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)

Viral myocarditis is the result of a viral infection that produces myocardial necrosis and triggers an immune response to eliminate the viral agent. Many pathogenic mechanisms may contribute to myocardial cell loss including the following: cytokine production contributing to disease severity; viral persistence, which may produce an autoimmune response to cardiac myosin; and viral invasion of vascular endothelium causing vascular spasm with reperfusion injury. The compensatory response of the myocardium to these mechanisms of cell loss is hypertrophy, which results in fibrosis, scarring, and dilation. The myocardial cell loss and physiological response produces a child with fever, lethargy, symptoms of congestive heart failure, cardiogenic shock, or new onset arrhythmias. The initial presentation may be subtle, but if left untreated will go on to produce severe symptoms. The focus of diagnostic studies is to evaluate cardiac function, identify the viral agent, and eliminate other causes of global cardiac dysfunction. Treatment must provide for support of cardiac function through inotropic and afterload-producing agents while providing rest for the stressed cardiac muscle. The nursing care of children with viral myocarditis must focus on continual assessment of the cardiovascular system while supporting the recovery of myocardial function.
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PMID:Viral myocarditis in children. 885 48

A 22-year-old man developed unconsciousness, severe quadriplegia and muscle atrophy, and had markedly elevated serum creatine kinase levels after using the high-dose steroid and nondepolarizing neuromuscular blocking agents during the course of sepsis and DIC. On neurological examination, he was lethargic. The patient had generalized muscle weakness and wasting, and diminished deep tendon reflexes. He weakly responsed to painful stimuli on the legs. The motor nerve conduction study demonstrated decreased CMAP (compound muscle action potential) amplitudes. Motor and sensory nerve conduction velocities and their distal latencies were normal. Muscle biopsy revealed marked muscle fiber atrophy predominantly in type 2 fibers and numerous basophilic and a few necrotic fibers. Some atrophic fibers had decreased to absent myosin adenosine triphosphatase activity in their center. Accordingly, he was diagnosed as having acute quadriplegic myopathy (AQM), which has been reported mainly in Western countries. The mechanism of muscle fiber degradation in this myopathy is still unknown. On immunohistochemical analysis to our patient, enzyme activities of various proteases such as calpain, cathepsin B, and proteasomes were increased in the sarcoplasm, especially in the atrophic fibers. We suggest that lysosomal cathepsin, nonlysosomal calpain, and ATP-ubiquitin-proteasome proteolytic pathways participate in muscle fiber degradation in AQM.
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PMID:[A case of acute quadriplegic myopathy]. 1108 98