Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (ophthalmoplegia)
3,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Wernicke's encephalopathy should be considered as a possible diagnosis in comatose and hypothermic patients. The classic triad of confusion, ophthalmoplegia (or nystagmus) and ataxia may be absent, and the history of alcohol abuse or other causes of thiamine deficiency may be unknown. Left untreated, acute Wernicke's encephalopathy has a 17 percent mortality rate. Since the morbidity from Wernicke's encephalopathy is potentially reversible with parenteral thiamine, and large doses of thiamine can be given without documented ill effects, it is recommended that all comatose or hypothermic patients, as well as those with more classic presentations of Wernicke's encephalopathy, be given parenteral thiamine before administration of glucose.
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PMID:Wernicke's encephalopathy. 218 37

Thiamine deficiency in the monkey is the animal counterpart of Wernicke's disease in humans. In the present study, thiamine deficiency was induced in 11 monkeys while three monkeys were given paired feedings supplemented by thiamine hydrochloride and three monkeys were maintained on regular chow. The typical clinical symptoms were apathy, inattention to peripheral stimuli, ataxia, ptosis, mydriasis progressing to pupillary areflexia, nystagmus, and ophthalmoparesis progressing to total ophthalmoplegia. With thiamine treatment, recovery was prompt and complete in mild to moderate cases but delayed and incomplete in severe cases. The animals were killed six or more months after discontinuance of the experiments to determine the chronic effects of treated thiamine deficiency. The significant abnormalities in the brain stem were symmetric gliosis and neuronal loss in the inferior colliculi, the regions of the third and sixth nerve nuclei, and the medial vestibular nuclei. White matter was characteristically spared. With the exception of the inferior colliculi, the target sites for neuropathologic changes were the centers for ocular motor control.
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PMID:Ocular signs in thiamine-deficient monkeys and in Wernicke's disease in humans. 402 52

Thiamine deficiency is known to lead to certain neurological sequelae including Wernicke- Korsakoff encephalopathy. Signs attributable to this condition include ataxia, ophthalmoplegia, nystagmus, and mental confusion. Recognised predisposing conditions include alcoholism gastric carcinoma, pyloric obstruction, hyperemesis gravidarum, and prolonged intravenous feeding. We have recently encountered two cases of Wernicke's encephalopathy after vertical banded gastroplasty for morbid obesity . Other neurological sequelae are recognised after vertical banded gastroplasty, including Guillain-Barre syndrome, psychosis, and pseudoathetosis, but the causes are multifactorial.
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PMID:Wernicke's encephalopathy after vertical banded gastroplasty for morbid obesity. 863 78

Wernicke's encephalopathy (WE) is a neuropsychiatric disorder caused by thiamine (vitamin B1)-deficiency. WE is most commonly seen among patients with alcohol abuse, and thiamine deficiency is here caused by several factors, among others inadequate diet, insufficient gastrointestinal absorption and enzymatic abnormalities. The syndrome, however, is also seen among non-alcoholic, undernourished patients, e.g. certain patients with cancer or AIDS. The diagnosis WE has traditionally been given when the triad of confusion, ataxia and ophthalmoplegia was present. However, it should be recognised, that these three symptoms are not always present at the same time, partly because the mental symptoms often dominate and cloud, possible ocular abnormalities and ataxia. The syndrome is, according to the author's opinion, still underdiagnosed. The treatment of WE, consisting of large doses of intravenous thiamine, is effective and safe, and therefore it is important to be aware of WE among risk-patients, especially among patients with alcohol abuse, and to institute treatment with intravenous thiamine at the slightest suspicion.
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PMID:[Wernicke's encephalopathy]. 863 25

Wernicke's encephalopathy (WE) is a neuropsychiatric condition generally caused by acute thiamine deficiency and classically involves the triad of altered mentation, ataxia and ophthalmoplegia. It is most common among alcoholics, but several other causes have been identified, including total parenteral nutrition (TPN) use. We present eight cases of WE in patients undergoing allogeneic BMT, where thiamine deficiency was caused by a lack of vitamin supplementation during TPN administration. Clinically, WE presented as a severe refractory metabolic acidosis, preceded by 'raspberry tongue', and ophthalmologic and neurologic dysfunction. The sites most affected were the periventricular structures and the thalamus, and no mammilary bodies lesions were found.
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PMID:Iatrogenic Wernicke's encephalopathy in allogeneic bone marrow transplantation: a study of eight cases. 933 55

Wernicke's encephalopathy is an uncommon disorder caused by a thiamine deficiency which is clinically characterized by the triad of ophthalmoplegia, ataxia and disturbances of consciousness, each finding being variably present. The disease is caused by malnutrition or malabsorption, and is often associated with prolonged alcohol intake, neoplasm and extensive inflammatory processes of the digestive tract and parenteral hyperalimentation-induced gastrointestinal mucosal atrophy. Clinical diagnosis can be elusive and MRI may be the only imaging technique able to detect the cerebral lesions, whose type and distribution are characteristic of the Wernicke's encephalopathy, whereas CT is positive only in exceptional cases. We report a case of a 56-year-old woman who developed a Wernicke's encephalopathy 1 month after a colonic resection with signal intensity changes located in the mammillary bodies and in the medial thalamic nuclei.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging in a case of Wernicke's encephalopathy. 968 4

Beri-Beri is caused by vitamin B1 (thiamine) deficiency. Thiamine is essential for carbohydrate metabolism and the generation of energy. Depending on age and calorie intake, 1-1.5mg/day are required with a 50% increase during pregnancy and lactation. Fever and increased muscular activity will also increase thiamine requirements (storage in muscles is limited, and reserves are quickly depleted). The sources of thiamine are meat, the outer layer of cereal grains and pulses, nuts, and leafy vegetables. The vitamin is lost during milling and processing and during excessive cooking. Beri-beri takes 2 forms: wet beri-beri which has a high output biventricular failure with edema associated with profound peripheral vasodilation and tachycardia (this also occurs in an acute fulminating form known as shoshin beri-beri) and dry beri-beri with symptoms of peripheral neuropathy with taxia, weakness, paraesthesia, and patchy sensory loss with areflexia. In this form, foot and/or wrist drop may occur. Thiamine deficiency can also produce Wernicke-Korsakoff psychosis characterized by vomiting, horizontal nystagmus, ophthalmoplegia, memory loss, and confabulation. Wet beri-beri is a medical emergency treated by intravenous administration of thiamine for several days. 38 patients (27 men and 11 women) were identified with beri-beri in urban Banjul in the Gambia. 14 had wet beri-beri, 11 a mixed presentation, and 13 dry beri-beri. Most of the patients were disabled for many months. Risk factors were pregnancy, alcohol consumption, fever, exercise, diabetes, and dysentery. 4 of the patients died (2 were in the last trimester of pregnancy). The staple diet in urban areas of the Gambia is imported, polished white rice in a groundnut- or oil-based sauce with fish and vegetables such as peppers, onions, and tomatoes. Meat is too expensive for the urban poor, and fruit and vegetable consumption is highly seasonal and income-dependent. There is little chance that this diet will be changed for the 46% of the population who live in urban areas. It is likely that a substantial proportion of the population has subclinical thiamine deficiency and are at risk of beri-beri. Since thiamine added to imported rice will be destroyed by traditional means of cooking, adding the vitamin to wheat flour may be an appropriate public health measure.
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PMID:Beri-beri: "Endemic amongst urban Gambians". 1231 72

Hemodialysis(HD) patients are at risk for thiamine deficiency because of low intake and accelerated loss of thiamine during HD. We report here an HD patient, an 82-year-old woman, who developed acute encephalopathy due to thiamine deficiency with hyperammonemia. She was admitted to Nishikawa Town Hospital due to pneumonia and was treated with ABPC/SBT for one week. While she was cured of pneumonia, she had a persistently poor appetite. On the twenty-fourth day after admission, HD with intradialytic parenteral nutrition(IDPN), which consisted of 10% glucose 500 ml, in order to correct her malnutrition, was started. She suddenly presented confusion, speech disturbance and ophthalmoplegia. HD with IDPN was stopped after two hours because of her symptoms. Laboratory studies disclosed plasma glucose of 186 mg/dl and serum ammonium of 155 micrograms/dl. Arterial blood gas analysis(inhaling 3 l/min O2) showed severe metabolic acidosis and respiratory acidosis (pH 7.138, pCO2 44.8 mmHg, pO2 108.9 mmHg, HCO3- 15.1 mmol/l). Her malnutrition, unexplained metabolic acidosis and neurological presentation raised the suspicion of acute encephalopathy due to thiamine deficiency. Fursultiamine 100 mg was administered intravenously. After two hours, metabolic acidosis disappeared (pH 7.437, pCO2 33.9 mmHg, pO2 161.0 mmHg, HCO3- 22.9 mmol/l), and she regained her clear consciousness and serum ammonium decreased at 16 micrograms/dl on the next morning. Serum lactate and thiamine level were shown later to be 57.5 mg/dl and 27 nmol/l, respectively. Her clinical course suggests that the glucose load including IDPN may have caused deterioration of the neurological disorder under the condition of thiamine deficiency. Furthermore, it is possible that a relationship exists between thiamine deficiency and hyperammonemia.
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PMID:[Acute encephalopathy due to thiamine deficiency with hyperammonemia in a chronic hemodialysis patient: a case report]. 1280 78

Wernicke's encephalopathy is a serious neurologic disorder caused by vitamin-B1 or thiamine deficiency. The classical triad of clinical symptoms described by Wernicke (gait ataxia, ophthalmoplegia, and confusion) are found in only a third of patients upon initial examination. Typical findings upon MR imaging in patients with Wernicke's encephalopathy are well documented, with signal intensities in the medial thalami and periaqueductal regions of the midbrain. We report a case of Wernicke's encephalopathy revealing an unusual contrast enhancement. It is therefore important to note that the acute stage of Wernicke's encephalopathy may be associated with an intense contrast enhancement upon MR-imaging reflecting the disruption of the blood-brain barrier and inflammatory processes caused by thiamine deficiency. As a consequence from the guideline for managing Wernicke's encephalopathy by the Royal College of Physicians early B-vitamin treatment in suspected is recommended cases.
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PMID:Wernicke's encephalopathy: unusual contrast enhancement revealed by magnetic resonance imaging. 1464 3

Wernicke encephalopathy consists of a triad of ophthalmoplegia, ataxia, and altered mental status. It is caused by thiamine deficiency and although it is commonly seen in alcoholics, patients undergoing gastric bypass surgery for morbid obesity could be a new group of patients to watch for. Florid papilloedema and optic neuropathy are not commonly seen but are still consistent with the diagnosis of Wernicke encephalopathy. The most striking feature remains the dramatic recovery after replacement of thiamine.
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PMID:You are what you eat. 1596 92


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