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 anti-anginal effects of KB-944 (Fostedil), a new calcium ion antagonist with a half life of approximately 23-28 hr, were evaluated in 20 patients with exertional angina pectoris in a placebo-controlled single-blind dose titration trial. Ambulatory monitoring and multistage treadmill exercise with computer-assisted electrocardiographic analysis was performed after 2 weeks of placebo therapy and after two 2-weekly periods of KB-944 therapy. The mean (+/- SEM) exercise time to the development of angina on treadmill walking increased from 6.9 +/- 0.4 min on placebo to 9.4 +/- 0.5 min on KB-944 100 mg/day (P less than 0.001) and 9.7 +/- 0.8 min on KB-944 200 mg/day (P less than 0.001 vs placebo and not significant vs KB-944 100 mg/day). The time to the development of 1 mm ST-segment depression of 5.3 +/- 0.4 min on placebo increased to 6.5 +/- 0.5 and 6.6 +/- 0.5 min on KB-944 100 and 200 mg/day, respectively (P less than 0.01 vs placebo). The heart rate at rest of 77 +/- 3 beats/min on placebo was reduced to 68 +/- 3 beats/min on KB-944 100 mg/day (P less than 0.001) and 71 +/- 2 beats/min on KB-944 200 mg/day (P less than 0.01). The maximal heart rate and the rate-pressure product were not altered by KB-944 therapy. One patient developed unstable angina during the treatment phase of KB-944 200 mg/day and was withdrawn. Five patients complained of dyspepsia and one of headache and lethargy during KB-944 200 mg/day. One patient developed ventricular tachycardia during treadmill testing while on KB-944 200 mg/day. The 24-hr ambulatory monitoring data confirmed the findings of exercise testing. KB-944 (Fostedil) in a dose of 100 mg once daily was well tolerated as compared to KB-944 200 mg once daily and both the doses were equally effective. The drug merits further evaluation for the treatment of exertional angina pectoris.
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PMID:Ambulatory monitoring and exercise testing in the evaluation of a new long-acting calcium ion antagonist KB-944 (Fostedil) for the treatment of exertional angina pectoris. 390 75

Acute toxicosis developed in a group (n = 35) of fattening hogs and replacement gilts that had excessive vitamin D3 inadvertently added to their feed. All of the pigs were lethargic, and emesis was evident in about half of the pigs 1 to 2 days after they consumed the feed. On the 2nd day, 3 of the pigs died. The remaining pigs were given a different ration. Five additional pigs died during the next 2 weeks. Clinical toxicosis also was observed in 1 of 2 feeder pigs fed the suspect feed in the laboratory and in 2 of 2 pigs fed the suspect feed by the company that had mixed the feed. Gross necropsy findings consistently observed were hemorrhagic gastritis and diffuse interstitial pneumonia. Myocardial degeneration and nephrosis were seen in, respectively, 1 of 6 and 4 of 6 pigs necropsied. Histologically, necrosis and mineralization of variable severity were observed in the fundic gastric mucosa, lungs, kidneys, bone, heart, and small blood vessels of the lungs and heart. Less necrosis and more mineralization were observed in pigs that survived longer than 6 days. The 2 pigs fed the suspect feed in the laboratory had increased concentrations of serum calcium from the 3rd to the 9th days or the 1st to the 3rd days, after feeding the suspect feed. Serum phosphorus concentrations were increased from the 1st until the 2nd or 3rd day, and serum magnesium concentrations were increased from the 1st or 2nd to the 3rd day after feeding the suspect feed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Acute toxicosis in swine associated with excessive dietary intake of vitamin D. 632 15

The main purpose of this work was to study changes in the balance of fluids, electrolytes and blood metabolites in neonatal piglets with severe transmissible gastroenteritis. Six two day old conventional piglets were infected with transmissible gastroenteritis virus while six others were used as normal controls. Blood samples were collected in heparin when the infected piglets were moribund. The following variables were measured: packed red cell volume, total plasma protein and bicarbonate, blood pH, blood urea nitrogen and plasma glucose, creatinine, chloride, inorganic phosphorus, sodium, potassium, magnesium and calcium. Vomiting and diarrhea appeared 12 to 24 hours postinoculation in the infected piglets and they were moribund one or two days later. Before becoming moribund, most of the piglets fell rapidly into a lethargic and comatose state. The most evident changes in their blood variables were an increase in packed cell volume, total protein, blood urea nitrogen, phosphorus and magnesium levels and a decrease in pH and bicarbonate concentration as well as a severe hypoglycemia. The results suggest that severe hypoglycemia coupled with metabolic acidosis and dehydration might be an important factor contributing to the high mortality rates caused by transmissible gastroenteritis in neonatal piglets. The hypoglycemia results from a combination of the inadequate glucose metabolism inherent to neonatal piglets and the acute maldigestion and malabsorption resulting from the diffuse and severe villous atrophy induced by the virus.
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PMID:Hypoglycemia: a factor associated with low survival rate of neonatal piglets infected with transmissible gastroenteritis virus. 647 97

Zinc is essential for many metabolic and enzymatic functions in man. Deficiency of zinc in man has now been recognized to occur not only as a result of nutritional factors, but also in various disease states, including malabsorption syndromes, acrodermatitis enteropathica, Crohn's disease, alcoholism and cirrhosis of the liver. The deficiency state in human subjects exists as a spectrum extending from mild to severe degree. The clinical manifestations of mild zinc deficiency include oligospermia, weight loss and hyperammonaemia. Moderate zinc deficiency is characterized clinically by growth retardation, hypogonadism in males, skin changes, poor appetite, mental lethargy, delayed wound healing, taste abnormalities and abnormal dark adaptation. In severe zinc deficiency states, bullous-pustular dermatitis, alopecia, diarrhoea, emotional disorders, weight loss, intercurrent infections, hypogonadism in males and, if unrecognized, death have been observed. Zinc is needed for the functions of over 100 enzymes. It is essential for DNA, RNA and protein synthesis and, as such, is important for cell division. Zinc is an inducer of mRNA of metallothionein, a protein which may have an important role in the regulation of intestinal zinc absorption. Zinc has a specific effect on testes in animals and man. Recent reports indicate that in human subjects thymopoietin may be zinc dependent and in animal studies somatomedin may be affected adversely due to dietary zinc restriction. Zinc plays an important role in the protection of cell membrane integrity and may be protective against free radical injury. Zinc is known to compete with cadmium, lead, copper, iron and calcium for similar binding sites. In the future, a potential use of zinc may be to alleviate toxic effects of cadmium and lead in human subjects. Recent evidence suggests that thymic-dependent lymphocytes (T cells are zinc dependent. T-helper and suppressor cells, T-effector cells and T-natural killer cells appear to be zinc dependent. Zinc is also essential for some of the neutrophil functions. Thus, it appears that zinc may play an important role in immunity. One may suggest that some of the clinical features of cirrhosis of the liver, such as testicular atrophy, loss of body hair, night blindness, poor wound healing, poor appetite, susceptibility to infections and enhanced sensitivity to drugs, may be related to conditioned deficiency of zinc, future studies are required to determine whether or not zinc supplementation is beneficial to these patients.
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PMID:The role of zinc in gastrointestinal and liver disease. 661 39

Twenty beef calves weighing approximately 180 kg were allotted to 3 groups. In group A, 6 calves were given 25 mg of mycelial monensin/kg of body weight orally and were evaluated at 1, 2, and 4 days for clinical, ECG, clinicopathologic, and pathologic alterations. In group B, 7 calves were given a single dose of monensin (40 mg/kg) and 5 were given a 2nd 40 mg/kg dose on day 7; calves were evaluated at days 1, 2, 4, 7, 8, 9, and 11. In group C, 2 calves served as controls. Monensin-treated calves developed anorexia, diarrhea, and lethargy after day 1. One group B calf died on day 7 with lesions of congestive heart failure. Electrocardiographic abnormalities were not observed in group A calves; in group B, prolongation of Q-T and QRS intervals occurred from days 2 to 11 and first degree heart block was seen from days 7 to 11. Clinicopathologic alterations included: increased serum activities of aspartate aminotransferase and creatine kinase in group B calves after day 2; decreased serum K+, Na+, and Ca2+ concentrations in both groups, and postdosing occurrence of leukocytosis. Calves were euthanatized sequentially and the lesions of monensin toxicosis were present in the heart, skeletal muscles, and rumen in groups A and B. Disseminated pale yellowish-brown areas of necrosis were present in the ventricular myocardium of 6 of 12 group B calves. Gross lesions were not present in the skeletal muscles or rumen. Microscopically, the myocardial and skeletal muscular lesions were characterized by sarcoplasmic vacuolation from mitochondrial swelling and lipid accumulation in calves killed after day 1 in groups A and B, and by myocardial necrosis with contraction bands, but without calcification, in group B calves killed by day 4. Acute rumenitis was present in groups A and B calves. Myotoxic effects of monensin may be related to its action as an ionophore producing altered intracellular ion concentrations and initiating degeneration and necrosis in striated muscle fibers.
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PMID:Clinical, clinicopathologic, and pathologic alterations in acute monensin toxicosis in cattle. 665 Sep 60

Hyperparathyroid crisis is a rare disease but should be suspected in acutely ill patients complaining of weakness, lethargy, nausea, vomiting, confusion and abdominal pain. Despite the variety of clinical manifestations, the syndrome forms a distinctive pattern which, in the presence of a serum calcium level greater than 16 mg/100 ml, should be recognized. The most difficult problem in diagnosis is the differentiation of hyperparathyroid crisis from ectopic parathyroid hormone-producing tumors. The disease is an endocrine emergency which requires prompt surgery after rapid correction of dehydration and hypercalcemia. The best results are achieved by removing offending parathyroid tissue within 72 hours after the onset of symptoms.
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PMID:Primary hyperparathyroidism: hyperparathyroid crisis. 730 6

A total of 42 patients with atherosclerotic--and 34 with involutional depression were studied by conjunctival biomicroscopy for particular features of lipid peroxidation and state of microcirculation before and after treatment with vasoactive preparations, antioxidants and calcium antagonists. POL were found to be increased in patients with atherosclerotic depression irrespective of the syndrome, and in involutional depression with anxious symptomatology, as well as in those patients in stuporous state, this being accounted by a decreased provision of the organism with antioxidants as well as by an inadequate activity of antioxidant enzymes; high incidence rate of intravascular and vascular changes was also noted in the above patient populations. Tocoferolum acetatum and corinfar potentiated antiaggregational and spasmolytic actions of vasoactive preparations, which fact made for an earlier eradication of microcirculatory disturbances, decrease in the free radical oxidation activity and recovery of those patients getting out of the psychotic state.
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PMID:[The correction of the metabolic and microcirculatory disorders in patients with atherosclerotic and involutional depressions]. 748 52

Previously, we have shown a significant increase in number of GABAB receptor binding sites in neocortex and thalamus of lethargic (lh/lh) mice, a mutant strain exhibiting absence seizures. This study was performed to test our hypothesis that presynaptic GABAB receptors would inhibit [3H]GABA release to a greater degree in lh/lh mice compared with their nonepileptic littermates (designated +/+). Synaptosomes isolated from neocortex and thalamus of age-matched male lh/lh and +/+ mice were similar in uptake of [3H]GABA. In the neocortical preparation, baclofen dose-dependently inhibited [3H]GABA release evoked by 12 mM KCl, an effect mediated by GABAB receptors. The maximal inhibition (Imax) value was significantly greater (80%) in lh/lh than +/+ mice, whereas the IC50 (3 microM) was unchanged. In the thalamic preparation, the effect of baclofen (50 microM) was 58% less robust in lh/lh mice. Other effects mediated by GABAB receptors (inhibitions in Ca2+ uptake and cyclic AMP formation) were also significantly reduced in thalamic synaptosomes from lh/lh mice. These data suggest a greater presynaptic GABAB receptor-mediated effect in neocortex and a reduced effect in thalamic nuclei of lh/lh mice. It is possible that selective effects of presynaptic GABAB receptors or GABA release in neocortex and thalamic nuclei of lh/lh mice may contribute to mechanisms underlying absence seizures.
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PMID:GABAB receptor-mediated effects in synaptosomes of lethargic (lh/lh) mice. 759 94

The most important recent development in primary generalized epilepsy has been the use of in-vitro and in-vivo models to delineate the neuronal populations and intrinsic mechanisms, which generate the synchronized thalamocortical burst-firing of absence seizures. Candidate molecular mechanisms, which may be critically involved in the pathogenesis of absence seizures in selected animal models, include the following: altered biophysical properties of T-type calcium channels in the genetic absence epilepsy rat of Strasbourg (GAERS) model; increased numbers of gamma-aminobutyric acid, B subtype receptors in the lethargic mouse (lh/lh mouse) model; and changes in the subunit composition of gamma-aminobutyric acid, A subtype receptors in the GAERS model. Regarding generalized convulsive seizures, neuronal populations within the inferior and superior colliculi appear to regulate seizures in the genetic epilepsy-prone rat (GEPR) model, and subpopulations within the substantia nigra pars reticulata (SNR) appear to regulate seizures in the fluorothyl model. Deficiencies in the function of GABAergic and noradrenergic receptors may underlie generalized convulsive seizures in the GEPR model.
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PMID:Models of primary generalized epilepsy. 762 May 85

Naked mole-rats have no access to obvious sources of vitamin D and therefore have an impoverished vitamin D status. In an investigation into the effects of vitamin D supplementation, inadvertently supraphysiological doses of 130,000 times the normal dose of vitamin D were administered. Within 5 days animals appeared lethargic, with reduced food intake. All but one of the seven animals were killed and blood was collected. Plasma vitamin D metabolites 25(OH)D and 1,25(OH)2D and calcium were determined. Both vitamin D metabolite concentrations exceeded the upper limits of sensitivity of the assays (> 100 ng/ml 25(OH)D and > 210 pg/ml 1,25(OH)2D). Active calcium uptake in the intestine was evident along with concomitant increases in calcium concentration in plasma, bone, and teeth. The remaining animal survived, but showed scab-like formations in the skin around the lower jaw and along the nipple line. X-ray analyses revealed calcium deposition in these cornified regions, although there was no evidence of metastatic calcification in other tissues. Deposition of excess calcium in skin that is regularly sloughed off and in teeth that are continuously worn down and replaced may reduce the vitamin D-induced hypercalcaemia and thus alleviate the effects of vitamin D intoxication.
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PMID:Vitamin D3 intoxication in naked mole-rats (Heterocephalus glaber) leads to hypercalcaemia and increased calcium deposition in teeth with evidence of abnormal skin calcification. 765 55


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