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

A 35-year old man with cough, hemoptysis, and dyspnea was found to have diffuse pulmonary infiltrates and iron-laden macrophages in the sputum. Pulmonary siderosis was confirmed by transbronchial biopsy. An associated hypochromic anemia required frequent transfusion. Though marrow iron stores were absent, reticulocytosis was maintained. Corticosteroid therapy resulted in cessation of hemoptysis, clearing of the pulmonary infiltration, and a substantial reduction in transfusion requirement. Splenectomy was of no benefit. The patient developed cerebral symptoms with seizures, and rapid deterioration led to cerebral symptoms with seizures, and rapid deterioration led to death. Disseminated hemangiosarcoma was found at autopsy. Steroid responsiveness of the associated pulmonary siderosis suggests that it had an immune basis.
...
PMID:Angiosarcoma with pulmonary siderosis and persistent reticulocytosis. Steroid responsiveness suggests an immune basis. 56 58

Anticholinergics (in particular, ipratropium bromide [Atrovent]) are first-line therapy in patients with chronic obstructive pulmonary disease (COPD). Although more studies are needed to support the use of combination therapy, adding an inhaled beta agonist to the therapeutic regimen is reasonable in patients who remain symptomatic and need quick relief. Patients frequently receive inadequate amounts of drug with standard doses delivered by metered-dose inhalers, often as the result of improper technique, so symptomatic patients may require higher doses. Caution is recommended when the dose of inhaled sympathomimetics is increased in COPD patients with ischemic heart disease or tachyarrhythmias. The addition of an oral sympathomimetic is seldom necessary. Theophylline may be considered in outpatients who remain symptomatic despite their use of inhaled bronchodilators, but heart disease, seizure disorders, and gastroesophageal reflux are contraindications. Corticosteroid therapy remains controversial but can be helpful in patients who still have severe disease despite maximum bronchodilator therapy. Antibiotics can be of benefit in COPD patients undergoing an exacerbation who have increasing dyspnea, cough, and phlegm production.
...
PMID:Drug treatment of COPD. Controversies about agents and how to deliver them. 134 54

The "transurethral resection of prostate" syndrome (TURPS) is the clinical manifestation of the resorption into the patient's body of a large amount of glycocolle-containing irrigating fluid used for this procedure. The full clinical picture, which is seldom seen, consists of dyspnoea, nausea, arterial hypertension, an increased central venous pressure, cerebral oedema, cardiogenic shock and renal failure. Improved surgical techniques, as well as incomplete and atypical forms of the syndrome could explain this low incidence. Absorption into the blood stream may be rapid, by way of the prostatic venous plexi, or slower, from the spaces around the prostate and under the peritoneum. The present-day pathophysiological theory explains this syndrome by an acute hyponatraemia, sometimes dissociated from the hypoosmolality, the toxicity of glycocolle, and the neurological effects of hyperammonemia. Acute hyponatraemia, with blood sodium concentrations below 115 to 120 mmol.l-1, should be considered as potentially serious. The different mechanisms involved may act alone or together, thus explaining that the minor forms of the syndrome mostly consist of a neurological picture. The emergency treatment depends on the natraemia. It includes diuretics and progressive reloading of the patient with sodium in case of severe hyponatraemia with seizures. The best prevention is a correct surgical indication and technique. The resection should not last for more than 90 to 120 min. The major problem remains the early diagnosis of TURPS. Carrying out this surgery under regional anaesthesia is helpful for this purpose, but, in the near future, the best means might be the monitoring of expired ethanol concentrations.
...
PMID:[Prostate transurethral resection syndrome]. 150 91

We describe the case of a 28 years old caucasian woman with tuberous sclerosis diagnosed at 23 when she underwent nephrectomy for a left renal angiomyolipoma with massive hematuria. She had adenoma but she presented on mental deficit and there was no record of seizures. Familiar history was negative except for the presence of adenoma sebaceum in her father, aged 63, and in her only daughter, aged 10. Five years after nephrectomy she was admitted to our hospital because of exertional dyspnoea and haemoptysis. Pulmonary involvement was confirmed by chest X-rays and CT scans.
...
PMID:[Tuberous sclerosis with pulmonary involvement]. 157 Jul 52

A 50-year-old black man with steroid-dependent stage IV sarcoidosis and a prior seizure attributed to neurosarcoidosis had progressive disorientation, ataxia, cranial neuropathies, and increased dyspnea. Neuroradiologic evaluation showed a ring-enhancing lesion in the left basal ganglion causing a mass effect. Craniotomy yielded purulent material that grew a pure culture of Listeria monocytogenes. He responded well to antibiotic therapy.
...
PMID:Listerial brain abscess in long-standing sarcoidosis. 158 11

Intravenous fluorescein angiography is a commonly performed and extraordinarily valuable diagnostic procedure. The frequency of adverse reactions after angiography has varied considerably in previous reports. In a prospective study of 2789 angiographic procedures in 2025 patients, the authors found that the percentage of adverse reactions depended strongly on the patient's angiographic history. Overall, adverse reactions followed 4.8% of the angiographic procedures. These reactions included nausea (2.9%), vomiting (1.2%), flushing/itching/hives (0.5%), and other reactions (dyspnea, syncope, excessive sneezing) (0.2%). No cases of anaphylaxis, myocardial infarction, pulmonary edema, or seizures occurred. The percentage of reactions was 1.8% for patients who had had previous angiography without ever having had an adverse reaction. In contrast, the percentage of reactions was 48.6% for patients who had had an adverse reaction to angiography previously.
...
PMID:Frequency of adverse systemic reactions after fluorescein angiography. Results of a prospective study. 189 Dec 25

There are several protozoan infections that cause relatively benign illness in normal individuals but result in severe disease manifestations in patients with AIDS. These diseases include Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia, CNS toxoplasmosis, cryptosporidiosis, and isosporiasis. Pneumocystis carinii pneumonia (PCP) caused by Pneumocystis carinii, is the most common opportunistic infection in AIDS. It is seen in more than 80% of individuals with this syndrome. Although historically classified as a protozoan, this organism shares many biochemical characteristics with fungi. The onset of PCP may be insidious, and cough and dyspnea are the most common presenting symptoms. Auscultation of the lungs is often unremarkable, but diffuse infiltrates are commonly seen on chest radiographs. The diagnosis of PCP can be confirmed by identifying the organism on specimens obtained by sputum induction or bronchoalveolar lavage. Trimethaprim-sulfamethoxazole is the treatment of choice but is unfortunately associated with leukopenia and rash in many individuals. Both trimethaprim-sulfamethoxazole and aerosolized pentamidine are used prophylactically in patients at high risk for initial or relapsing infection. The appropriate use of these agents has resulted in improved survival for AIDS patients with PCP. Toxoplasmosis, due to Toxoplasma gondii, affects the central nervous system in patients with AIDS. Headache is a common presenting symptom, and both seizures and paresis can occur. A diagnosis of toxoplasmosis is strongly suspected in symptomatic individuals with ringed mass lesions noted on head CT. Patients with this condition are treated with a combination of sulfadiazine, pyrimethamine, and folinic acid. Cryptosporidiosis and isosporiasis are coccidian protozoan diseases that can result in severe, acute, and chronic diarrhea in immunocompromised individuals. Cryptosporidiosis is the more common of the two and is caused by an unknown species of the genus crytosporidium. Isosporiasis is due to infection with Isospora belli. Dehydration and weight loss are a common result of infection with either agent. A definitive diagnosis can be made by examining an acid fast stain of a diarrheal stool specimen and demonstrating oocysts that are specific for each of these organisms. Fluid replacement and general supportive care are essential in the treatment of both of these diseases. Spiramycin is an unproven treatment modality that is often used in patients with cryptosporidiosis. Isosporiasis responds to initial therapy with trimethaprim-sulfamethoxazole, followed by prophylaxis with pyrimethamine. The adoption of safe sexual practices that minimize fecal-oral contamination should decrease the future prevalence of these diseases and other enteric parasitic infections.
...
PMID:Parasitic diseases. Diseases associated with acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. 201 33

Soman-induced respiratory failure was investigated in awake, behaving guinea pigs chronically instrumented to allow concurrent recordings of medullary respiratory-related unit (RRU) activity, diaphragm electromyogram (DEMG), and electrocorticogram. Responses to soman typically began with hyperpnea. Loss of consciousness, as indicated by the development of seizure activities, took place shortly after the onset of hyperpnea. This was followed by dyspnea, hypopnea, and finally, respiratory failure. The most profound respiratory dysfunctions were seen during the development of dyspnea characterized by a progressively degenerative RRU-DEMG phase relationship (phase anomalies) and mixed patterns of ataxic breathing. Electrophysiographic records indicated that the anomalous RRU-DEMG phase phenomenon is attributable to a state of functional dissociation in some brainstem mechanisms that are normally involved in the orchestration of a synchronous respiratory drive. The failure of bulbar rhythmogenic mechanisms to maintain an orderly and synchronous recruitment of respiratory drive, which led to untimely and chaotic activations of respiratory muscles, was apparently the underlying cause of various ataxic breathing patterns and a reduced ventilatory efficiency. Spectral analyses of DEMG activities showed that, despite episodic muscle fasciculations and signs of fatigue, the functional integrity of the diaphragm was not significantly compromised by soman at a dose sufficient to produce respiratory failure. These findings not only support the notion of a relatively more important involvement of central respiratory mechanisms in soman-induced respiratory failure, but also identify a state of functional dissociation of central respiratory timing mechanisms as being a significant component in soman intoxication.
...
PMID:Neurophysiological concomitants of soman-induced respiratory depression in awake, behaving guinea pigs. 230 Sep 68

Eleven adult goats and 32 adult outbred mice were inoculated IV with Cowdria ruminantium-infected blood (Kwanyanga isolate), monitored clinically, then serially euthanatized. Predominant clinical signs of disease in goats were depression, head tremors, seizures, and dyspnea. In mice, dyspnea and depression were the only clinical signs of disease noticed. Tissues were examined histologically and immunohistochemically for C ruminantium colonies or antigen. In goats, C ruminantium was detected only in endothelial cells of the brain, even though gross and microscopic lesions were confined to the thorax. In mice, C ruminantium was detected only in endothelial cells of the heart and lungs.
...
PMID:Histologic and immunochemical study of the pathogenesis of heartwater (Cowdria ruminantium infection) in goats and mice. 239 97

The antiepileptic effect of lamotrigine (LTG) was assessed in a double-blind, placebo-controlled crossover trial in 24 adult patients with refractory partial seizures. LTG or placebo was added to existing antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). The dose of LTG varied from 75 to 400 mg daily. Three patients did not complete the trial. One was withdrawn from the trial with ataxia, tiredness, dyspnea, and diplopia while receiving LTG and died 18 days later of invasive carcinoma involving the liver. A second patient was withdrawn during baseline for contravening admission criteria, and a third received LTG in error during both treatment periods. Twenty-one patients (12 men and 9 women) completed the trial. An analysis of seizure counts in the 12-week treatment period with LTG showed a statistically significant reduction in seizures as compared with placebo for total seizures (p less than 0.002), partial seizures (p less than 0.002), and secondarily generalized seizures (p less than 0.05). The analysis of total seizure days showed a significant reduction during LTG treatment (p less than 0.002). There were no statistically significant changes in plasma concentrations of phenytoin (PHT), carbamazepine (CBZ), primidone (PRM), or phenobarbital (PB) between the two treatment periods. The most common adverse events reported during the trial were diplopia, drowsiness, tiredness, ataxia, and headache, but although these were more frequent during LTG treatment, the differences from placebo were not statistically significant. No hematological or biochemical changes were noted.
...
PMID:Controlled trial of lamotrigine (Lamictal) for refractory partial seizures. 249 73


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>