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Query: UMLS:C0023380 (
lethargy
)
5,697
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In the present investigation, 20 patients with ET were treated with recombinant interferon alfa-2c (IFN) for up to 4 years. Initially, IFN was administered subcutaneously at a dosage of 6-45 MU/week. The dosage was adjusted according to individual tolerance and response. The median dose during induction was 20 MU/week, 10 MU/week during the remaining first year, 6 MU/week during the second year and 2 MU/week thereafter. 13 patients (65%) achieved complete remission (platelet count less than 440/nl), four patients (20%) had partial remission (greater than 440/nl but a reduction by more than 50% of the initial count). The median platelet count remained steady throughout the 4-year period of treatment, in spite of extreme dose reductions. After withdrawal of IFN, however, platelet counts again increased. The white blood cells showed a marked decrease similar to that of platelet counts, whereas the haemoglobin level remained fairly stable. In the bone marrow, a significant decrease in megakaryocyte density and size could be observed. Concurrently with the improvement of haematological parameters, clinical symptoms improved, but reappeared after withdrawal of IFN. During induction, fever, bone and/or muscle pain,
fatigue
,
lethargy
and psychological symptoms were the most prominent side-effects in the majority of patients. In three patients these symptoms led to discontinuation of the treatment. With repeated dose reductions, excellent long-term tolerance was achieved, and during late maintenance treatment the only observed side-effect was an induction of thyroid autoimmunity in three patients. IFN is an effective, well-tolerated alternative in the long-term treatment of symptomatic ET. However, since withdrawal of IFN leads to recurrence of thrombocytosis, continued treatment is to be recommended.
...
PMID:Interferon in essential thrombocythaemia. 193 8
A questionnaire was administered in class to a sample of physical education students at a Malaysian University in order to determine their beliefs and use patterns regarding vitamin supplementation. About a quarter of the subjects (24.6%) had practised vitamin supplementation for the past two years prior to the study, 14.9% of them being females as opposed to only 9.7% males. The most frequently used vitamin supplements, in rank order, were multivitamins (used by 57.6%), vitamin C (24.2%), the B-Complex vitamins (9.1%), and vitamin E (6.1%). Among vitamin supplementeers, the most frequently cited reasons for using vitamin supplements, in rank order, were 'to supplement the daily diet' (33.3%), 'to prevent colds' (27.3%), and 'to prevent
fatigue
or
lethargy
' (21.2%). Among non-supplementeers, the three reasons most frequently mentioned for not using vitamin supplements were 'vitamin needs are adequately supplied by daily meals' (50.5%), 'I am healthy enough and therefore I do not need extra vitamins' (27.2%), and 'fear of insidious side effects' (9.9%). In general, both supplementeers and non-supplementeers tended to believe in the purported health benefits of vitamin supplementation. However, on the whole, supplementeers were willing to change their supplementation habits.
...
PMID:Vitamin use and beliefs among students at a Malaysian university. 212 80
Hypercalcemia is a potentially lethal endocrine disorder occurring in 10% to 20% of cancer patients at some time during the course of their disease. Clinical manifestations vary in severity, depending on the degree and duration of hypercalcemia, rapidity of onset, patient's age, performance status, sites of metastases, previous antineoplastic therapy, and the presence of hepatic or renal dysfunction. The clinical features of hypercalcemia are protean and affect multiple organ systems, resulting most prominently in neurologic, gastrointestinal, renal, cardiovascular, and musculoskeletal morbidity. Recognition of the disorder requires a high index of suspicion because many of its symptoms, such as nausea, anorexia, weakness,
fatigue
,
lethargy
, and confusion, are non-specific and, in the patient with a malignancy, can result from other complications of the primary disorder. If identified appropriately as being related to hypercalcemia, such symptomatology is potentially reversible with treatment. Whereas in the ambulatory general medical population the most common cause of hypercalcemia is primary hyperparathyroidism, in cancer patients and hospitalized patients in general, the most common cause is malignancy. Hypercalcemia in cancer patients is, in most cases, due to advanced metastasized disease. Diagnostic tests are useful in the differential diagnosis of hypercalcemia, and such tests, together with an accurate history and careful clinical observation, permit the best therapeutic approach to an individual patient.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestations of cancer-related hypercalcemia. 218 49
A young, previously healthy woman presented with increasing muscle pain, lower limb swelling,
fatigue
and eosinophilia. She had consumed L-tryptophan tablets (one to two at night) over the preceding five months for management of her insomnia. Her condition slowly deteriorated and she developed generalised oedema and severe
lethargy
. A white blood cell count was 21.3 x 10(9)/L with 43% eosinophils (Normal range: 4.0-11.0 x 10(9)/L with 1-6% eosinophils. A biopsy specimen of the deep fascia and gastrocnemius muscle demonstrated fasciitis and myositis. The patient failed to recover after cessation of L-tryptophan use but her condition improved rapidly without significant sequelae after systemic treatment with corticosteroids.
...
PMID:Eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome associated with L-tryptophan use. 199 19
Eighteen patients with advanced renal cell carcinoma were treated with human lymphoblastoid interferon (Wellferon) and continuous fusion vinblastine. All patients received vinblastine as a continuous infusion at a dose of 1.5 mg/m2/day on days 1 to 5. The interferon was given by daily intramuscular injections on days 1 to 10. Three patients were treated with a dose escalation scheme that reached a maximum daily dose by day 3 of 5 X 10(6) units/m2/day and that was then continued until day 10. Fifteen patients received 3 X 10(6) units/m2/day on day, 1, and 5 X 10(6) units/m2/day on days 3 to 10. Treatments were repeated every 28 days. Neutropenia (less than 1,500/mm3) occurred in 14 of 18 patients. Transient increases in serum glutamic-oxaloacetic transaminase levels to greater than four times baseline were noted in nine patients. Thrombocytopenia (less than 100,000 platelets/mm3) occurred in one patient.
Fatigue
,
lethargy
, and decline in performance status were marked in four of the patients. None of the patients in the low-dose interferon group and only 1 of the 15 patients in the high-dose interferon group had an objective response (7%, with a 95% confidence interval of 0 to 31%). Of the 12 patients completing at least two courses of therapy, 10 were in the high-dose group, which included the 1 objective (partial) response. This response noted at the start of the fourth course. Ten others developed progressive disease and one stopped treatment because of neurologic toxicity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Interferon-alpha-n1 and continuous infusion vinblastine for treatment of advanced renal cell carcinoma. 231 58
Although consequences of zinc deficiency have been recognized for many years, it is only recently that attention has been directed to the potential consequences of excessive zinc intake. This is a review of the literature on manifestations of toxicity at several levels of zinc intake. Zinc is considered to be relatively nontoxic, particularly if taken orally. However, manifestations of overt toxicity symptoms (nausea, vomiting, epigastric pain,
lethargy
, and
fatigue
) will occur with extremely high zinc intakes. At low intakes, but at amounts well in excess of the Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) (100-300 mg Zn/d vs an RDA of 15 mg Zn/d), evidence of induced copper deficiency with attendant symptoms of anemia and neutropenia, as well as impaired immune function and adverse effects on the ratio of low-density-lipoprotein to high-density-lipoprotein (LDL/HDL) cholesterol have been reported. Even lower levels of zinc supplementation, closer in amount to the RDA, have been suggested to interfere with the utilization of copper and iron and to adversely affect HDL cholesterol concentrations. Individuals using zinc supplements should be aware of the possible complications attendant to their use.
...
PMID:Zinc toxicity. 240 97
Nine adult white men ranging in age from 27 to 76 (mean, 55 years) were treated for primary hepatic lymphoma between 1972 and 1986 at the Memorial Sloan-Kettering Cancer Center. Six patients presented with right upper quadrant or epigastric pain or discomfort, and three patients complained of
fatigue
and
lethargy
. Fever and night sweats were evident in two, and two patients had lost weight. One patient was asymptomatic; the liver mass was detected during the work-up for cancer of the prostate. Seven patients on whom computerized tomography was performed all had solitary masses in the liver although in three of them tumor had extended into both lobes as noticed at surgery. One had additional porta hepatic lymph node metastasis. Eight patients underwent an exploratory laparotomy; four had hepatic resection, and four had wedge biopsies of unresectable liver tumor. One patient had a percutaneous needle biopsy of the liver. Eight patients received combination chemotherapy. Six patients are alive, five of whom are in initial complete remission. All three patients who died had persistent or recurrent disease in the liver. The results of therapy and surgery to date in these and in other cases in the literature are encouraging.
...
PMID:Primary lymphoma of the liver. 244 37
Neurological symptoms including
lethargy
, obtundation, and confusion are early and common findings in patients with sepsis. The etiology of the mental status changes that occur during severe infection is not known. We investigated the effects of sepsis on the levels of high-energy phosphates to determine whether
decreased energy
metabolism was a factor in the depressed neurological state. The time course of changes in brain pH and brain high-energy phosphate metabolites during an Escherichia coli infusion was determined from sequential phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (31P-NMR) spectra of ketamine-xylazine-anesthetized rats. A second group of rats received 0.9% saline infusion and served as a control group. Despite severe obtundation and near loss of righting reflex, the rats in the septic group had no significant differences in the brain pH, the ratio of phosphocreatine (PCr) to beta-adenosine 5'-triphosphate (beta-ATP), or in the ratio of PCr to Pi. The only significant decrease in brain high-energy phosphates or pH occurred terminally in the septic rat group and corresponded with a rapidly falling arterial blood pressure. We conclude that the severe neurological depression that is characteristic of sepsis is not due to decreased levels of brain high-energy phosphates or brain acidosis.
...
PMID:An in vivo examination of rat brain during sepsis with 31P-NMR spectroscopy. 261 Feb 45
Primary hyperparathyroidism becomes increasingly common with age and affects females four times more commonly than males. We now know that the majority of patients are asymptomatic of the disease and the commonest symptoms are
fatigue
and
lethargy
. Because of these facts, it is now appropriate to consider conservative management of primary hyperparathyroidism in the older patient who is asymptomatic or who has only mild symptoms. Further studies are indicated to ascertain whether such a conservative policy is correct.
...
PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism. Clinical presentation and factors influencing clinical management. 267 66
beta-Adrenoreceptor antagonists are liable to produce behavioural side-effects such as drowsiness,
fatigue
,
lethargy
, sleep disorders, nightmares, depressive moods, and hallucinations. These undesirable actions indicate that beta-blockers affect not only peripheral autonomic activity but also some central nervous mechanisms. In experimental animals beta-blockers have been found to reduce spontaneous motor activity, to counteract isolation-, lesion-, stimulation- and amphetamine-induced hyperactivity, and to produce slow-wave and paradoxical sleep disturbances. Furthermore, central effects such as tranquilizing influences are used for the treatment of conditions such as anxiety. Several different mechanisms of action could be responsible for these CNS effects: Centrally mediated specific actions on centrally located beta-adrenergic receptors, known to exist downstream from, and at the terminals of, 'vigilance-enhancing' central noradrenergic pathways. Centrally mediated specific actions on centrally located receptors of the non-adrenergic type; an affinity of some beta-blockers towards 5-HT-receptors is well documented. Centrally mediated non-specific actions on centrally located neurones, owing to the membrane-stabilizing effects of beta-blockers. Peripherally mediated actions whereby beta-blockers induce changes in the autonomic activity in the periphery, which are relayed to the CNS to induce changes in activity of a variety of central systems. It can be assumed that with any one of the beta-blockers all these mechanisms come into play, yet with varying degrees depending on characteristics of the drugs such as lipophilicity and hydrophilicity, the ratio of antagonist versus (partial) agonist properties, affinity to 'alien' receptor sites, strength of membrane-stabilizing activity, stereospecific affinity, and potency.
...
PMID:CNS-related (side-)effects of beta-blockers with special reference to mechanisms of action. 286 51
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