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)

Three patients had neurologic signs due to isopropyl alcohol (IPA) intoxication. Over a several-week period, a known alcoholic developed apathy, confusion, ataxia, and hyperreflexia. During this period, there was no ethanol available to him, and he denied use of other intoxicants. He was found stuporous in the hospital after drinking IPA and admitted to IPA abuse during the preceding weeks. Two other men were admitted in a stupor after large ingestions of IPA. Intoxication with IPA has two different presentations: stupor in a known alcoholic and encephalopathy of unknown cause in individuals who hide their addiction. Ethanol, methanol, IPA, and ethylene glycol intoxications are associated with different clinical and laboratory findings.
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PMID:Isopropyl alcohol intoxication. 198 19

We report an unusual presentation of solvent abuse. A 17-year-old boy was brought to the emergency department after he inhaled fumes from a rag soaked with a carburetor cleaner containing toluene, methylene chloride, and methanol. Considered to be intoxicated from the acute effects of sniffing toluene or methylene chloride, the patient remained lethargic and ataxic despite removal from exposure and administration of supplemental oxygen. Subsequently, he was found to have a toxic serum methanol level (23 mg/dL). Toluene, methylene chloride, and methanol are widely used in industry and carry potential occupational risks for exposure. These agents are also found in many products available for home use. The toxicology and management of each of the agents in this exposure are discussed.
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PMID:Methanol poisoning as a result of inhalational solvent abuse. 234 80

A tetrodotoxin-like substance, denoted ephippiotoxin, was obtained from the tissue of Brachycephalus ephippium, a small pumpkin-coloured frog collected in the Atlantic Forest of the southeast region of Brazil. Ephippiotoxin is a dialyzable substance soluble in water, methanol and ethanol, but insoluble in organic solvents such as chloroform and other apolar solvents. After treatment with active charcoal (Norit-A) and purification with ion-exchange Amberlite IRC-50 resin (NH4 + form), a freeze-dried residue was obtained, with a toxicity of c. 117 micrograms/kg (mice, i.p.). Ephippiotoxin showed the same mobility as crystalline tetrodotoxin (Sankyo) when submitted to thin-layer chromatography (silica gel G) using seven different solvent systems. White mice (20 +/- 1 g) injected i.p. with either B. ephippium tissue extracts or semi-purified toxin showed partial paralysis of the hind limbs, lethargy, altered breathing rhythm and clonic convulsions. Death occurred within 1.5-30 min after injection, depending on the dose. Ephippiotoxin induced atrioventricular diastolic blockade in the toad heart. It also inhibited the response of toad striated muscle to direct and indirect electric stimulation and blocked the compound action potential of isolated frog sciatic nerve.
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PMID:A tetrodotoxin-like substance found in the Brazilian frog Brachycephalus ephippium. 377 95

A fatal case of poisoning by a mixture of methanol and ethylene glycol is described. A 72-year-old man was hospitalized when he was found stuporous to semicomatose, and despite massive bicarbonate therapy, died 36 hr after the admission. While the presence of numerous oxalate crystals in urine strongly suggested ethylene glycol intoxication, the GC analysis of the liquid the patient ingested revealed that he presumably drunk about 150 to 200 ml of a mixture of methanol (80%) and ethylene glycol (20%), the amount well over the lowest lethal dose when the additiveness of toxicity was considered. Retrospective evaluation of the signs suggested that while some of them such as oxalate crystalluria, elevated CPK, hypocalcemia, renal failure are attributable to the toxicity of ethylene glycol, others including elevated serum amylase and cyanosis are indicative of methanol poisoning. Disturbed consciousness was considered to be of metabolic origin; the high anion gap observed (38.2 mEq/liter) may be due not only to lactic acidosis but also to acidogenicity of the two chemicals ingested. The importance of gas chromatographic analysis for identification of the causative chemical(s) is stressed.
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PMID:A case of poisoning by a mixture of methanol and ethylene glycol. 667 Jan 3

Alcoholics are predisposed to certain metabolic disorders that cause stupor and coma. These entities include acute ethanol intoxication, ethanol-induced hypoglycemia, alcoholic ketoacidosis, ethylene glycol and methanol intoxications, thiamine deficiency, and hepatic encephalopathy. The recognition and management of these entities and the evaluation of stuporous alcoholics are discussed.
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PMID:Saturday Conference: stuporous alcoholics: metabolic considerations. 704 Dec 82

Methanol intoxication can be a challenge, in part because it is relatively uncommon but also because of the pharmacokinetics involved. A patient may not experience symptoms and thus may not present for treatment for several hours, or even a day or two, after exposure to the toxic substance. Yet, the interval between ingestion and treatment is one of the most important factors in determining patient outcome. Typical symptoms of methanol intoxication include lethargy, vertigo, vomiting, blurred vision, and decreased visual acuity. Treatment focuses on prevention of methanol conversion to its toxic metabolites, correction of metabolic acidosis, and elimination of the toxic substances from the system. Ethanol and bicarbonate administration and hemodialysis have been effective.
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PMID:Methanol intoxication. How to help patients who have been exposed to toxic solvents. 838 47

The secondary metabolites present in the methanol extract of a Mucor hiemalis strain (SMU-21) mycelia, cultured in liquid medium, were evaluated for toxicity to Bactrocera oleae (Gmelin) and Ceratitis capitata (Wiedemann) (Diptera: Tephritidae) adults. Feeding and contact bioassays revealed that the methanol fraction of the crude supernatant was strongly toxic to both species. Symptoms of toxicity developed quickly; lethargy occurred 1-2 h posttreatment, and mortality reached 82-97% after 24 h. Both feeding and contact bioassays showed that B. oleae was more susceptible than C. capitata. Concentrations producing 50% mortality (LC50) to B. oleae and C. capitata after 24 h in feeding bioassays were 0.52 and 1.28 mg/ 0.1 ml diet, respectively, but 34.8 and 64.0 microg/ cm2, respectively, after 4 h in contact bioassays. Solvent partition, precipitation, and chromatographic procedures were used to isolate the active principles from the crude supernatant. These resulted in the isolation of one high-pressure liquid chromatography fraction with insecticidal activity on B. oleae flies equal to the initial crude supernatant.
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PMID:Partial purification and insecticidal activity of toxic metabolites secreted by a Mucor hiemalis strain (SMU-21) against adults of Bactrocera oleae and Ceratitis capitata (Diptera: Tephritidae). 1706 96