Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
54,520 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Primary varicella-zoster virus (VZV) infections in adults generally follow a more severe course than in children and are more often associated with life-threatening complications. In the years 1992 to 1995 we observed 7 immunocompetent adults with a severe course of primary VZV infection. All 7 patients presented initially with a characteristic rash. In 6 patients the diagnosis of VZV was confirmed by ELISA on material taken from the lesions, and in all of them it was confirmed by serology. The following complications were observed: pneumonia (5x), elevated liver enzymes (4x), myocarditis (1x), encephalitis (1x) and myelitis (1x). Pulmonary lesions were characterized by bilateral interstitial infiltrates on chest-x-ray and required mechanical ventilation in 2 patients. The liver enzymes were only slightly elevated and clinically not significant. Myocarditis in one case was postulated in view of elevated creatine kinase levels, ECG-repolarization changes and AV-block III which required the insertion of a transitory pacemaker. Encephalitis presented as abnormal behaviour at work followed by seizures. Myelitis was suspected due to ascending sensory motor tetraparesis and confirmed by MRI. All patients were treated with high doses of parenteral acyclovir (3 x 10 mg/kg body weight i.v. per day) for 5-12 days. 6 patients recovered completely and only the patient with myelitis has residual neurological deficits 3 months after discharge. Although we cannot exclude the possibility that supportive therapy without acyclovir would have had the same outcome, we recommend high-dose parenteral acyclovir for treatment of visceral and neurological complications in primary VZV infections in adults.
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PMID:[Visceral and neurological complications in Varicella infections of adults]. 864 43

Vertigo is an unpleasant sensation of movement of the subject or of his surroundings. There are many causes of vertigo. Traditionally these are divided into 'central' and 'peripheral'. It is unusual to find it as a symptom of myelopathy. We describe the case of a 67 year-old woman with no significant previous clinical history who complained of the sudden onset of vertigo a few hours previously, which worsened on turning her neck towards the left. On examination, the vertigo recurred on turning her neck to the left after a latent period of a few seconds together with the appearance of ipsilateral conjugated nystagmus, which gradually disappeared. On neurological examination, there was amyotrophy of both arms with weakness, considerably reduced reflexes, except for clonus of the left wrist. There was slight paraparesia with bilateral cutaneoplantar flexion and a level of sensitivity at C2-C3. The sensitivity disorder was more marked in the arms with a bilateral distribution approximately at C5-C7 affecting predominantly thermoanalgesia. Cervical MRI showed a mass consistent with ependymoma. This was removed surgically 2 weeks after admission. The findings of the intraoperative biopsy confirmed the radiological diagnosis. The vertigo improved one week after admission, although the patient died of pneumonia one month after operation. Despite the vertigo was an atypical symptom, it was the clue that led to the diagnosis. Hypotheses about the cause of vertigo are discussed.
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PMID:[Vertigo as an atypical symptom of intraspinal cord tumor]. 868 Nov 75

A case of intramedullary melanocytoma of the medulla oblongata; which has not been hitherto reported, is presented. The tumor ran on a slow progressive course. The patient died of pneumonia seven months after the operation. MRI findings did not specify this tumor as they were not distinct from those of malignant melanoma. The tumor was totally black and was not attached to the dura. Microscopically, the neoplastic cells were uniform in size and possessed abundant melanin granules in their cytoplasm. Mitosis was very rare. The ultrastructure of the tumor cells showed many melanosomes at varying stages of maturation. The melanocytoma in the eloquent region has an unfavorable outcome.
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PMID:[Primary intramedullary melanocytoma of medulla oblongata: a case report]. 885 54

We report a 70-year-old man with progressive gait disturbance and gaze palsy. The patient was well until summer of 1991 when he was 66-year-old, when he noted a gradual onset of difficulty in gait and looking downward. He was evaluated in our hospital in May, 1994 when he was 69-year-old. On admission, he was alert but markedly demented with disorientation and memory loss. Constructional apraxia and dressing apraxia were noted. He had difficulty in gaze to all directions; he could move his eyes only 20% of the normal range. Oculocephalic response was retained. He had small voice and some dysphagia. Other cranial nerves were unremarkable. He could not walk unsupported. Marked retropulsion was noted in which he would fell down spontaneously upon standing unless supported. Moderate to marked rigidity was noted in the neck, trunk, and in the legs, however, in the upper extremities, rigidity was only mild. No tremor was noted. Deep reflexes were symmetrically exaggerated with ankle clonus bilaterally. Plantar response was flexor. Sensation was intact. Routine laboratory tests were unremarkable, however, his cranial MRI showed moderate to marked fronto-temporal atrophy and moderate midbrain and pontine tegmental atrophy. The third ventricle was markedly dilated. He was discharged for out patient care, however, his dysphagia had become progressively worse, and he suffered from frequent bouts of pneumonia. He was admitted to our service on October 17, 1994. His neurologic examination was essentially similar except that he showed more advanced dementia. He was still able to stand with support. Gastrostomy was placed on October 25. Post-operative course was unremarkable. He was discharged on November 1. His motor disturbance showed gradual deterioration, and by the May of 1995, he became bed-ridden, and was admitted to another hospital on May 30, 1995. He was almost totally unable to move his eyes, but oculocephalic response was still elicited. Marked truncal and limb rigidity were noted. He vomited coffee-ground substance on October 31, 1995, and developed hypotension. The subsequent course was complicated by pneumonia and he expired on November 24. The patient was discussed in a neurological CPC. Majority of the participants thought that the patient had progressive supranuclear palsy, but some participants thought that the patient had corticobasal degeneration because cortical atrophy was so marked. Post mortem examination revealed atrophy of the frontal and parietal lobe. The brain stem was atrophic particularly in the tegmental area including the midbrain. The substantia nigra showed marked neuronal loss and globose type neurofibrillary tangles in the remaining neurons. The neurons in the locus coeruleus was well retained, however neurofibrillary tangles were seen. In addition, the cerebellar dentate nucleus, the inferior olivary nucleus, and the internal globus pallidus showed marked neuronal loss and neurofibrillary degeneration. In the frontal cortex, although macroscopic examination showed some atrophy, microscopic examination failed to show neuronal loss or gliosis. The pathologic findings were consistent with the diagnosis of progressive supranuclear palsy.
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PMID:[A 70-year-old man with a progressive gait disturbance and gaze palsy]. 902 10

We reported a case of a 76-year-old male who suffered from gait disturbance. His first MR image showed multiple masses in the cerebellum and cerebrum. After 50Gy of whole brain irradiation the masses downsized, but, after 8 months the patient was readmitted because of general convulsions. MRI on his second admission showed an enlargement of the multiple masses and reinforcement of the perifocal edema. One year after the onset, MRI revealed the unusual appearance of multiple obscure-marginated cystic masses, intratumoral hemorrhage, and intraventricular hemorrhage. Soon he died of complications from pneumonia. In the autopsy, a mass 4 x 5 cm in size was found in the right lung and multiple metastatic foci were found in the CNS, small intestine, and lymph nodes. The case was diagnosed as bronchial atypical carcinoid with multiple metastases.
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PMID:[Multiple brain metastasis of bronchial atypical carcinoid: unusual MR imaging, case report]. 930 Apr 50

We report a 45-year-old man with monocytosis and right hemiparesis. The patient suffered from an acute myocardial infarction from which he recovered completely when he was 42 years old. One year prior to his death, he was found to have increase in monocyte count (35.5% of leukocytes) in peripheral blood and splenomegaly; he was admitted to the hematology service of our hospital. He was diagnosed as having chronic myelomonocytic leukemia after bone marrow examination. He was treated with radiation therapy with improvement in splenomegaly. In May of 1995, he had fever, anemia, and thrombocytopenia for which he needed daily blood transfusion. In November of 1995, he had an onset of weakness in his right hand, and neurologic consultation was asked for in November 27, 1995. Neurologic examination revealed a chronically ill japanese man in no acute distress. He was alert and not demented. Higher cerebral functions were intact. Cranial nerve examination revealed right facial paresis of the central type. Motor-wise, he was right hemiparetic. Generalized muscle wasting was noted apparently due to the chronic debilitating disease. Deep tendon reflexes were within normal range in the right upper extremity, but were diminished in other areas. Sensation was intact, and no meningeal signs were noted. Pertinent laboratory findings were as follows: Hb 8 g/dl, RBC 238 x 10(4)/microliter, WBC 2,900/microliter (band 1.0%, seg 18.5%, lym 28.0%, mono 44.0%, Baso 2.5%), Plt 13 x 10(4)/microliter, PT 16.6"/10.9", APTT 44.7"/35.0". CSF contained 87 mg/dl of protein, 155 mg/dl of glucose and 2 mononuclear cells/microliter. Bone marrow was slightly hypercellular with mild increase in blast forms. No chromosome abnormality was found. CT and MRI revealed a large mass in the left fronto-parietal region and the meninges showed marked thickening with enhancement after gadolinium-DTPA in MRI. The patient was treated with glycerol and steroid, but the subsequent course was complicated by a seizure, agitation, and pneumonia. He died from respiratory failure on January 13, 1996. The patient was discussed in a neurologic CPC and the chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had chronic myelomonocytic leukemia with infiltration of leukemic cells into meninges and the parenchyme of the cerebrum. Thickening of the dura was thought to be in part a reaction to the subdural hematoma as well as to leukemic cells along the meninges. Postmortem examination revealed hypercellular bone marrow with increase in monocytic cells (more than 20%). The lungs showed pneumonia with scattered old tuberculous lesions. The heart showed an old myocardial infarction in the posterior wall of the left ventricle. The brain showed an old chronic subdural hematoma in the left fronto-temporal region and a cystic mass lesion in the left frontoparietal region. The mass was hypercellular and most of them were monocytes. The dura mater showed reactive thickening without leukemic cell infiltration. It was concluded that this patient had chronic myelomonocytic leukemia with a formation of leukemic mass in the brain. Pathologists thought that the mass was a hematogenous spread. It is rare for chronic myelomonocytic leukemia to form a mass lesion in the brain.
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PMID:[A 45-year-old man with peripheral monocytosis and right hemiparesis]. 962 75

Primary germinoma of the central nervous system carries a good prognosis because of their radiosensitivity. Recurrence is rare and extraneural metastases are even more unusual. We report a unique case of a primary intracranial germinoma exhibiting complete response to radiotherapy, but recurring as an intra-abdominal yolk sac tumor. The presence of a VP shunt is thought to have facilitated metastatic spread of the intracranial neoplasm. An 21-year-old (corrected) male was admitted with headache and consciousness disturbance. Computed tomography (CT) revealed an enhanced tumor of the pineal region and hydrocephalus. A ventriculo-peritoneal shunt was emplaced immediately. No serum tumor markers such as alpha-fetoprotein or human chorionic gonadotropin were detectable. A test dose of radiotherapy (whole brain 20Gy) was given. The tumor size was remarkably decreased. Clinical diagnosis was germinoma. Additional whole brain radiation (total 45Gy) and whole spine radiation (20Gy) were given. The tumor and the hydrocephalus regressed completely and the patient returned to school. Three years later, he experienced a feeling of abdominal fullness. CT and echotomography of the abdomen showed a large peritoneal and intra-hepatic tumor. But MRI revealed no recurrent tumor of the pineal lesion or of the other areas in the central nervous system. Radiological and clinical findings showed no tumors in the testis, the retroperitoneal cavity, or the thymus. Laboratory investigation demonstrated elevated serum AFP (26,550 ng/ml). AFP level regressed after combined chemotherapy. However, the patient died due to pneumonia and multiple organ failure. Only needle necropsy was performed. The microscopic appearance of the peritoneal tumor was confirmed to be an endodermal sinus tumor. It was suspected to be a metastasis of the pineal tumor through the V-P shunt system.
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PMID:[Extraneural metastasis of pineal germinoma through a ventriculoperitoneal shunt, following histological change]. 1019 Jan 63

To clarify the relationship between long-term prognosis of patients with stroke and their MRI findings, 103 patients with initial cerebral thrombosis, who survived more than three months after the ictus, were studied for five years. The mean age of 98 patients (T group), who were followed up completely, was 73.1 years-old and 65 were men. The age-matched controls consisted of two groups: 65 subjects, who had hypertension and/or diabetes without a history of stroke (R group), and 85 subjects, who had any hypertension, diabetes and stroke (N group). MRI findings were divided into six categories: 1) types of causative lesion, 2) grades of periventricular hyperintensity (none, rims/caps, patchy, diffuse PVH), 3) number of spotty lesions, 4) presence of silent infarction. 5) ventricular dilatation, and 6) extents of brain atrophy. Types of causative lesion were subdivided into 3 subtypes; infarction of the perforating artery territory (P type), infarction of the cortical artery territory (C type), and brainstem infarction (B type). The presence of vascular risks and dementia, and the extent of activity of daily living (ADL) were assessed. The P, C, and B types were identified by MRI in 46, 36, and 16 of the T group, respectively. Motor impairment, dementia, and an ADL status of complete dependence at discharge were also seen in 84, 44, and 22, respectively. In the T group, 33 patients died during five years, which resulted in a cumulative mortality rate of 33.7% and an annual mortality rate of 8.2%. Based on log-rank analysis, the survival rate of the T group revealed was significantly lower than those of the R and N groups. The recurrent rate in the T group (annual stroke recurrence rate was 4.0%) was higher than in the R and N groups, but stroke recurrence was not the cause of death and two thirds of deaths were due to aspiration pneumonia and/or asphyxia. Cox hazard regression analysis for death due to respiratory diseases showed that the hazard ratios of infarction, patchy PVH, and more than 4 spotty lesions were 8.87 (p < .001), 0.31 (p = .058), and 0.44 (p = .098), respectively. Compared to the survival group, rates of complete dependence in ADL, dementia, and brain atrophy were significantly higher in the death group with low incidences of the P type and patchy PVH, which indicated small vessel disease. These findings suggested that in patients with cerebral thrombosis, even in the chronic phase, care should be taken to prevent pneumonia and/or asphyxia due to bulbar palsy. Furthermore, no MRI findings were distinct predictors of long-term prognosis, although infarction based on the small vessel disease had rather good outcome in terms of respiratory disease.
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PMID:[Long-term prognosis of patients with initial cerebral thrombosis and the MRI findings]. 1036 31

We described herein a case of the fulminant form of acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) that developed after mycoplasma pneumonia. A 28-year-old man who presented with fever, headache, and writing difficulty was admitted to our hospital in August 1997. He developed hernia on the 3rd hospital day. Surgical decompression and intravenous prednisolone failed to halt his progressive deterioration. We introduced systemic hypothermia and he has shown marked recovery; despite having Broca's type aphasia, he could comprehend spoken language and communicate with others by gesture. Head MRI demonstrated diffuse high signals over the white matter on fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) images, which suggested extensive demyelination. The clinical course, imaging studies and presence of polymorphonuclear dominant leucocytosis in the blood and CSF in the patient are somewhat similar to findings in acute hemorrhagic leukoencephalitis, however, the result of a brain biopsy was inconclusive. The fulminant form of ADEM is usually fatal. Treatments such as corticosteroids, intravenous immunoglobulin, and surgical decompression have been performed to improve the prognosis. Our case results indicate that hypothermia, which suppresses both brain edema and immune response, may be included in the repertoire of treatment for the fulminant form of ADEM.
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PMID:Fulminant form of acute disseminated encephalomyelitis: successful treatment with hypothermia. 1042 55

A 42-year-old house wife presented with worsening headaches over 6 months in the absence of visual symptoms or symptoms suggestive of focal neurology. She was a life-long smoker. Systems review was unremarkable apart from secondary amenorrhoea and galactorrhoea of 6 months duration. Her serum prolactin was found to be 620 mU/l (60-400), FT4 12.6 nmol/l (9.8-23.1), TSH 1.38 mU/l (0.35-5.5), oestradiol < 73 pmol/l, LH and FSH of 4.4 and 12.6 mIU/l, respectively. She was on bromocriptine. A presumptive diagnosis of pneumonia, based on pyrexia and CXR findings, was made and she was started on IV antibiotics. Two days later she developed meningism and deterioration of conscious level. (Lumbar puncture results: no organisms, 312 neutrophils and 164 lymphocytes). CT scan revealed a 2.5-cm pituitary adenoma, with suprasellar extension. A repeat hormonal profile revealed FSH 1.4, LH < 0.3 mU/l, oestradiol < 73 pmol/l, prolactin 488 mU/l (60-400), and low random cortisol at 29 nmol/l. T1-weighted MRI revealed a large pituitary mass with evidence of haemorrhage. The patient subsequently underwent a transsphenoidal exploration with resection of the pituitary lesion. Whilst awaiting the histopathology results, CT of chest revealed a 1. 5-cm diameter rounded well defined density in the right lower lobe associated with hilar, pre- and right para-tracheal lymphadenopathy. The histopathology of the pituitary lesion, obtained piecemeal, revealed fragments of fibrous tissue infiltrated by sheets of acidophilic prolactin-positive cells, in keeping with a prolactinoma. In addition, other fragments with blood clot included highly atypical epithelial cells with mitotic figures. These were negative for prolactin but showed HMFG-and CEA-positivity, excluding them from a pituitary lineage. Transbronchial biopsy revealed moderately differentiated adenocarcinoma, with evidence of lymphatic spread. The overall conclusion was of bronchogenic adenocarcinoma, metastasizing to a prolactinoma and complicated by apoplexy.
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PMID:Pituitary apoplexy following metastasis of bronchogenic adenocarcinoma to a prolactinoma. 1046 19


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