve cell destruction, microglial nests, small isolated and confluent areas of necrosis and perivascular round cell infiltration) are secondary to the injury of the nerve cell body caused by the neurotropic virus.
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PMID:Western equine and St. Louis encephalomyelitis. 1482 14

Two cases of hemorrhagic meningoencephalitis secondary to Naegleria fowleri infection confirmed by postmortem analysis are described. The first patient is a 5-year-old boy who presented with a severe headache, neck stiffness, and lethargy. His neurologic examination was significant for somnolence and nuchal rigidity. Cerebrospinal fluid studies and structural neuroimaging were consistent with hemorrhagic meningoencephalitis. Another 5-year-old boy presented to a different institution 2 miles away in the same week with similar complaints. Both patients declined rapidly and expired within 48 hours of admission secondary to transtentorial herniation caused by the mass effect of inflammation, edema, and hemorrhage with displacement of the brain stem. Histopathologic and immunochemistry analysis of brain tissue revealed the presence of Naegleria trophozoites in both cases.
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PMID:Naegleria fowleri hemorrhagic meningoencephalitis: report of two fatalities in children. 1511 87

The changing endocrine profile in premenopausal women alters aspects of sleep and circadian rhythms. Subjectively women appear to feel a greater need for sleep and report poor and insufficient sleep more often than men. This greater sleep requirement may manifest with a higher amplitude of slow-wave sleep in the EEG in women. Healthy young women, with biphasic body temperature rhythms of ovulatory menstrual cycles, have more stage 2 sleep, higher spindle frequency activity and less rapid-eye movement (REM) sleep when progesterone predominates in the luteal phase. These sleep-EEG changes may largely be caused by neurosteroids acting on the brain. Sleep regulatory mechanisms, indicated by the onset to sleep, slow-wave sleep (SWS) and slow-wave activity, appear to be unaffected by menstrual phase in women with normal cycles. Women with premenstrual mood symptoms have more stage 2 sleep and seemingly less SWS and REM sleep, a blunted circadian rhythm of melatonin and an earlier minimum body temperature than asymptomatic women. Subjective repercussions include increased daytime sleepiness, lethargy and fatigue. Treatment strategies for menstrual-associated complaints include using oral contraceptives and sleep deprivation but the physiology and pharmacology of normal menstrual changes, the disorders and their treatment need to be better understood.
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PMID:Menstrual factors in sleep. 1531 Apr 93


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