Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0023380 (
lethargy
)
5,697
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Lethargy
, hyperpyrexia, tremor, and rigidity associated with leukocytosis and elevation of the
creatine kinase
level occurred in a patient with a closed head injury who was being treated with haloperidol for control of agitation. This constellation of symptoms, known as the neuroleptic malignant syndrome (NMS), partially improved when the neuroleptic medication was stopped, but complete resolution of the syndrome did not occur until the patient was treated with bromocriptine. Because haloperidol is the most widely used medication for the agitation that develops in patients with significant closed head injuries, neurosurgeons should be aware of the NMS. The NMS is caused by neuroleptic medications and may initially present with unexplained hyperpyrexia, leukocytosis, and elevated
creatine kinase
levels. Halting the neuroleptic, supportive care, and the use of dantrolene sodium and bromocriptine are the treatment modalities of choice for this syndrome, which has a mortality rate of 20 to 30% and may be linked to malignant hyperthermia.
...
PMID:Neuroleptic malignant syndrome complicating closed head injury. 396 Feb 97
Lethargy
, marked muscle weakness and rigidity, a maximal temperature of 40 degrees C, and a maximal
creatine kinase
value of 17,240 IU/liter developed in a 36-year-old woman following treatment with several neuroleptics. Initial treatment with dantrolene was unsuccessful. The patient's condition improved gradually over a 10-day period with no specific therapy. Muscle biopsy revealed a contracture pattern diagnostic of malignant hyperthermia susceptibility, as well as abnormal sensitivity to fluphenazine. This report may be the first description of a patient with neuroleptic malignant syndrome in whom muscle biopsy response similar to that seen in malignant hyperthermia occurred and documents that dantrolene is not uniformly successful therapy for this syndrome.
...
PMID:Neuroleptic malignant syndrome. Patient with unique clinical and physiologic features. 614 89
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.
...
PMID:Clinical, clinicopathologic, and pathologic alterations in acute monensin toxicosis in cattle. 665 Sep 60
An 18-month-old sexually intact male llama and a 7-month-old female llama were examined because of weakness,
lethargy
, and recumbency. Both had signs of ascending motor paralysis with minimal or no afferent sensory loss. Tick paralysis was diagnosed on the basis of complete clinical recovery following removal of a single, attached and engorged female tick (Dermacentor andersoni) from each llama. The male llama recovered within a few hours after removal of the tick, but recovery in the female llama required several days. Serum
creatine kinase
activity was high in both llamas, possibly as a result of direct effects of toxin on muscles or nerves.
...
PMID:Tick paralysis in two llamas. 759 50
Acrylamide is an important chemical used in the synthesis of polyacrylamides, which have a wide variety of industrial applications. The principal toxic effect of acrylamide, both in animals and in humans, is neurotoxicity. Peripheral nervous system effects are most prominent, but central nervous system effects have also been reported. Acrylamide is metabolized to the epoxide glycidamide, whose adducts to hemoglobin and to DNA have been identified in animals and humans. This metabolite may be involved in the reproductive and carcinogenic effects of acrylamide. In the present study we investigated whether glycidamide would exert neurotoxic effects similar to those caused by its parent compound. Male rats were injected i.p. with acrylamide (25 or 50 mg/kg) or glycidamide (50 or 100 mg/kg) daily for 8 days. Reduced weight gain was evident in animals exposed to glycidamide or to the higher dose of acrylamide. Both compounds induced
lethargy
and ataxia, but the posture of glycidamide-treated rats differed from that of animals treated with acrylamide. At the high doses, both compounds significantly affected rats' behavior in the rotarod test; on the other hand, only acrylamide was effective in the hindlimb splay test. Acrylamide inhibited activity of glyceraldehyde-3-phosphate dehydrogenase (GAPDH) in sciatic and tibial nerves, as well as in brain. Glycidamide inhibited GAPDH activity only in brain and activity of
creatine kinase
in both peripheral and central tissues. Acrylamide also caused profound urinary retention and distended bladders, while the effects of glycidamide were minimal. Morphological abnormalities were seen in sciatic nerves and dorsal root ganglion cells of rats treated with acrylamide (50 mg/kg x 12), but not in rats exposed to glycidamide (100 mg/kg x 11). These results indicate that the toxicities of acrylamide and glycidamide differ and suggest that acrylamide itself may be primarily responsible for its peripheral neurotoxicity.
...
PMID:Evaluation of the neurotoxicity of glycidamide, an epoxide metabolite of acrylamide: behavioral, neurochemical and morphological studies. 774 May 44
Infection of 60 to 90% of neutrophils with the protozoa, Hepatozoon canis, was detected in 2 dogs. Clinical signs included
lethargy
, anorexia, and weight loss. Both dogs had severe anemia, leukocytosis, and thrombocytopenia as well as hypoalbuminemia, hyperglobulinemia, and high activities of serum alkaline phosphatase and
creatine kinase
. Both dogs were treated with imidocarb dipropionate and doxycycline. One dog recovered clinically, with disappearance of parasites from WBC. The other dog died, despite treatment. Necropsy revealed widespread dispersion of schizonts in the parenchymal tissues, but no involvement of skeletal muscle tissues. The disease syndrome that has been identified in the Texas Gulf region is characterized by gait abnormalities associated with multifocal pyogranulomatous myositis, thus, it is distinct clinicopathologically from the syndrome observed in these 2 dogs.
...
PMID:Hepatozoon canis infection in two dogs. 779 Mar 3
Sixty-six dogs with hypothyroidism were identified from dogs examined over a 5-year period. Hypothyroidism was diagnosed only if the dog had a low, resting serum thyroxine concentration and serum thyroxine concentration was not higher than the lower limits of the reference range 6 hours after IV administration of bovine thyrotropin. The prevalence of hypothyroidism was 0.2%. Neutering was determined to be the most significant gender-associated risk factor for development of hypothyroidism. Neutered male and spayed female dogs had a higher relative risk of developing hypothyroidism than did sexually intact females. Sexually intact females had a lower relative risk. Breeds with a significantly increased risk, compared with other breeds, were the Doberman Pinscher and Golden Retriever. The most common clinical findings were obesity (41%), seborrhea (39%), alopecia (26%), weakness (21%),
lethargy
(20%), bradycardia (14%), and pyoderma (11%). Low voltage R-waves were found on 58% of ECG. Clinicopathologic abnormalities included hypercholesterolemia (73%), nonregenerative anemia (32%), high serum alkaline phosphatase activity (30%), and high serum
creatine kinase
activity (18%). Serum total triiodothyronine concentrations were within reference ranges in 15% of the hypothyroid dogs. Response to treatment was good in most dogs, but those with severe concurrent disease or neurologic abnormalities were less likely to respond with complete resolution of clinical signs.
...
PMID:Hypothyroidism in dogs: 66 cases (1987-1992). 817 72
Clinical signs that included
lethargy
, inappetence, diarrhea, and vomiting and that progressed to seizures were observed in 40 feeder pigs that were approximately 70 days old. The pigs were fed ground red wheat and whole milk and were housed in a barn that did not allow exposure to direct sunlight. Analysis of samples of feed obtained from the farm indicated inadequate quantities of calcium and phosphorus as well as a low ratio of these 2 nutrients. Serum and tissue concentrations of vitamin A were less than normal. Low serum calcium concentrations, high serum phosphorus concentrations, and high alkaline phosphatase and
creatine kinase
activities were compatible with low vitamin D concentrations.
...
PMID:Seizures and acute death attributable to hypovitaminosis A and suspected hypovitaminosis D in feeder pigs. 849 85
A 3-year-old boy had recurrent episodes of
lethargy
, encephalopathy, and hepatomegaly accompanied by hypoglycemia, elevated liver aminotransferase and
creatine kinase
values, and nonketotic dicarboxylic aciduria; the serum carnitine level was moderately reduced. Carnitine palmitoyltransferase II activity was decreased in lymphocytes and fibroblasts. Therapy with L-carnitine and a diet low in long-chain triglycerides did not prevent recurrent episodes.
...
PMID:Recurrent metabolic decompensation in profound carnitine palmitoyltransferase II deficiency. 828 68
Signalment, clinical signs, and physical examination and clinicopathologic findings in dogs diagnosed with Hepatozoon canis parasitemia (n = 100) were compared with those in Hepatozoon-negative dogs (n = 180). A subset (n = 15) of Hepatozoon-positive dogs with unusually high (> 800 H canis gametocytes/microL of whole blood) parasitemia was compared with dogs that had low parasitemia (n = 85) and with Hepatozoon-negative dogs (n = 180). Hepatozoon-positive dogs significantly differed from Hepatozoon-negative dogs in body temperature, total red blood cell count, hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit, and platelet count. Dogs with high H canis parasitemia significantly differed from those with low parasitemia in hemoglobin concentration, hematocrit, and total neutrophil count. Clinical findings from dogs with high H canis parasitemia included emaciation,
lethargy
, hyperglobulinemia, hypoalbuminemia, and increased serum alkaline phosphatase and
creatine kinase
activities. Findings at necropsy included hepatitis, pneumonia, and glomerulonephritis associated with H canis schizonts and extensive parasitism of bone marrow, spleen, and lymph nodes. Low hemoglobin concentration, low platelet count, and concurrent parvovirus infection together represented the best predictor variables for Hepatozoon positivity in dogs presenting to the hospital.
...
PMID:Retrospective case-control study of hepatozoonosis in dogs in Israel. 947 Jan 63
1
2
3
4
Next >>