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)

The Southwest Oncology Group (SWOG) studied the response rate and toxicity of merbarone (1,000 mg/m2 IV continuous infusion days 1-5, q 21 days) in patients with advanced metastatic renal cell carcinoma. Among 36 eligible patients, there was one partial response for a response rate of 3% (95% C.I. 0.1-15%). There were no mixed responses. There were no treatment related deaths or adverse drug reactions. Significant anemia, diarrhea, and hypercalcemia were observed. Mild to moderate degrees of malaise/fatigue/lethargy, dizziness/vertigo, hyperglycemia, creatinine increase, nausea, vomiting, weight loss, pedal edema, dyspnea, and granulocytopenia were noted. Merbarone does not have significant activity as a single agent in advanced renal cell carcinoma.
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PMID:Phase II evaluation of merbarone in renal cell carcinoma. 786 Feb 33

Self-administered questionnaires were used to find out the prevalence among employees working in the three local authority premises in a Health District of self-reported illness which could be associated with sick building syndrome. Eye symptoms were found to be more common among employees working in a typing centre using VDUs. The symptoms tiredness, lethargy and influenza-like ('flu-like) illness, including aches in the limbs, were reported in significantly higher numbers by employees working in areas where there was evidence of increased pressure of work and worries over job losses. Dry throat and blocked or stuffy nose were symptoms reported in significantly higher proportions by employees working in certain buildings, where anecdotal evidence suggested that there could be problems with temperature regulation. This study also confirmed findings by other studies that for some symptoms women complain in significantly higher numbers than men. It was concluded that the type of work people do, in addition to the type of building they work in, play an important role in self-reported illnesses. Causation of sick building syndrome is complex and probably of multifactorial origin.
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PMID:An investigation into sick building syndrome among local authority employees. 797 93

Humans spend one-third of their lives sleeping, yet the role of this phase of the circadian rhythm is not clear. Theories postulating the purpose of sleep include the restorative theory and the humeral theory. Both theories have identified weaknesses. What is known is that chronic disruption of sleep and/or sleep deprivation causes significant physiological and psychological symptoms. These include fatigue, lethargy and daytime somnolence accompanied by irritability, memory loss, decrease in judgment and paranoia. Obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) imposes another, more life-threatening dimension for the client.
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PMID:Obstructive sleep apnea. 798 95

The authors' primary purpose was to identify home healthcare needs of adults (N = 244) living with HIV disease/AIDS. The study followed a retrospective chart review of a stratified random sample of cases discharged during 1991 from a certified home health agency (CHHA) in New York City. Frequently observed signs and symptoms included dyspnea, weakness, fatigue/lethargy, pain, ataxia, cough, skin lesions, and memory deficit. Additional problems identified included inadequate nutrition, issues related to compliance with prescribed medications, inadequate in-home support systems, inadequate facilities/utilities in the home, financial concerns and lifestyles that included drug/alcohol abuse and tobacco use. The results suggest that the health care needs of people living with HIV disease/AIDS in the home care setting are multifaceted and extend beyond the clinical manifestations of HIV disease.
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PMID:Home healthcare needs of adults living with HIV disease/AIDS in New York City. 803 11

Adolescent depression occurs within various developmental, social, and biologic contexts, and is manifested by traditional depressive symptoms such as fatigue, loss of interest in daily activities, weight changes, sleep disturbances, sad moods, difficulty with concentration, behavioral agitation or lethargy, feelings of worthlessness, and recurrent thoughts of death. Depressed adolescents may combine these symptoms with certain additional behaviors such as academic deterioration, substance abuse, sexual activity, somatic complaints, eating disorders, conduct disorders, and other risk-taking behaviors. School nurses can play a central role in the prevention, assessment, referral, and follow-up care of this significant adolescent health problem.
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PMID:A review for school nursing professionals: adolescent depression. 828 6

Fatigue and lethargy, common symptoms in uraemia, have been attributed to many factors. To assess possible bioenergetic contributions to this, we examined the forearm muscle of five patients in end-stage renal failure using 31P-magnetic resonance spectroscopy. There was a small increase in the ratio of intracellular inorganic phosphate to ATP in resting muscle, suggesting an increased cytosolic phosphate concentration. During exercise, increased phosphocreatine breakdown was accompanied by rapid intracellular acidification and an increase in calculated lactic acid accumulation in the muscle of the uraemic subjects, suggesting glycolysis dominating over oxidative phosphorylation as a source of ATP. After exercise, the half-time of phosphocreatine (PCr) recovery was longer in the uraemic subjects, suggesting diminished mitochondrial function. The initial rate of PCr resynthesis was not significantly decreased, but when account was taken of the high cytosolic ADP concentration (which drives mitochondrial oxidative ATP synthesis) the calculated maximum oxidative capacity was significantly reduced in the uraemic subjects. Thus there was evidence of mitochondrial dysfunction in uraemia due either to limitation of oxygen supply, reduced mitochondrial content, or an intrinsic mitochondrial defect. This resulted in increased phosphocreatine depletion and increased glycolytic ATP production during exercise and there was partial compensation of the mitochondrial abnormality by increased ADP concentration. In three of these patients studied after elevation of haemoglobin with erythropoeitin (from 8 to 12 g/dl), initial phosphocreatine breakdown and lactic acid accumulation during exercise were normalized, while exercise duration and calculated maximum oxidative capacity remained significantly abnormal. This suggests that anaemia contributes to these metabolic abnormalities but does not fully explain them.
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PMID:Effect of chronic uraemia on skeletal muscle metabolism in man. 838 87

The immunogenicity and adverse reaction of an inactivated hepatitis A (HA) vaccine were investigated. Sixty healthy adult volunteers who lacked antibody to HA virus (anti-HAV) received three doses of vaccine containing 720 enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) units (EL.U) according to a 0, 1 and 6 month schedule. Blood tests for serum liver enzymes and anti-HAV were performed at screening 7 days prior to, and 1, 6 and 7 months after the first dose. Anti-HAV was tested by radio immunoassay and ELISA for titre determination. The seroconversion rates measured by ELISA were 98.3% (59/60) at months 1 and 6 and 100% at month 7. Sixty-one per cent (109/180) of the documented injections were followed by local symptoms, essentially mild soreness at the site of injection; and 22.2% (40/180) by minor general symptoms including malaise, fatigue and lethargy. It is concluded that HA vaccine is highly immunogenic and safe. It may replace immunoglobulin as an effective method of preventing HA virus infection in adults.
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PMID:Safety and immunogenicity of hepatitis A vaccine in healthy adult volunteers. 839 10

Twelve patients with intractable partial seizures [4 receiving carbamazepine (CBZ), 4 phenytoin (PHT), and 4 both] entered a study of the tolerability of flunarizine (FNR) at specified plasma concentrations. After an 8-week baseline period, a single-dose pharmacokinetic study was performed for each patient to calculate a loading dose and maintenance dosage necessary to achieve a target plasma FNR concentration of 30 ng/ml. The first 8 patients received the loading dose (as divided doses) during a 1-week hospitalization and the maintenance dosage for the ensuing 8 weeks. These patients proceeded to treatment periods with target concentrations of 60 and then 120 ng/ml, using doses based on an assumed linear relation between dose and plasma concentration. The last 4 patients were studied only at the 120- ng/ml target level. Results indicated that this procedure successfully approximated target levels of 30 and 60 ng/ml, but observed concentrations in the last period exceeded the 120-ng/ml target level and continued to increase with time, often necessitating a dosage reduction owing to intolerability. Calculated doses for a given target concentration varied by a factor of 12. The most frequently reported adverse experiences were sedation and increased fatigue; reports of dizziness, headache, and lethargy were also common. Based on this study, a target concentration of at least 60 but < 120 ng/ml is recommended for a controlled clinical trial of the antiepileptic efficacy of FNR.
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PMID:Increasing plasma concentration tolerability study of flunarizine in comedicated epileptic patients. 840 51

Autoimmune chronic active hepatitis is a rare type of chronic active hepatitis which occurs with a bimodal age distribution (10 to 30 or > or = 50 years) most frequently in women. It is characterized by negative markers for other possible (e.g. viral) etiologies, hypergammaglobulinemia and a number of circulating autoantibodies. According to the latter, several subgroups can be discriminated today. Histology shows chronic active hepatitis with chronic, sometimes plasma-cell-rich infiltration of portal tracts and piece-meal necroses. Symptoms and signs are classically non-specific and include general malaise, lethargy and fatigue. Accompanying autoimmune diseases may be present. The disease is today, however, also frequently diagnosed in an early, asymptomatic stage. Cause(s) and pathogenetic mechanism(s) of the increasingly heterogeneous appearing disease remain unknown. Recent observations seem to indicate that as yet undetermined (exogenous) substance(s) and the hepatitis C virus may, at least in certain subgroups, trigger autoimmune reactions, which may then perpetuate on the basis of a permissive (immuno)genetic background. Untreated, the disease is, in general, progressive, leads to cirrhosis and shows a mortality of up to > or = 50% in 2 to 4 years. Signs potentially indicating a nonfavorable prognosis include high inflammatory activity and the presence of cirrhosis at diagnosis. Typically, immunosuppressive therapy with corticosteroids (with or without azathioprine) results in remission of inflammatory, but usually not fibro-genetic activity with its potential for cirrhosis. Exacerbations after cessation of treatment are not infrequent (> or = 50%), and indefinite therapy is required in a number of patients, despite its potential for unwanted effects (e.g. osteopenia). Such therapy may increase the 5-year survival rate to > 80%. Liver transplantation remains the sole therapeutic option in end stage disease.
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PMID:[Autoimmune chronic active hepatitis]. 845 13

Intravenous infusion of physostigmine (a centrally active anticholinesterase agent) in normal subjects leads to a syndrome of psychomotor inhibition; this has been proposed as a model for selected symptoms of depression. In view of its similarity to the negative schizophrenic syndrome, we compared the 'physostigmine syndrome' to the negative symptom profile by evaluating the behavioral effects of intravenous physostigmine infusion in seven normal volunteers. Observer ratings and self description revealed significant withdrawal, apathy, alogia, lethargy, decreased energy, slowed thoughts, diminished affective responsivity, and reduced hedonic capacity. Subjects did not report sadness, ideas of hopelessness, worthlessness, or guilt. These findings support the implication of cholinergic hyperactivity as one mechanism in the pathophysiology of negative schizophrenic symptoms.
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PMID:Cholinergic hyperactivity and negative symptoms: behavioral effects of physostigmine in normal controls. 846 Dec 67


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