Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026837 (muscle rigidity)
1,077 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Dantrolene sodium acts primarily by affecting calcium flux across the sarcoplasmic reticulum of skeletal muscle. Recently, dantrolene has been used very successfully in the treatment of several rare hypercatabolic syndromes which have previously been associated with high mortality rates. In malignant hyperthermia, where early diagnosis and treatment usually with intravenous dantrolene in association with other supportive measures (and often subsequent dantrolene therapy) is performed, recovery is seen in virtually 100% of patients. There is a rapid resolution of hyperthermia, dysrhythmias, muscle rigidity, tachycardia, hypercapnia, mottled or cyanotic skin, and metabolic acidosis, and a slower normalisation of myoglobinuria and elevated serum creatine phosphokinase levels. In patients with family history or previous episodes of malignant hyperthermia, prophylactic treatment with dantrolene prior to anaesthesia prevents the syndrome occurring in most cases. Where malignant hyperthermia has developed patients have been successfully treated with further dantrolene therapy. Dantrolene has also been used successfully in the treatment of a few cases of heat stroke and the neuroleptic malignant syndrome--both of which have many similarities to malignant hyperthermia. Dantrolene is well established in the treatment of patients with muscle spasticity where it generally improves at least some of the components of spasticity (i.e. hyper/hypotonia, clonus, muscle cramps and spasms, resistance to stretch and flexor reflexes, articular movement, neurological and motor functions and urinary control). However, in some patients, particularly those with multiple sclerosis, dantrolene may not be effective, and in many cases muscular strength may diminish. Long term dantrolene therapy has been associated with hepatic toxicity and may cause problems in patients treated for disorders of muscle spasticity. Thus, dantrolene offers a unique advance in the therapy available for the treatment of hypercatabolic disorders and is also useful in the treatment of muscle spasticity of various aetiology.
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PMID:Dantrolene. A review of its pharmacodynamic and pharmacokinetic properties and therapeutic use in malignant hyperthermia, the neuroleptic malignant syndrome and an update of its use in muscle spasticity. 352 59

Drug-induced hyperthermia is one condition that anesthesiologists may meet even though it is uncommon, it is life threatening. We report 3 cases of patients at Siriraj Hospital, Mahidol University who developed drug-induced hyperthermia and rhabdomyolysis from different mechanisms. In two of them, the diagnosis was suspected malignant hyperthermia. Rigidity, hyperthermia and tachyarrhythmia developed just after inhalation induction (halothane and sevoflurane) and intubation with succinylcholine. The other case was the result of amphetamine abuse. He also had received both succinylcholine and inhalation agent (isoflurane) but no obvious signs or symptoms were detected during anesthesia. He developed a gradual increase in fever over 13 hours post operation and complained of muscle pain (with leg muscle cramps). All of them showed a marked increase in muscle enzymes and had rhabdomyolysis. As a result of early detection and early manangement, these three patients survived without any permanent damage to vital organs. We conclude that Thai anesthesiologists should be more aware and alert to drug-induced hyperthermia especially as nowadays many teenagers abuse stimulant drugs and "triggering" drugs as antidepressant or serotonin reuptake inhibitors are prescribed more frequently. Early detection and management will decrease morbidity and mortality.
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PMID:Drug-induced hyperthermia and rhabdomyolysis during the perioperative period: report of three patients. 1245 25

It is well known that painful muscle cramps occur frequently in patients with advanced liver cirrhosis (LC). Although many studies discuss the pathophysiological causes of these muscle cramps in various conditions, the results are not clear as far as the cause associated to LC is concerned. In order to investigate the cause of muscle cramps in LC, we examined the histological findings of skeletal muscle fibers in LC rat model and in a patient with LC. LC (n=9) was induced in rats by chronic carbon tetrachloride administration. The histological findings of skeletal muscle tissues from the lower leg in LC rats and those of the upper arm in a patient with LC were compared. The degenerated muscle fibers and centronucleus in LC rats were similar to the opaque fibers frequently observed in myotonic dystrophy with severe muscle rigidity in patients with LC. In conclusion, results of this study suggest that one of the causes for muscle cramps in patients with LC is due to skeletal muscle fiber degeneration. Therefore, histological observation of skeletal muscle fibers should be considered in the treatment of painful muscle cramps.
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PMID:Degeneration of skeletal muscle fibers in the rat administrated carbon tetrachloride: similar histological findings of the muscle in a 64-year-old patient of LC with muscle cramp. 1247 35

A 68-year-old man who was given a diagnosis of interstitial pneumonia. Chest computerized tomography (CT) revealed subpleural honeycomb formations and traction bronchiectasis. Three months after the diagnosis of interstitial pneumonia, he noticed neurological symptoms, such as facial spasms, dysphagia, muscle rigidity and muscle cramp, and repeatedly received clonazepam. He was diagnosed with stiff-person syndrome on electromyography when he was hospitalized due to aspiration pneumonia. He has needed continuous rehabilitation due to the progression of neurological symptoms despite the partial efficacy of anti-epilepsy agents. We report a case of interstitial pneumonia with stiff-person syndrome.
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PMID:[Interstitial pneumonia associated with stiff-person syndrome]. 2018 50

Stiff person syndrome (SPS) is a rare neurologic disorder, characterized by muscle rigidity and spasms. Anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase (anti-GAD) antibodies are associated with the classic form of SPS, while antibodies against amphiphysin are associated with the paraneoplastic form of the disease. We present the case of a patient with paraneoplastic SPS, presenting with muscle cramps of lower extremities that progressed to severe muscle rigidity and spasms, associated with a right breast tumor and positive anti-amphiphysin antibodies. Paraneoplastic SPS is a rare neurological disorder, challenging for the physicians both to diagnose and treat.
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PMID:Paraneoplastic Stiff Person Syndrome in Early-Stage Breast Cancer with Positive Anti-Amphiphysin Antibodies. 3317 94