Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (paresis)
5,831 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Treatment of isolated, scintigraphically cold thyroid nodules in the thyroid gland by means of hemithyroidectomy ensures that, in patients with thyroid carcinoma, it is possible subsequently to carry out total thyroidectomy by means of an intervention limited to the contralateral surgically intact side. The object of the present investigation to assess whether this therapeutic strategy was rational and safe. Hemithyroidectomy was carried out in 67 patients on account of a "cold nodule" while the remaining 33 patients were submitted to operation on other indications. Out of the 67 patients, one (2%) had a papillary carcinoma, 53 (79%) had follicular adenomata, 12 (18%) had nodular goitre and one (2%) had Hashimoto's thyroiditis. In the entire material, one case (1%) of permanent hypocalcaemia was encountered. None of the patients developed paresis of the recurrent laryngeal nerve. Reoperation proved necessary in one patient (1%) on account of postoperative heamorrhage. It is concluded that hemithyroidectomy is a rational primary method of treatment in cases with suspected malignant disease in the thyroid gland. Non-neoplastic conditions may be excluded with reasonable certainty by preoperative clinical assessment and thyroid scintigraphy and ultrasound scanning. The intervention is safe and every thyroid surgeon should be capable of performing the operation.
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PMID:[Hemithyroidectomy. A consecutive series of 100 patients]. 202 13

Various degrees of persistent or paroxysmal paresis involving only the hindlimbs or all four limbs were observed in 3 dogs with hypothyroidism and lymphocytic thyroiditis. Clinical features included lethargy, obesity, alopecia, insidious and progressive paresis, hypotonia, and slow segmental reflexes in 2 dogs. Obesity, alopecia, paroxysmal paresis, and behavior change were observed in the third dog. Laboratory tests indicated that thyroid function was less than normal in all 3 dogs. Abnormal electromyographic potentials and slow motor nerve conduction velocities were found in each dog. Muscle biopsy specimen abnormalities included selective type-II myofiber atrophy in all dogs, whereas one dog had angular atrophy of type-I and type-II myofibers indicative of denervation. A substance that stained with para-aminosalicylic acid was observed within vacuoles of type-I myofibers in one dog. Lymphocytic thyroiditis characterized by lymphocytic infiltration of excised thyroid glands was observed in all dogs.
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PMID:Neuromuscular abnormalities associated with hypothyroidism and lymphocytic thyroiditis in three dogs. 355 92

Seventy-six patients with clinical diagnosis Graves' disease, reoperated in the Clinic of Endocrine Surgery over the period 1985 through 1996, are analyzed. Distribution by gender and age: 3 men with mean age 55.33 y (range 49-60), and 73 women at mean age 39.67 years (range 19-69). The scope of secondary operation includes: thyroidectomy--3 cases, subtotal thyroid resection--55, lobectomy with contralateral subtotal resection--2, and unilateral predominantly subtotal resection--16 cases. It is the purpose of the study to assay the underlying causes of surgical relapse in Graves' disease, its relationship to the radicalism of the intervention, thyrostatic therapy duration, and early and late postoperative complications associated with its removal. In 16 cases (21.05%) secondary operative intervention is done against the background of enhanced production of thyroid hormones. A short 3 to 6-month thyrostatic course precedes the reoperation in eleven patients (14.47%). Unilateral thyroid resection is resorted to in 16 patients (21.05%). Postoperative hypothyroidism is observed in 6 cases (7.89%). A relapse of Graves' disease after reoperation is noted in 3 instances (3.94%). Six patients of the series reviewed (7.89%) develop postoperative hypoparathyroidism: transitory in four (5.26%) and permanent in two (2.63%). In the early postoperative period, paresis of n recurrents (n laryngeus inferior) develops in 2 patients (2.63%): left- and rightside, one each respectively. In terms of morphological patterns, the ensuing relapses after surgery in Graves' disease patients portray the initial pathological process: some cases show a tendency of nodular adenomatous hyperplasia development, sporadic cases form follicular adenomas, and in 14 cases (18.42%) lymphoid infiltrates predominate with a tendency to be converted into Hashimoto's thyroiditis. The presence of enhanced proliferative response induced by a variety of factors, therapeutic ones inclusive, is the basic morphological factor of the recurrent conditions described.
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PMID:[Surgical treatments in recurrent Graves' disease]. 1124 84

Five-year follow-up of a young male patient is presented. Total external ophthalmoplegia developed 1 week after an upper respiratory tract infection. After 3 years of the course, hyperthyreosis and clinical signs of thyroid-associated ophthalmopathy occurred. Hashimoto's thyroiditis and ultrastructural signs of mitochondrial damage of striated muscle were found by histological investigations. The paresis of the external ocular muscles recovered after long-term corticosteroid treatment. On the basis of clinical symptoms and histological results, the authors supposed that an immunological reaction had caused mitochondrial damage in the striated muscles, which also resulted in thyroiditis. This case history points that autoimmune mechanism more frequently might participate in the pathogenesis of chronic external ophthalmoplegia, and the symptoms might precede organ-specific or perhaps systemic autoimmune disorders.
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PMID:External ophthalmoplegia associated with Hashimoto's thyroiditis and recovered on corticosteroid treatment. 2253 71

Hashimoto encephalopathy (HE) is characterized by heterogeneous neurological symptoms. HE is diagnosed based on three criteria-the presence of antithyroid antibodies, neurological symptoms from the cerebrum and/or cerebellum, and a positive response to immunotherapy. We clinically analyzed 18 patients (3 men, 15 women; age range, 38-81years) diagnosed with HE in our hospital from May 2013 to January 2016. Eleven patients showed sensory abnormalities such as strong pain, deep muscle pain, dysesthesia, paresthesia, or neuralgia. Surprisingly, the majority of the pain was distributed in a manner that was not explainable anatomically. Seventeen patients showed motor disturbances, such as weakness, paresis of extremities, or dexterity movement disorder, and eight patients showed give-way weakness, which is disruption of continuous muscle contraction. Other symptoms indicative of brain-related anomalies such as tremor, dystonia, involuntary movements, cerebellar ataxia, parkinsonism, memory loss, and chronic fatigue were also seen. In most patients, such motor, sensory, or higher brain functions were markedly improved with immunosuppressive therapies such as prednisolone, azathioprine, or immunoadsorption therapy. Although give-way weakness and anatomically unexplainable pain are typically considered as being psychogenic in origin, the presence of these symptoms is indicative of HE. HE exhibits diffuse involvement of the entire brain and thus, these symptoms are explainable. We propose that physicians should not diagnose somatoform disorders without first excluding autoimmune encephalopathy.
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PMID:[Clinical Features and Treatment of Hashimoto Encephalopathy]. 2766 88