Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Administration of recombinant erythropoietin (r-HuEPO) is an effective treatment for the anaemia of chronic renal failure, but in some patients it has been accompanied by elevated blood pressure. This study focuses on seven patients with end-stage renal failure, managed on haemodialysis, who developed probable hypertensive encephalopathy with seizures during treatment with r-HuEPO. All made a full recovery. The events were not clearly related to the haemoglobin concentrations achieved, and four patients have subsequently been restarted on r-HuEPO therapy at a reduced dose, resulting in a slower increase in haemoglobin with no recurrence of episodes of severe hypertension. Close attention needs to be paid to blood pressure in patients commencing erythropoietin therapy, and it seems prudent to aim for a gradual increase in haemoglobin concentration to allow the circulation to adapt to changes in oxygen delivery and haematocrit.
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PMID:Seizures in haemodialysis patients treated with recombinant human erythropoietin. 251 27

Renal failure and its treatment are associated with a number of neurologic complications that must be differentiated from the nervous system complications of the disease leading to renal failure. Uremic encephalopathy is characterized by clinical signs of depressed brain function coexisting with excitation, often in the form of generalized epileptic seizures. Peripheral neuropathy, due to axonal involvement, is common and is characterized by ascending sensory and motor dysfunction. The treatment of renal failure also may lead to the development of neurologic abnormalities in the form of dialysis disequilibrium characterized by headache, nausea, irritability that may progress to seizures, coma, and death, which is caused by the entry of free water into the brain and swelling. Dialysis dementia, caused by the toxic effects of aluminum, is now rare. Renal transplant recipients may develop cerebrovascular disease, infections by opportunistic organisms, or malignant neoplasms, particularly primary lymphoma of the brain. As transplant recipients live longer and more operations are performed, additional complications may be seen in the future.
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PMID:Neurologic complications of renal disease. 254 62

The spectrum of neurological complications associated with heroin addiction has changed in the past six years because of the progressive knowledge of the neurological complications related to HIV infection. We reviewed 48 heroin addicts with neurological complications and 452 heroin overdose who were seen in the Emergency Unit of our hospital during 1988 and the publications since 1967. Regarding the overdose we present the results of a prospective study leading to determine the causes. We emphasize the relationship with the level of total morphine in serum, instead of conjugate morphine, and with the presence of high levels of benzodiazepines found in the plasma rather than an hypothetic hypersensitivity phenomenon. We resume the neurological complications related with heroin addiction: spongiform leukoencephalopathy, epileptic seizures, stroke, transverse myelopathy and neuromuscular complications such mononeuropathy, plexopathy, acute inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy, rhabdomyolysis, fibrosing myopathy, musculoskeletal syndrome and acute bacterial myopathy. Some of such complications (i.e. transverse myelitis, polyradiculoneuropathy, leucoencephalopathy) must rise the suspicion of an HIV infection. Likewise, in patients assisted for overdosage we believe it's necessary rule out myoglobinuria by means of CPK serum levels and detection of urine hematic pigments without red blood cels in the urine sediment, in order to prevent and treat the renal failure. We report the results of muscular biopsy found in the musculoskeletal syndrome, which are similar to those found in alcoholic myopathy. Finally, we describe the clinical and diagnostic aspects in an unusually neuromuscular complication: the acute bacterial myopathy.
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PMID:[Non-infective neurologic complications associated to heroin use]. 256 83

Recent improvements in the results of orthotopic liver transplantation (OLT) have made this a well-accepted treatment for patients with severe hepatic failure. Current problems encountered following OLT are discussed. Immediate complications comprise surgical bleeding, primary graft non-function, and graft failure due to hepatic artery occlusion. Secondary complications are frequent. Surgical ones include biliary and vascular (hepatic artery thrombosis most often) problems, as well as intra-abdominal abscesses associated with gastrointestinal perforation, biliary leak, graft ischaemia or an infected haematoma. 40% of patients having undergone OLT will be reoperated on, 2/3 of them within 3 months. Non-surgical complications are mostly pulmonary. The risk of pneumonitis is increased by prolonged mechanical ventilation; it is always potentially disastrous in the immunosuppressed, transplanted patient. Hypertension is also often seen in the early postoperative period; it requires prompt treatment. Early renal impairment after OLT is common, and of better prognosis than late onset renal failure, which is generally associated with shock, graft failure, sepsis or use of nephrotoxic agents. Seizures, usually only one, occur in about 10% of patients; recovery is complete. Encephalopathy with intracranial oedema related to fulminant hepatitis has a worse prognosis, but survival figures are quite encouraging. Three type of rejection are described after OLT: 1) severe accelerated rejection (very rare), 2) acute rejection encountered in about 70% of patients over the first 3 months, and 3) late rejection, which can lead to the vanishing bile duct syndrome (VBDS). Diagnosis of rejection is made by liver biopsy. Prophylactic immunosuppression includes cyclosporin, methylprednisolone and azathioprine. Cyclosporin toxicity and drug interactions are reviewed. Treatment of acute rejection episodes comprises an initial bolus of high doses of corticoid drugs; if there is no response, antilymphocyte globulin or monoclonal antibodies may have to be used. Infection is the main cause of death following OLT. Early infections, mostly intra-abdominal and pulmonary, are bacterial or fungal. Vital (especially CMV) and other opportunistic infections occur generally after the second week. Retransplantation, carried out in 10 to 25% of patients, may be urgent in case of primary graft failure, or hepatic artery thrombosis associated with graft failure, or hepatic artery thrombosis associated with graft failure. Other indications are early graft rejection with severe hepatic dysfunction, chronic rejection with severe VBDS, and recurrence of the initial disease.
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PMID:[Liver transplantation in adults: postoperative management and development during the first months]. 262 46

The carbapenems differ from the penicillins (penams) in having an unsaturated bond between C2 and C3 and a carbon atom replacing sulphur at position 1 of the thiazolidine ring. The various carbapenems differ primarily in the configuration of the side chains at C2 and C6. Carbapenems include the thienamycins, olivanic acids, carpetimycins, asparenomycins, pluracidomycins, and other natural and semi-synthetic compounds. Carbapenems vary in their stability and resistance to beta-lactamases, ability to inhibit and to induce beta-lactamases, and in-vitro spectra of activity. Many are highly unstable in solution. Some are degraded by mammalian dehydropeptidases in vivo. The hydroxyethyl side chain in the alpha or trans-configuration at C6 in thienamycin provides striking resistance to beta-lactamases, but this compound is highly unstable in concentrated solution and the solid state. The N-formimidoyl derivative of thienamycin (imipenem) is more stable in solution and has broad-spectrum activity against aerobic and anaerobic bacteria. However, imipenem is not stable to renal dehydropeptidases and its degradation products are nephrotoxic in certain animals. It is thus administered with the dehydropeptidase inhibitor cilastatin. High serum levels of imipenem (especially in patients with renal failure and central nervous system disease) have been associated with seizures. The drug is therefore not appropriate for meningitis. Meropenem is a new carbapenem which has the same side chain as imipenem at C6. Its unique side chain at C2 assures a broad spectrum of activity which includes Pseudomonas aeruginosa and other aerobic and anaerobic organisms. Only Ps. (Xanthomonas) maltophilia is generally resistant. This species is resistant also to imipenem.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The carbapenems: new broad spectrum beta-lactam antibiotics. 268 Nov 23

Extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO) is an approved therapy for some neonates who have respiratory failure that is due to hyaline membrane disease, meconium aspiration, persistent pulmonary hypertension, congenital diaphragmatic hernia, or sepsis. The major complication of this therapy is hemorrhage, with intracranial hemorrhage having the highest morbidity and mortality. Seizures, incisional bleeding and bleeding in the pleural space, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, renal failure, and cardiovascular complications account for most of the other complications. Cranial sonography provides an ideal imaging modality for baseline evaluation and daily follow-up; however, computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging, because of better sensitivity, are important for assessment after ECMO. The changes in intracranial blood flow related to ECMO can be noninvasively evaluated by Doppler ultrasound modalities.
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PMID:Neurosonographic findings in infants treated by extracorporeal membrane oxygenation (ECMO). 268 79

We reviewed the records of 154 children who received 207 renal transplants for end-stage renal disease from 1965 to 1987, and discovered that 48 (31%) had had convulsive seizures, some before transplant surgery, others only after transplant, and some during both before and after transplantation. The majority of children had minimal long-term problems, and 60% of the children had only a single convulsion. In six of the patients, convulsions were a manifestation of more serious underlying conditions that produced significant morbidity. Seizures of differing clinical type occurred, with hypertension being the most significant etiologic factor. In children with renal failure, there are minimal symptoms heralding the hypertensive encephalopathy. Rapid resolution without recurrence of seizures after control of hypertension is a major sign that hypertension was the cause and that the long-term prognosis is good.
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PMID:Convulsions in children undergoing renal transplantation. 279 42

The authors report the development of a rapidly progressive encephalopathy marked by confusion, myoclonus, seizures, coma, and death in a group of women with renal failure who received an oral solution of citrate and aluminum hydroxide gel concurrently. Two patients were documented as having marked hyperaluminemia far exceeding blood aluminum levels encountered in the chronic state of aluminum intoxication. We ascribe the toxicity to enhanced gastrointestinal absorption of aluminum when complexed with citrate.
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PMID:Acute aluminum toxicity associated with oral citrate and aluminum-containing antacids. 291 1

Disorders of calcium homeostasis are frequent and seldom diagnosed in the Emergency Department. In both the adult and pediatric population, the causes of increased or decreased calcium are many, and the index of suspicion needs to be raised for these disorders. Selective ordering is warranted for patients with altered mental status, seizures, neuromuscular irritability, or in patients with diseases known to have abnormalities of calcium as a complicating factor. These include renal failure, multiple myeloma, metastatic cancer, granulomatous disease, and endocrinopathies.
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PMID:Calcium. 293 31

The neurotoxic potential of intravenous administered benzylpenicillin (BPC) was studied in rabbits with intact blood-CNS barriers and rabbits with experimental E. coli meningitis. At onset of epileptogenic EEG activity or seizures, serum, CSF and brain tissue were collected for assay of BPC. Based on the fact that, in tissues, BPC seems to remain extracellularly, brain concentrations of BPC were expressed as brain tissue fluid (BTF) levels, calculated as 10x the concentration in whole brain tissue. Neurotoxicity could be precipitated in all rabbits. In normal rabbits BTF levels of BPC were considerably higher than those in CSF indicating a better penetration across the blood-brain barrier (BBB). BPC penetrated better to CSF and BTF in meningitic rabbits than in normal controls, suggesting some degree of damage of the BBB concomitant with meningeal inflammation. E. coli meningitis did not increase the neurotoxicity of BPC. In control rabbits the intracisternal injection of saline resulted in some degree of pleocytosis. Unmanipulated animals are therefore preferable as controls. Epileptogenic EEG-changes was the most precise of the two variables used for demonstration of neurotoxicity. EEG-changes were therefore used as neurotoxicity criterion in the following rabbit experiments. To evaluate the effect of uraemia alone and uraemia plus meningitis on the neurotoxity of BPC in rabbits, cephaloridine was used to induce uraemia. Meningitis was induced by intracisternal inoculation of a cephalosporin resistant strain of E. cloacae. Untreated rabbits were used as controls. Uraemia resulted in increased BTF penetration of BPC, possibly explained by permeability changes in the BBB and/or decreased binding of BPC to albumin. Uraemia did not result in increased penetration of BPC into the CSF of non-meningitic rabbits. Uraemic non-meningitic rabbits had the highest BTF levels of BPC at the criterion, indicating that cephaloridine-induced renal failure increased the epileptogenic threshold in these rabbits. The combination of uraemia and meningitis increased the neurotoxicity of BPC since the criterion was reached at considerably lower BTF levels of BPC. Meningitis, either alone or together with uraemia, did not increase the neurotoxicity in comparison to control rabbits. Higher BTF levels of BPC were found in meningitic rabbits than in controls with intact blood-CNS barriers at onset of EEG-changes. In all groups of rabbits there was a pronounced variability of BPC levels in the CSF while the intra-group variations in BTF levels were much smaller. Thus, BTF and not CSF levels were decisive for the neurotoxicity of BPC.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Neurotoxicity of beta-lactam antibiotics. Experimental kinetic and neurophysiological studies. 324 57


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