Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038220 (status epilepticus)
7,272 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

BACKGROUND--Acute dehydration with hypochloronatremic metabolic alkalosis is a classical complication of cystic fibrosis of the pancreas. Its progressive development as a revealing manifestation of the disease is rare as is its appearance in newborns. Case n. 1.--A 13 month-old girl was admitted because of status epilepticus. She was severely dehydrated (20% weight loss) but had normal diuresis. Investigations showed metabolic alkalosis, hypochloronatremia and hypokalemia. All the manifestations disappeared within 5 days with treatment but three sweat tests were abnormal. Case n. 2.--A 7 month-old girl was admitted because she suffered from progressive loss of weight (10%); she was dehydrated and had metabolic alkalosis plus hypochloronatremia, but her diuresis was normal. Two sweat tests were abnormal. Case n. 3.--A 4.5 month-old boy was admitted because he suffered from severe (12%) weight loss. His diuresis was normal despite dehydration; metabolic alkalosis and hypochloronatremia were found. Two subsequent sweat tests were abnormal. Case n. 4.--A 3 day-old girl was admitted suffering from meconium ileus. Two initial mechanism analysis for protein were abnormal. She had a cardiorespiratory arrest on the 13th day of life, when she had lost 14% of her birth weight; investigations showed metabolic alkalosis, hyponatremia (83 mEq/l), hypochloremia (45 mEq/l); kalemia was 5.9 mEq/l. Peritoneal dialysis was needed to correct hydroelectrolytic changes. A sweat test performed on the 26th day of life was also abnormal. Investigations performed during the periods of dehydration, and repeated later, showed transient functional kidney failure. None of the four patients had any respiratory or gastrointestinal clinical manifestations of cystic fibrosis. CONCLUSION--Metabolic alkalosis with hypochloronatremia plus progressive, severe dehydration in infants whose diuresis is paradoxically normal must be followed by examination for cystic fibrosis.
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PMID:[Cystic fibrosis revealed by dehydration with hypochloronatremic alkalosis in 3 infants and a neonate]. 808 18

Milk-alkali syndrome is mainly caused by the ingestion of large amounts of calcium and absorbable alkali. This syndrome can lead to metastatic calcification, renal failure and metabolic alkalosis secondary to hypercalcemia. Hypercalcemia is rarely a cause of seizure activity. Very few case reports have been published linking seizure to hypercalcemia, but only one recent case report about mesial temporal sclerosis relates the seizure activity to Milk-alkali syndrome. This is another report regarding seizure associated with excess calcium carbonate intake, but without any evidence of mesial temporal sclerosis. The patient described in this article, suffered from status epilepticus most likely secondary to hypercalcemia. Evaluations for malignancy, thyroid, and parathyroid dysfunctions were non conclusive, therefore hypercalcemia in our patient was attributed to milk-alkali syndrome given the history of the prolonged calcium carbonate intake.
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PMID:Status epilepticus secondary to milk-alkali syndrome induced by hypercalcemia (oral antacids). 2151 51

Bartter syndrome is a rare hereditary (autosomal recessive) salt-losing tubulopathy characterized by hypokalemia, hypochloremia, metabolic alkalosis, and normal blood pressure with hyperreninemia, The underlying renal abnormality results in excessive urinary losses of sodium, chloride, and potassium. We report a case of a four-month-old infant with neonatal Bartter syndrome, who presented only with status epilepticus. To the best of our present knowledge, there is no reported case of Bartter syndrome who presented with status epilepticus.
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PMID:Status epilepticus as the only presentation of the neonatal Bartter syndrome. 2247 Aug 74