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Query: UMLS:C0027121 (myositis)
4,538 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The problem of sufficient nitrogen and caloric supply for surgical patients with pronounced protein catabolism under the working conditions of a surgical department in a developing country is discussed. The authors report good success with Vivonex in the postoperative nutrition of patients with a small bowel perforation with typhoid fever and of patients with diffuse peritonitis following a perforated appendix. Vivonex proved its usefulness also in the alimentation of patients with tropical myositis and extensive burns.
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PMID:Management of surgical nutritional complications in developing countries. 81 Apr 35

Clinical sarcocystosis was studied in 37 goats after inoculation with graded doses of sporocysts of Sarcocystis capracanis. Eight uninoculated goats served as controls. Clinical response varied with the dose. Goats inoculated with 10-40 million sporocysts died between 11 and 13 days after inoculation (DAI), from interstitial pneumonia, vasculitis, and necrosis of mesenteric lymph nodes. All goats inoculated with 100,000 or 1 million sporocysts died between 19 and 23 DAI; clinical signs were anorexia, fever (40-41 C), anemia, and weight loss. Four of 4 goats inoculated with 50,000 sporocysts and 1 of 4 inoculated with 10,000 sporocysts died 24, 28, 39, 68, and 61 DAI, respectively. Goats inoculated with 1,000 sporocysts and uninoculated goats remained clinically normal. After day 18 and before day 68, packed cell volume and hemoglobin content decreased to as low as 11% and 3.6 g/dl, respectively. Alanine aminotransferase and lactic dehydrogenase activities were inconsistently increased. Blood urea nitrogen and bilirubin values were increased, reaching as high as 63 mg/dl and 10 mg/dl, respectively. Histologically, thymic atrophy, vasculitis, hepatitis, cholangitis, myocarditis, generalized myositis, and encephalomyelitis were the main microscopic findings. The cause of the anemia in goats that died after day 19 was not determined.
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PMID:Sarcocystosis in goats: clinical signs and pathologic and hematologic findings. 678 65

Intracompartmental muscle pressures were recorded from the right and left forelimbs (extensor carpi radialis, triceps brachii) of healthy horses maintained in left lateral recumbency while under deep halothane anesthesia for 180 to 240 minutes. Cardiac output, blood pressure, blood gases, and acid-base status were monitored throughout the anesthesia, and electrolyte levels (Ca2+, P+, K+, Cl-, Na+) and enzyme activities (aspartate aminotransferase (AST), creatine phosphokinase (CPK), and blood lactate) were monitored for 7 days. Postanesthetic forelimb lameness was produced in 5 of the 6 horses with this prolonged anesthetic regime. This lameness was associated with muscle plaque formation and clinical signs which were similar to the forelimb lameness sometimes seen in horses after surgical anesthesia. Plasma protein, serum calcium, plasma sodium, and blood urea nitrogen concentrations did not change, whereas significantly increased hematocrit, plasma potassium, and serum inorganic phosphate values were seen at the end of anesthesia, along with a decrease in plasma chloride values. Blood lactate, serum AST, and serum CPK activities were significantly high in the postanesthetic period, although the sequence of the changes differed. Intracompartmental muscle pressures were higher in the left forelimb adjacent to the floor (contact limb), and in the instance of the triceps of the contact limb, the pressures were sufficiently high (greater than 30 mm of Hg) that they may have compromised capillary blood flow. However, these high intracompartmental muscle pressures did not persist when positional changes of the horses were introduced at the end of the anesthetic period. There was no correlation between the severity of postanesthetic lameness and any of the measured values. The results demonstrate an experimentally induced postanesthetic lameness which was primarily related to the development of a myositis. Although the causative factors of this myositis may be multiple, the present study implicates local hypoxia in that increased blood lactate and inorganic phosphate values preceded that increased CPK activity. Intracompartmental muscle pressure in the contact limb were possibly high enough to have restricted local capillary blood flow.
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PMID:Equine postanesthetic forelimb lameness: intracompartmental muscle pressure changes and biochemical patterns. 721 25

The toxic effects of imidocarb dipropionate (3,3'-bis[2-imidazolin-2-yl] carbanilide dipropionate) were studied in calves injected twice intramuscularly with 0, 5, 10 or 20 mg/kg dosages. Transient, dosage dependent signs of toxicosis consisted of excessive salivation, serous nasal discharge, diarrhoea and dyspnoea. Elevations in blood urea nitrogen concentrations and serum glutamic oxalacetic transaminase activities were related to dosage and markedly increased at the high dosage. Renal hyperaemia, hepatomegaly, pulmonary congestion and oedema, hydrothorax, hydroperitoneum, hydropericardium and mortality occurred at the 20 mg/kg dosage. Microscopic lesions observed at the high dosage included acute severe renal tubular necrosis and focal hepatocellular necrosis. Injection site reactions varied from microscopic areas of necrotising myositis at the 5 mg/kg dosage to focal grossly visible areas of necrosis, encapsulated by granulation tissue and surrounded by fascial oedema at the 20 mg/kg dosage.
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PMID:A study of the toxicity of imidocarb dipropionate in cattle. 741 62

A 47-year-old white woman with a history of stage III squamous cell carcinoma of the anus was transferred to Johns Hopkins Hospital for further evaluation of renal failure, hemolytic anemia, and thrombocytopenia. The patient was first diagnosed with squamous cell carcinoma of the anus 1 year before admission. She was treated with external beam radiation of the pelvis and two cycles of mitomycin C-based chemotherapy (a cumulative dose, 34 mg/m(2)). Her clinical course was complicated by Clostridium difficile colitis and myositis successfully treated with prednisone. Three months before admission, the patient developed dysuria. Her creatinine increased from normal to 1.7 mg/dL, and microscopic hematuria was present. A renal ultrasound and an abdominal computed tomographic scan showed no abnormalities or obstruction. One month before admission, she underwent a cystoscopy, which showed only radiation-induced changes in the bladder. Two weeks before admission, the patient became delirious and was taken to a hospital, where she was found to be anemic, with a hematocrit level of 23.7%, and thrombocytopenic with a platelet count of 110,000/mm(3). Her creatinine level was 5.9 mg/dL. Previous values of hematocrit, platelet count, and serum creatinine were normal. On admission at Johns Hopkins Hospital the patient had no complaints. She was afebrile on physical examination and had normal vital signs. Head, neck, chest, cardiovascular, and abdominal examinations were normal. There was skin pallor, but no echymoses or petechiae. She was alert and oriented with normal mental status. Her neurologic examination was normal. Laboratory data showed a white blood cell count of 6390/mm(3), a hematocrit level of 26.5%, and a platelet count of 26,000/mm(3). Her blood urea nitrogen level was 57 mg/dL, creatinine level was 4.0 mg/dL, and lactate dehydrogenase was 550 U/L (reference, 115 to 275 U/L). Urinalysis showed innumerable red blood cells and large protein. A peripheral blood smear showed fragmented red blood cells, schistocytes, no abnormal white blood cells, and few platelets. There was no radiographic or clinical evidence of relapse of her squamous cell carcinoma. What is the diagnosis?
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PMID:Cases from the Osler Medical Service at Johns Hopkins University. 1474 66

Dermatomyositis (DM) is an idiopathic inflammatory disorder consisting of skin and skeletal muscle involvement. Some drugs induce DM or dermatomyositis-like syndrome (DM-LS), the others provoke polymoysitis (PM) or cause elevation of serum levels of muscle enzymes (SE) or give muscle damage (M). The unexpected adverse reactions to drugs causing myositis are not a solved contemporary problem. The aim of this study was to determine the structural requirements of eliciting drug-induced DM as compared with drug induced PM. The Common Reactivity Pattern (COREPA) approach was used to describe the structural requirements for eliciting side effects of 20 drugs, such as DM and combined activities as DM+DM-LS and PM+M+SE. The specific atoms (atomic groups) defined to have characteristic ranges for their electronic properties (atomic charges) were found to be indicative for the possible active centers responsible for eliciting the adverse effects. Reduced sulphur in the charge range of -0.07 < Qs < -0.450 a.u. and a nitrogen atom (in a cyclical fragment or anticyclical in a sp3-hybridization) in a charge range of -0.390 < QN < -0.140 a.u. were found as active centers for DM and DM+DM-LS side effects. In other group of drugs, the oxygen atoms of carbonyl and hydroxyl groups in the charge range of -0.350 < Qo < -0.320 a.u. were found to induce PM+M+SE side effects. It was found that DM requires moderate electrophilicity as compared with other chemical in the training set, whereas DM+DM-LS effect needs higher electrophilicity in the range of -0.220 < ELUMO < 0.250 eV for lowest unoccupied molecular orbital ELUMO. Similarly, PM+M+SE effect required higher electrophilicity, however, defined differently--in terms of lower values of nucleophilicity parameter EHOMO, i.e., highest occupied molecular orbital.
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PMID:Quantitative structure-activity relationship modeling of dermatomyositis activity of drug chemicals. 1726 Jun 74