Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033774 (pruritus)
14,546 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fourteen cases of complications from implantation of acrylic fibers into scalps for correction of male-pattern baldness were studied. The complications were severe enough in all of them to force attempts to remove the fibers, many of which from the nature of their knotted insertion could not be extracted. Thus, immediate complications were encountered and serious, delayed, bad effects are anticipated. Among the early complications already observed are marked edema of the face; hemorrhagic oozing; microbial infection; foreign-body reactions; scarring; acneform comedones and pustules; pain, pruritus, and numbness; and loss of natural hair. Complications in the furture are likely to be progressive sclerosis from irretrievable fragments and knots of the artificial materials and conceivably malignant degeneration of tissues of the scalp. For all of these known and possible bad effects, implantation of present-day synthetic fibers into the scalp must be judged to be a dangerous practice that must be stopped at once.
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PMID:Complications of implantation of synthetic fibers into scalps for "hair" replacement: experience with fourteen cases. 42 73

Koro, a psychogenic anxiety syndrome interfering with genital body image and sexual functioning, has hitherto been described as occurring mainly in isolated cases of South Chinese males. The present communication reports an epidemic outbreak in November 1976 in Northeastern Thailand where within a few days at least 200 patients, most of them Thai and two-thirds males, were treated at local hospitals. Main presenting symptoms were acute anxiety, in some cases leading to fainting, (subjective) shrinking of the penis and impotency in men, shrinking and/or itching of the external genitals and frigidity in women; further complaints included initial nausea and dizziness, abdominal pains, headaches, facial numbness. All patients recovered after brief symptomatic intervention. Popular opinion and news media echoed the patients' paranoid projection of viewing the epidemic as caused by Vietnamese food and tobacco poisoning in a hideous assault against the sexual vitality and general health of the Thai people, in the context of a specific socio-cultural and politico-historical situation. It appears that an adequate interpretation of Koro and of analogous hysterical symptom formation would have to go beyond the hitherto applied psychoanalytic models by considering the specific sociodynamic factors involved in the pathogenesis of such phenomena.
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PMID:[Mass-hysteria with Koro-symptoms in Thailand]. 90 91

Two groups of patients treated by short (Milan) and long (Newcastle) haemodialysis were compared for incidence of symptoms and biochemical control. Short dialysis corrected urea and creatinine as well but control of potassium and phosphate were similar. The only apparent penalties to be paid by short dialysis patients were a higher incidence of itching, tingling or numbness, impairment of vibratory sense and difficulty in controlling blood pressure. The short dialysis group had higher haemoglobin and less dyspnoea, muscle weakness and dizziness after dialysis.
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PMID:A comparison of short and long haemodialysis. 93 42

We treated strongyloidiasis patients and obtained the following results: Of the 299 patients (184 males and 115 females), 81 patients (27.1%) had no complaints before treatment, 218 patients complaints of some symptoms, including arthralgia and/or lumbago (28.4%), abdominal pain and/or borborygmus (19.3%), numbness of extremities (18.1%), constipation (16.3%) and itching (15.7). We treated 219 patients with mebendazole and symptoms improved after treatment described below: Thirty-seven of the 63 patients (58.7%) with arthralgia and/or lumbago improved. Twenty-seven of the 36 patients (75.0%) with numbness of extremities improved. Thirty-one of the 32 patients (96.9%) with heartburn improved. We treated 26 patients with mebendazole plus thiabendazole and twelve of 14 patients (85.7%) with abdominal pain and/or borborygmus were improved after treatment. We treated 54 patients with ivermectin and five of 18 patients (27.8%) with arthralgia and/or lumbago were improved after treatment.
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PMID:[Clinical study on symptoms in patients with strongyloidiasis]. 129 17

The lateral femoral cutaneus nerve is vulnerable to entrapment neuropathy where the nerve passes through the lateral end of the inguinal ligament. At the end of last century the clinical manifestation of this condition has been termed Meralgia paresthetica. It is a syndrome of pain, numbness, itching or other dysesthesias in the anterolateral aspect of the thigh, where perception of pinprick and touch often is diminished or lost. 36 patients were operated upon over a period of 17 years. After a short historical review, pathogenesis, clinical aspects and therapy of the syndrome are discussed. The correct surgical therapy is not the resection of the nerve, but its decompression, similar to the therapy of the entrapment of the median nerve at the wrist.
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PMID:[Meralgia paresthetica. Pathogenesis, clinical aspects and therapy of compression of the lateral cutaneous nerve of the thigh]. 153 16

Altogether 126 patients with mental disorders of the non-psychotic nature, that occurred for the first time during menopause were examined. Different vegetative disorders (hot flush, hyperhidrosis, blood pressure fluctuations, asphyxia sensation, numbness of the limbs, skin burning, chill, pruritus) played the leading part in the clinical picture. The mental disorders manifested in the form of extensive age-related , asthenic, hysteric, phobic and depressive disorders. The long-term climacteric was likely to give rise to the formation of a pathological personality.
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PMID:[Mental disorders in women during menopause]. 164 42

Symptoms as an important sign of the effects of methyl bromide were studied in 56 male workers (37 currently exposed and 19 previously exposed) in a methyl bromide factory. The workers were 18 to 62 yr of age (mean age: 41) and were exposed from 1 to 25 yr (mean: 7 yr). They were compared to 56 age-matched referents with a standardized questionnaire. The results of pairwise comparison of the symptoms of the age-matched pairs of exposed and referent subjects showed that the occurrence of dizziness, numbness, paresthesia and weakness of extremities, nightmares, fatigue and dry and scaly skin was statistically significantly higher among the workers than among the referents. When the symptoms during the work shift (acute symptoms) were compared, irritation symptoms such as itching, bullae or reddish swollen hands and runny noses with nasal irritation were reported significantly more often in the exposed groups. The correlation of the symptoms among the exposed workers suggested that chronic symptoms are closely related to acute irritation symptoms and exposure duration. The results suggest that symptom inquiry is useful for detecting the possible effects of exposure to methyl bromide.
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PMID:Symptoms among workers with long-term exposure to methyl bromide. An epidemiological study. 165 69

The anatomy and physiology of the epidural space and the mechanism of action, sites of action, and pharmacokinetics of analgesics administered by continuous epidural infusion are reviewed, and the efficacy, adverse effects, and postoperative indications for use of analgesics administered by this route are discussed. Narcotics selectively block pain conduction by occupying specific opiate receptors in the spinal cord. Local anesthetics provide analgesia by axonal membrane blockade; they also can produce nonselective sympathetic and somatic (sensory and motor) blockade in addition to analgesia. A narcotic-local anesthetic mixture should provide an additive analgesic effect, without an increase in the incidence of adverse effects. Comparative efficacy studies have shown that continuous epidural infusions of narcotics, local anesthetics, and narcotic-local anesthetic combinations, when used appropriately, may produce better analgesia than conventional bolus methods of pain relief. Continuous epidural infusions also offer a safety advantage over intermittent epidural injections because peak and trough levels of the analgesic agent are avoided. Adverse effects of epidurally administered narcotics include respiratory depression, pruritus, urinary retention, nausea and vomiting, and sedation. Adverse effects of epidurally administered local anesthetics include urinary retention, hypotension, numbness, motor weakness, tachyphylaxis, and, rarely, systemic toxicity. The cost of epidurally administered drugs is substantially higher than that for i.m. or i.v. narcotic analgesia, but this cost may be offset by other benefits such as a shorter hospital stay. Current studies suggest superior analgesia for the majority of surgical procedures with continuous epidural analgesia infusions compared with more traditional methods of providing analgesia.
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PMID:Management of postoperative pain by continuous epidural infusion of analgesics. 174 61

A 24-year-old patient was treated using hypnotic intervention for extreme pruritus. With hypnotherapy the pruritus cleared. Six months after her final appointment she sought hypnotherapy for unexplainable increasing numbness and pain. With hypnotherapy she experienced temporary relief. Later a diagnosis of Guillain-Barre syndrome was made. Hypnotherapy appeared to improve muscle function temporarily in the acute stage of the patient's disease. Hypnotherapy to reduce the symptoms of Guillain-Barre should be investigated further.
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PMID:Hypnotherapy in a case of pruritus and Guillain-Barre syndrome. 229 18

The Restaurant syndromes can be caused by five major factors: food allergens, sulfites, monosodium glutamate (MSG), tartrazine, and scombroidosis (and other seafood poisoning). A history of atopy and ingestion of known food allergens such as peanuts, egg, fish, and walnuts, together with positive results of skin tests or RAST to these foods, will favor a diagnosis of food allergy. Allergic reactions to peanuts have produced fatalities in minutes through an IgE mediated reaction. An extremely rapid onset (minutes) of symptoms consisting of flushing, bronchospasm and hypotension is consistent with a sulfite reaction. Burning, pressure, and tightness or numbness in the face, neck, and upper chest following ingestion of Chinese food favors a diagnosis of adverse reaction to MSG. Also, development of late onset bronchospasm (up to 14 hours) may be related to MSG reactions. Bronchospasm and urticaria in a patient with a history of aspirin intolerance suggests tartrazine sensitivity. If everyone ingesting a fish meal develops flushing, urticaria, pruritus, gastrointestinal complaints, or bronchospasm, this implies scombroidosis, ciguatera, or other seafood poisoning. Finally, severe headache or hypertension can result from ingestion of naturally occurring amines, such as tyramine (cheese, red wine) and phenylethylamine (chocolate). A double-blind oral challenge test may be the only way of confirming the diagnosis for most of the etiological factors of the Restaurant syndromes. The treatment of choice for acute reaction is epinephrine followed by antihistamine. Proper labeling and avoidance of these ingredients in sensitive individuals are the best preventive measures.
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PMID:The restaurant syndromes. 330 66


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