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Query: UMLS:C0023380 (
lethargy
)
5,697
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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.
...
PMID:A case of poisoning by a mixture of methanol and ethylene glycol. 667 Jan 3
Adult female mink (Mustela vison) were fed a diet that contained Fusarium moniliforme culture material that provided dietary concentrations of 89 ppm fumonisin B1, 21 ppm fumonisin B2, and 8 ppm fumonisin B3 for 87 days. During the trial, there was mild
lethargy
in the mink fed fumonisins, but no other clinical signs or differences in feed consumption (measured during the first two weeks), body weights, or survivability were observed between the fumonisin-treated and control mink. Several hematologic parameters (mean corpuscular hemoglobin concentration, plasma total solids, and lymphocyte concentration) and serum chemical concentrations (globulin, phosphorus, potassium, blood urea nitrogen, creatinine, bilirubin, and cholesterol) and activities (alkaline phosphatase, alanine aminotransferase,
amylase
, and aspartate aminotransferase) were greater in the mink fed fumonisins than in the controls. Serum albumin/globulin and sodium/potassium ratios and chloride concentrations were lower in the fumonisin-fed mink than in the controls. The concentrations of free sphinganine and the ratio of free sphinganine to free sphingosine in the liver and kidneys of the fumonisin-treated mink were greater than in the control mink. No histopathologic alterations were associated with fumonisin treatment. These results indicate that long-term dietary exposure to F. moniliforme culture material containing 118 ppm total fumonisins is not lethal to adult mink, but can produce adverse physiological effects in the animals.
...
PMID:Chronic toxicity of fumonisins from Fusarium moniliforme culture material (M-1325) to mink. 757 84
A 5-year-old mentally retarded child developed laboratory evidence of pancreatitis during accidental acute carbamazepine (CBZ) intoxication. He had been seizure-free with CBZ for 4 years for a seizure disorder with no obvious toxicity. CBZ had been discontinued 5 months before he was admitted to the hospital. After he accidentally ingested a CBZ overdose, he was found vomiting and
lethargic
. Serum
amylase
and lipase levels were increased for several days. With supportive treatment and no CBZ, he recovered and serum
amylase
and lipase levels returned to normal. No other causes of pancreatitis were identified. Therefore, most likely the chemical pancreatitis was associated with the acute CBZ intoxication.
...
PMID:Acute chemical pancreatitis associated with carbamazepine intoxication. 842 54
Seventeen Minnesota and Wisconsin dogs with granulocytic ehrlichosis were studied. The diagnoses were made by finding ehrlichia morulae in peripheral blood neutrophils. Eight dogs were studied retrospectively, and nine dogs were studied prospectively. The medical records of all dogs were reviewed. Eighty-eight percent of the dogs were purebred and 76% were spayed females. The median age was 8 years. Sixty-five percent of the cases were diagnosed in October and November. Fever and
lethargy
were the most common clinical signs. The most frequent laboratory findings were lymphopenia, thrombocytopenia, elevated activities of serum alkaline phosphatase and
amylase
, and hypoalbuminemia. No dogs seroreacted to Ehrlichia canis or Ehrlichia chaffeensis antigens, which are cross-reactive. Seventy-five percent of the dogs tested during the acute phase of disease and 100% of the dogs tested during convalescence were seropositive for E. equi antigens. Granulocytic ehrlichial 16S rRNA gene DNAs from six dogs were amplified by PCR. Sequence analysis of a 919-bp sequence of the ehrlichial 16S rRNA gene amplified by PCR from the blood of two dogs revealed the agent to be identical to the agent of human granulocytic ehrlichiosis in Minnesota and Wisconsin and to be very similar to E. equi and Ehrlichia phagocytophila and less similar to E. canis, Ehrlichia ewingii, and E. chaffeensis. The geographic, clinical, serologic, and molecular evidence indicates that granulocytic ehrlichiosis in Minnesota and Wisconsin dogs is not caused by E. ewingii, but suggests that it is a zoonotic disease caused by an agent closely related to E. equi and that dogs likely contribute to the enzootic cycle and human infection.
...
PMID:Geographic, clinical, serologic, and molecular evidence of granulocytic ehrlichiosis, a likely zoonotic disease, in Minnesota and Wisconsin dogs. 874 70
The imaging findings in two miniature schnauzers with acute necrotizing pancreatitis are described. Both dogs were treated previously for diabetes mellitus and hyperlipidemia. Vomiting, anorexia, and
lethargy
were observed in both dogs at presentation. Laboratory evaluations supportive of pancreatitis included left shift, abnormally high serum
amylase
and lipase activities, hypocalcemia, and abnormally high serum activities of liver enzymes. Sonographically, both dogs had diffusely enlarged hypoechoic pancreatic tissue with anechoic foci compatible with necrosis, abscessation, phlegmon, and pseudocysts formation. Contrast-enhanced computed tomography (CT) findings in both dogs were compatible with pancreatic necrosis. Dog 1 was managed medically for 11 days. Follow-up CT scan in this dog disclosed decreased pancreatic size and increased contrast enhancement compatible with partial resolution of pancreatitis.
...
PMID:Combined use of ultrasonography and contrast enhanced computed tomography to evaluate acute necrotizing pancreatitis in two dogs. 1262 55
Four adult, full-sibling slender-tailed meerkats (Suricata suricatta) were diagnosed with acute pancreatitis. The incident case presented with
lethargy
, anorexia, abdominal guarding, and a cranial abdominal mass. Serum was grossly lipemic, with elevated cholesterol and triglyceride concentrations and increased
amylase
and lipase activity. An exploratory laparotomy confirmed chylous peritonitis and included excision of a saponified spleno-duodenal mass, a partial pancreatectomy, and a splenectomy. Histopathology revealed severe, multifocal, subacute necrotizing and granulomatous pancreatitis. Within 13 days of the incident case, the second meerkat was identified with essentially identical clinical, surgical, and histologic findings. During subsequent physical examinations of apparently unaffected cohorts (n=12), physical and hematologic findings suggestive of pancreatitis were identified in the two remaining siblings of the first two cases. The definitive cause for these four cases is undetermined; however, common risk factors identified were obesity and hyperlipidemia, a change to a higher-fat diet, and genetic predisposition. To assess its usefulness in the diagnosis of meerkat pancreatitis, serum canine and feline pancreatic lipase immunoreactivity (cPLI and fPLI) concentrations were measured in serum samples (n=61) from two unrelated meerkat populations. Although these assays are highly sensitive and specific for the diagnosis of pancreatitis in domestic carnivores, similar correlation was not apparent for meerkats. In addition, hyperlipidemia was inconsistently present in many meerkats, with no apparent correlation to the development of clinical illness. Based on these observations, sensitive and specific diagnostic tests for pancreatitis in meerkats are currently unavailable.
...
PMID:Acute pancreatitis in slender-tailed meerkats (Suricata suricatta). 2059 19