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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of this paper is to describe 2 siblings who had a generalized
neurological disease
which presented as intestinal pseudoobstruction. The siblings had 40-year histories of abdominal pain, distention, and
vomiting
as well as gait ataxia, small, irregular, poorly reactive pupils, dysarthria, absent deep tendon reflexes, and impaired vibratory and position senses. Compared with age-matched controls, they had inappropriate blood pressure responses to phenylephrine, the Valsalva maneuver, and upright posture, lack of sweating on warming, and pupillary denervation hypersensitivity. Radiographs revealed hyperactive, nonpropulsive contractions of a dilated esophagus and small intestine and extensive colonic diverticulosis. Esophageal manometry recorded repetitive, spontaneous, nonperistaltic waves and positive Mechyolyl tests. Postmortem examinations showed degeneration of the myenteric plexuses of the esophagus, small intestine, and colon of both patients. Myenteric plexus neurons were significantly reduced in number compared with 7 controls. About one-third of the siblings' neurons contained round, eosinophilic intranuclear inclusions, which, by histochemistry, were composed of protein by lacked RNA, DNA, carbohydrate, and fat. By electron microscopy the inclusions consisted of an irregular array of nonviral, nonmembrane-bounded filaments. Neurons and glial cells of the brain, spinal cord, dorsal root, and celiac plexus ganglia contained identical intranuclear inclusions. Intestinal smooth muscle was normal. These 2 siblings represent a unique disease in which degeneration of the myenteric plexus resulted in hyperactive but uncoordinated smooth muscle activity and the clinical syndrome of intestinal pseudoobstruction, the presenting manifestation of their
neurological disease
.
...
PMID:A familial neuronal disease presenting as intestinal pseudoobstruction. 21 42
Gastroesophageal reflux (GER) has been recognized with increasing frequency as the source of a wide variety of symptoms in infants and children. During the past 8 years at the UCLA Hospital, 74 patients under 18 years of age have been identified as having sufficiently severe symptomatic reflux to warrant gastroesophageal fundoplication. Although repeated
emesis
was the most common primary symptom, failure to thrive was a major symptom in 20 patients, repeated pneumonia in 18, asthma in five, and dysphagia owing to stricture in 12. Nine patients with previously repaired esophageal atresia had severe reflux. Serious
neurologic disorders
were present in 14 children. The diagnosis of reflux in the majority of symptomatic children was established by combining the findings of an abnormal esophagogram, Tuttle test, esophageal manometry, and esophagoscopy with biopsy. Six infants experienced repeated symptomatic GER although results of all diagnostic studies were normal. Each of the patients had undergone an unsuccessful trial of medical management before the decision to operate was made. Transabdominal Nissen fundoplication with gastrostomy was performed on each of the 74 children (28 under 1 year of age). Each of the strictures was successfully managed by postoperative dilatations. No death and no major complications occurred, but six patients experienced transient dysphagia and four had delayed gastric emptying. Every patient has been relieved of clinical reflux, and the pulmonary status in each, including the asthmatic children, has been markedly improved. On the basis of this favorable experience with 74 patients, we believe that an aggressive surgical approach should be taken in the management of symptomatic GER in infants and children who fail to respond to an adequate trial of medical management.
...
PMID:Gastroesophageal fundoplication for the management of reflux in infants and children. 70 70
We reported a case of an eight-year-old boy with CEOP. His parents and sibling were in good health. There was no family history of epileptic and
neurological disease
. He had his first attack of unconsciousness with fixation of eye movement for a few minutes at the age of 7 years. After six months, he experienced attacks of
vomiting
followed by loss of consciousness and elementary visual hallucinations consisting of red and blue colors. Sometimes he complained of contraction of visual field for 10 to 20 seconds, as if a curtain had fallen following the visual hallucination of a bright light spot. At the age of eight years, he was admitted to our hospital for evaluation and therapy. Investigations included neurological examination, IQ, CT findings were normal. Visual evoked potential revealed more reduced amplitude in the left side than in the right. The EEG findings during the waking state showed continuous bilateral 1-2 c/s spike and wave complex discharges in occipital and posterior temporal areas. These discharges were immediately suppressed by eyes-opening in an illuminated room, but not in a dark room. However, during the light sleep stage, diffuse irregular spike and wave discharges appeared frequently with left side dominance. From the clinico-electrophysiological findings we diagnosed him as CEOP. In order to investigate the changes of the occipital spike and wave discharges by photic stimulation, we administered intermittent photic stimulation (IPS) for 10 seconds at each frequency between 1-30 flashes/sec (f/s) in a dark room.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of childhood epilepsy with occipital paroxysms (CEOP) presenting particular EEG findings]. 152 May 13
Patients requiring feeding gastrostomies are often poor risks for either laparotomy or general anesthesia. Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy can be performed at the bedside by a surgeon-endoscopist and with minimal sedation. The authors performed this procedure on 45 patients ranging in age from 17 to 88 years. The procedure was indicated for
neurologic disorders
in 34 patients, head and neck tumours in 2, failure to thrive in 4, esophageal obstruction from lung cancer in 1 and tracheostomy for multisystem failure or trauma and sepsis in 4. In three cases the procedure could not be performed because the stomach could not be intubated. In 29 cases local anesthesia and sedation (diazepam and meperidine) were used, but in 16 cases general anesthesia with hyperventilation was preferred. The mean operative time was 32 minutes, decreasing with experience so that the current mean operative time for the last nine cases was 23 minutes. Feeding was begun on day 1 after operation in most patients and on day 2 in others. Complications included tube displacement in three patients, superficial infection at the site of the tube insertion in three (not requiring drainage or tube removal) and asymptomatic pneumoperitoneum in one patient. These complications all occurred early in the series. No patient suffered paralytic ileus,
vomiting
, aspiration or significant leaking around the tube. In the authors' opinion percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy is the preferred method for placement of a feeding gastrostomy. It can be performed rapidly with minimal stress in high-risk patients.
...
PMID:Percutaneous endoscopic gastrostomy: indications and results. 309 37
Normal pressure hydrocephalus (NPH) is generally considered to be a disorder of adult and geriatric patients. We report four patients who are children or young adults with chronic neurological disorders, recent deterioration of their levels of function, normal cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) pressures, and ventricular enlargement. All four patients improved after the placement or revision of a ventriculoperitoneal shunt. Frequent symptoms and signs included irritability (three patients),
vomiting
(three patients), and abnormal limb posturing (two patients). Correct diagnosis was hampered by two factors: (a) Multiple or prolonged recordings of CSF pressures were invariably well within the normal ranges with respect to age, and (b) the patients had chronic neurological deficits. After ventriculoperitoneal shunting, subjective and objective improvement was seen in all cases. Young patients with large ventricles may benefit from shunting procedures despite low CSF pressures. These patients may be clinically identified by symptoms of new neurological dysfunction in cases of previously static
neurological disease
or acceleration of slowly progressive neurological dysfunction. Some of these underlying neurological disorders may predispose children and young adults to NPH.
...
PMID:Normal pressure hydrocephalus in children and young adults. 361 70
We studied a 59-year-old woman with dementia, retinitis pigmentosa, sensorimotor neuropathy, and attacks of
vomiting
associated with blood pressure lability and loss of consciousness. Abnormalities included CT evidence of cerebral atrophy, low IQ, slow central and peripheral nerve conduction velocities, axonal degeneration in sural nerve biopsy, and elevated levels of catecholamines and slow waves in EEG during attacks. Her sister, two brothers, and daughter also had progressive muscle weakness, visual disturbance, and similar
vomiting
attacks. The hereditary
nervous system disorder
does not fit any previously described condition.
...
PMID:Familial neuropathy with dementia, retinitis pigmentosa, and dysautonomia. 386 Jul 47
Although it is generally accepted that anti-cancer chemotherapy should be administered at the maximum tolerable dose, it is not clearly established that the therapeutic results at dosage levels involving maximum tolerable toxicity are really superior to those with lower, better tolerated doses. 392 patients with advanced primary lung cancer were treated with 5 chemotherapy regimens including cyclophosphamide, methotrexate, vincristine, procarbazine, hydroxyurea, adriamycin and CCNU, in combinations of 3 to 7 agents. Response rates of 50% and over were registered after 8 weeks of treatment. During the same time the intensity of leukopenia, thrombocytopenia,
vomiting
, other digestive toxicity,
neurologic disorders
and alopecia was graded according to the worst observation from 0 to 4. The results show that there is no correlation between the grade of toxicity and the rate of response either for the whole group or for subgroups of patients as defined by cell type, degree of dissemination, age, or performance status. They demonstrate that the search for maximum tolerable toxicity is not a sine qua non for the best possible response to chemotherapy in primary lung cancer.
...
PMID:[The toxicity/efficacy relationship in polychemotherapy of lung neoplasms]. 626 22
Gastroesophageal reflux (GER) is one of the most frequent symptomatic clinical disorders affecting the gastrointestinal tract of infants and children. During the past 2 decades, GER has been recognized more frequently because of an increased awareness of the condition and also because of the more sophisticated diagnostic techniques that have been developed for both identifying and quantifying the disorder. Gastroesophageal fundoplication is currently one of the three most common major operations performed on infants and children by pediatric surgeons in the United States. Normal gastroesophageal function is a complex mechanism that depends on effective esophageal motility, timely relaxation and contractility of the lower esophageal sphincter, the mean intraluminal pressure in the stomach, the effectiveness of contractility in emptying of the stomach, and the ease of gastric outflow. More than one of these factors are often abnormal in the same child with symptomatic GER. In addition, in patients with GER disease, and particularly in those patients with
neurologic disorders
, there appears to be a high prevalence of autonomic neuropathy in which esophagogastric transit and gastric emptying are frequently delayed, producing a somewhat complex foregut motility disorder. GER has a different course and prognosis depending on the age of onset. The incompetent lower esophageal sphincter mechanism present in most newborn infants combined with the increased intraabdominal pressure from crying or straining commonly becomes much less frequent as a cause of
vomiting
after the age of 4 months. Chalasia and rumination of infancy are self-limited and should be carefully separated from symptomatic GER, which requires treatment. The most frequent complications of recurrent GER in childhood are failure to thrive as a result of caloric deprivation and recurrent bronchitis or pneumonia caused by repeated pulmonary aspiration of gastric fluid. Children with GER disease commonly have more refluxing episodes when in the supine position, particularly during sleep. The reflux of acid into the mid or upper esophagus may stimulate vagal reflexes and produce reflex laryngospasm, bronchospasm, or both, which may accentuate the symptoms of asthma. Reflux may also be a cause of obstructive apnea in infants and possibly a cause of recurrent stridor, acute hypoxia, and even the sudden infant death syndrome. Premature infants with respiratory distress syndrome have a high incidence of GER. Esophagitis and severe dental carries are common manifestations of GER in childhood. Barrett's columnar mucosal changes in the lower esophagus are not infrequent in adolescent children with chronic GER, particularly when Heliobacter pylori is present in the gastric mucosa. Associated disorders include esophageal dysmotility, which has been recognized in approximately one third of children with severe GER. Symptomatic GER is estimated to occur in 30% to 80% of infants who have undergone repair of esophageal atresia malformations. Neurologically impaired children are at high risk for having symptomatic GER, particularly if nasogastric or gastrostomy feedings are necessary. Delayed gastric emptying (DGE) has been documented with increasing frequency in infants and children who have symptoms of GER, particularly those with
neurologic disorders
. DGE may also be a cause of gas bloat, gagging, and breakdown or slippage of a well-constructed gastroesophageal fundoplication. The most helpful test for diagnosing and quantifying GER in childhood is the 24-hour esophageal pH monitoring study. Miniaturized probes that are small enough to use easily in the newborn infant are available. This study is 100% accurate in diagnosing reflux when the esophageal pH is less than 4.0 for more than 5% of the total monitored time.
...
PMID:Gastroesophageal reflux in childhood. 853 88
Gastrointestinal motor dysfunctions result when extrinsic autonomic nerves are diseased and are unable to modulate the motor functions of the digestive tract, which depend on the enteric nervous system and the automaticity of the smooth muscles. Gut motor dysfunction may result from disorders at all anatomic levels of the extrinsic neural control and degenerations of gut smooth muscle. It illustrates the important modulation of gut motor function by the nervous system. Although much emphasis has been placed on dysphagia and constipation in
neurologic disorders
, more recent studies have highlighted incontinence,
vomiting
, and abdominal distention in the symptomatology of such patients. Strategies that evaluate the motor functions of the digestive tract and the extrinsic neural control are available; they aid in selection of rational therapies for these patients, which include physical therapy and biofeedback training (for dysphagia or incontinence), prokinetic agents (for neuropathic forms of gastroparesis, chronic intestinal dysmotility, or slow transit colonic disorders), and nutritional support using the enteral or parenteral route. Electrical or magnetic stimulation of lumbosacral roots provides a novel method to alleviate constipation in paraplegics.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal dysfunction in neurologic disease. 908 70
Fifty children, 24 female and 26 male, with ages varying from 6 to 72 months (mean = 23.7 m.) that experienced at least one febrile seizure (FS) entered a prospective study of intermittent therapy with clobazam. Cases with severe neurological abnormalities, progressive
neurological disease
, afebrile seizures, symptomatic seizures of other nature, or seizures during a central nervous system infection were excluded. Seizures were of the simple type in 25 patients, complex in 20 and unclassified in 5. The mean follow-up period was 7.9 months (range = 1 to 23 m.), and the age at the first seizure varied from 5 to 42 months (mean = 16.8 m.). Clobazam was administered orally during the febrile episode according to the child's weight: up to 5 kg, 5 mg/day; from 5 to 10 kg, 10 mg/day; from 11 to 15 kg, 15 mg/day, and over 15 kg, 20 mg/day. There were 219 febrile episodes, with temperature above 37.8 degrees C, in 40 children during the study period. Twelve children never received clobazam and 28 received the drug at least once. Drug efficacy was measured by comparing FS recurrence in the febrile episodes that were treated with clobazam with those in which only antipyretic measures were taken. Ten children (20%) experienced a FS during the study period. Of the 171 febrile episodes treated with clobazam there were only 3 recurrences (1.7%), while of the 48 episodes treated only with antipyretic measures there were 11 recurrences (22.9%), a difference highly significant (p < 0.0001). Adverse effects occurred in 10/28 patients (35.7%), consisting mainly in
vomiting
, somnolence and hyperactivity. Only one patient had recurrent
vomiting
which lead to drug interruption. These effects did not necessarily occurred in every instance the drug was administered, being present in one febrile episode and not in the others. We conclude that clonazepam is safe and efficacious in preventing FS recurrence. It may be an alternative to diazepam in the intermittent treatment of FS recurrence.
...
PMID:Treatment of febrile seizures with intermittent clobazam. 962 35
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