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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (
pruritus
)
14,546
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Guinea worm infection is one of the most easily prevented parasitic diseases, but it is nevertheless a common cause of disability in rural areas of Africa, south-west Asia, and India. Infection occurs when drinking water is infested with infected Cyclops, a microcrustacean. Worms up to 70-80 cm in length develop in the subcutaneous tissues of the feet or legs and larvae are liberated to renew the cycle when an infected individual steps into a well or pond from which others draw drinking water. Infection is markedly seasonal because of (a) the influence of the climate on the types of water source used and (b) the developmental cycle of the parasite. The disability may be economically very important if the period of infection coincides with busy periods in the agricultural year. Sieving water through a cloth is sufficient to remove the Cyclops, but on a public health scale improved water supplies are required for control. Once the cycle of reinfection can be broken in any district the disease disappears. Chemical treatment of water bodies with temephos is also an effective and safe way of controlling transmission. Treatment consists of rolling out each emerging worm onto a small stick, a few centimetres each day, and certain drugs reduce the pain and
pruritus
and enable the worm to be removed more quickly.
...
PMID:Guinea worm disease: epidemiology, control, and treatment. 16 22
A clinical trial of the oral form of VP 16-213 (NSC-141540), a semisynthetic podophyllotoxin, was undertaken. In 20 patients, treatment was started at 200 mg/day p.o. for 5 days; courses were repeated after a rest period of 16 days. Five patients were treated at the same dose, repeated with only 9-day rest periods. Subsequently, 65 patients were given 300-400 mg/day for 5 days, with rest periods of 9 days between courses. The side effects encountered included anorexia, nausea and vomiting, stomatitis, diarrhea, leukopenia, thrombocytopenia, alopecia, and
pruritus
. Substernal discomfort with or without palpitations was reported by 18 patients; no explanation for this symptom could be found. No complete remissions (CR) were observed. Parital remissions (PR) and improvement (IMP) were seen as follows: small cell carcinoma, lung (10 patients)--2 PR, 3 IMP; adenocarcinoma, lung (4 patients)--1 PR; alveolar cell carcinoma, lung (1 patient)--1 IMP; mesothelioma (4 patients)--1 IMP; ovarian cancer (12 patients)--3 PR, 3 IMP; breast cancer (20 patients)--4 IMP; colon cancer (8 patients)--2 IMP; bladder cancer (4 patients)--2 IMP; histiocytic lymphoma (7 patients)--2 PR, 3 IMP; chronic myeloid leukemia (1 patient)--1 IMP.
...
PMID:A clinical trial of the oral form of 4'-demethyl-epipodophyllotoxin-beta-D ethylidene glucoside (NSC 141540) VP 16-213. 16 75
The types of functional disturbances caused by a neurotropic virus was investigated by means of neurophysiological techniques. Two types of neurophysiologic lesions were produced in the superior cervical sympathetic ganglia and sural nerve in rats infected with two distinct strains of pseudorabies virus. The
pruritus
-producing strain following intraocular inoculation displayed spontaneous activity in the ganglia both in vivo and in vitro. This activity was susceptible to the actions of ATP, AMP, pyridoxine, pyridoxamine, serotonin and gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA). Following intradermal inoculation, spontaneous activity and
pruritus
were seen along the sural nerve. The non-
pruritus
producing strain caused meningoencephalitis with impaired sympathetic synaptic conduction. The relationship of these pathopharmacologic findings to pathogenesis of syndromes naturally or experimentally occurring in viral infection was assessed.
...
PMID:Pseudorabies virus - induced neural hyperreactivity following occular and skin infections in the rat. 16 21
Forty-one pregnant women with
pruritus
, in whom cholestasis was verified by the presence in their serum of an abnormal lipoprotein, lipoprotein-X (LP-X), were divided into two clinical groups,
pruritus
gravidarum (PG) (n=20) and hepatosis of pregnancy (HP) (n=21) in relation to serum bilirubin (below and above 1.2 mg/100 ml, respectively) and/or SGOT, SGPT (below and above 50 units/l, respectively). In HP, but not in PG, serum lipids, i.e. cholesterol, phospholipids, triglycerides, pre-beta-lipoproteins (very-low-density lipoproteins), and low-density lipoproteins were increased and high-density lipoproteins decreased when compared with suitable controls. Serum lipids were elevated in proportion to the derangement in the liver function tests, alkaline phosphatase, SGOT, and SGPT. The occurrence of LP-X was inversely related to HDL cholesterol, suggesting a causal relationship between HDL lipid metabolism and the presence of LP-X. Serum TIBC, Simplastin A, and serum iron were elevated in HP in relation to the degree of deterioration of liver function tests. Some of these changes in serum in cholestatic pregnancy may partially (serum triglycerides and pre-beta-lipoproteins) or completely (TIBC and Simplastin A) be explained by an enhanced estrogen influence in promoting increased liver lipid/protein metabolism.
...
PMID:Studies in cholestasis of pregnancy. 16 48
Two cases of Aujeszky's disease in a cat and a dog belonging to the same owner are reported. The two animals each were five months of age. The symptoms shown by the cat were typical of Aujeszky's disease: intense
itching
, salivation and the head bent to one side. The main symptoms shown by the dog consisted in salivation, ptosis of one eye, a drooping ear, the head bent to one side and ataxia. As
itching
was not observed in the dog and the animal had spent the first months of its life in wooded surroundings, it could also have been affected with rabies, although it had been inoculated with LEP-Flury vaccine forty days prior to importation. It is of importance to the practitioner to know that
itching
may be absent in dogs with Aujeszky's disease and that rabies should also be suspected in these cases. Only a laboratory diagnosis will be conclusive. Studies were negative for rabies, the virus of Aujeszky's disease being found to be present in the two cases. The source of infection probably consisted in contaminated pork offal (larynges).
...
PMID:[An atypical case of Aujeszky's disease in a dog (author's transl)]. 16 63
The authors report 3 cases and report the diagnostic usefulness of two signs of minor cholestasis described by one of them in 1966. A relative increase, in the absence of obvious virus hepatitis or cirrhosis, of the serum bilirubin, cholesterol, lipids and alkaline phosphatase, together with B.S.P. excretion. suggest minor cholestasis. The sign of "metacritical aggravation" when there is some suspicion of minor cholestasis, the supervision of the course of the disease, or a retrospective inquiry, permit, in the presence of minor symptoms, such as, pain, fever, jaundice, or
pruritus
, one to make the diagnosis of minor cholestasis. The latter is due either to the presence of small gall stones in the common bile duct, or to inflammation of the ampulla of Vater, or sphincter of Oddi, a Vaterian ampulloma, pancreatitis, or following damage to the common bile duct. In practice, liver biopsy confirms the diagnosis, and intravenous cholangiography, by the perfusion method, is usually able to demonstrate obstruction of the common bile duct.
...
PMID:[Relative increase and metacritic aggravation in the diagnosis of anicteric cholestasis]. 16 83
Normal men have been found to develop
pruritus
and gas bubble lesions in the skin, and disruption of vestibular function, when breathing nitrogen or neon with oxygen while surrounded by helium at increased ambient pressure. This phenomenon, which occurs at stable ambient pressures, at 1 or many ATA, has been designated the "isobaric gas counterdiffusion syndrome." In a series of analyses and experiments in vivo and in vitro the cause of the syndrome has been established as due to gas accumulation and development of gas bubbles in tissues as a result of differences in selective diffusivities, for various respired and ambient gases, in the tissue substances between capillary blood and the surrounding atmosphere. The phenomenon here described in man is an initial stage of a process shown later in animals to progress to continuous, massive, lethal, intravascular gas embolization.
...
PMID:A new gas lesion syndrome in man, induced by "isobaric gas counterdiffusion". 17 Feb 42
Fifteen patients with a variety of
itching skin
diseases (atopic eczema, dermatitis herpetiformis, lichen planus, urticaria and psoriasis) have been studied in the sleep laboratory. Recordings were made of all-night electroencephalogram, electro-oculogram, submental electromyogram, and muscle potentials from both forearms. Bouts of scratching during orthodox (NREM) sleep occurred more frequently in stages 1 and 2 than in stages 3 and 4. The frequency in paradoxial (REM) sleep was close to that in stage 2 sleep. This pattern was similar for all the diseases studied and seems to be related to the physiology of the sleep stages rather than to the skin diseases themselves. The mean duration of the bouts of scratching was not related to the sleep stage in which they started.
...
PMID:Further studies of scratching during sleep. 17 5
The authors report 5 cases whose main characteristics appeared very similar. Constantly, they found the same skin signs, urticaria without
pruritus
, recurring over a long period. The latter was accompanied by a very high E.S.R. and immuno-electrophoresis showed, in all cases, an increase in monoclonal IgB, permitting one to make the diagnosis of macroglobulinemia. In four cases out of five, this clinical picture was accompanied by bony pain associated with radiological signs of condensation. The symptoms were accompanied by prolonged fever and lymphadenopathy. After being well tolerated for a long period, the disease may become worse and lead to death. Thus this seems to be a true disease entity?
...
PMID:[Chronic urticarial lesions and macroglobulinemia. Apropos of 5 cases]. 18 33
Monkeys were infected intranasally with Herpesvirus suis. After an incubation period of 7 to 13 days the animals became acutely ill and rapidly died. Clinical signs included salivation, incoordination, ataxia and epileptiform convulsions, but not
pruritus
. Histopathological changes were confined to the central nervous system, and consisted of destruction of neurones with the formation of intranuclear inclusion bodies, gliosis and perivascular cuffing. Virus was isolated from the brain and spinal cord in the later stages of the illness but neutralising antibodies were not detected in serum. The distribution of lesions indicated direct spread of virus from the inoculation site along cranial nerves to the brain.
...
PMID:Experimental infection of monkeys with Herpesvirus suis (Aujeszky's-disease virus). 19 Apr 2
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