Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (vomiting)
31,883 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In a double-blind, randomized study the efficacy of lactulose was compared with neomycin-sorbitol in 45 episodes of acute nitrogenous portal-systemic encephalopathy (PSE) induced by dietary protein, azotemia, or gastrointestinal hemorrhage. All patients had underlying cirrhosis, and at the time of randomization had encephalopathy of at least grade 2 severity and arterial ammonia concentrations greater than 150 microgram/100 ml. Two thirds of the patients in each group returned to normal mental status and more than 80% in each group showed at least one grade improvement in mental state. In addition, there was equivalent improvement in asterixis, in the performance of the Number Connection Test, in the electroencephalographic pattern, and in arterial ammonia concentration. The principal difference between the two groups was a greater reduction in stool pH after lactulose therapy than after neomycin-sorbitol therapy. One patient randomized to neomycin-sorbitol had to be withdrawn from the study because of persistent vomiting related to the administration of the medication. Otherwise there were no complications attributable to therapy in either group. These data suggest that neomycin-sorbitol and lactulose are equally effective in the treatment of acute nitrogenous portal-systemic encephalopathy.
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PMID:Neomycin-sorbitol and lactulose in the treatment of acute portal-systemic encephalopathy. A controlled, double-blind clinical trial. 35 73

Reye's syndrome (encephalopathy and fatty liver) is generally considered a disease of children. Four patients, aged 16, 18, 19, and 23 years, with Reye's syndrome were initially seen by internists. A viral prodrome followed by vomiting and encephalopathy without focal neurological signs or jaundice clinically suggested Reye's syndrome. Normal findings of CSF examination (except for increased opening pressure), abnormal findings of liver function tests, and increased blood ammonia further supported the diagnosis. None was hypoglycemic. Reye's syndrome was related to influenza B virus in three patients and to Varicella in another. Three patients survived. Reye's syndrome may be seen intially by general practitioners, emergency room physicians, internists, or psychiatrists. The importance of considering this syndrome in the differential diagnosis of unexplained encephalopathy in adults is stressed.
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PMID:Reye's syndrome in nonpediatric age groups. 48 May 58

Reye's syndrome is difined as fatty degeneration of the viscera with encephalopathy. The signs are change in consciousness after recovery of a viral illness, vomiting, high fever, and progresseve deterioration of the level of consciousness. Signs of brain stem involvement quickly follow. The clinical findings are: mild elevations of serum transaminases (SGOT and SGPT), normal to slightly elevated bilirubin, abnormal blood-clotting functions, normal to low blood glucose, high blood ammonia, and normal cerebrospinal fluid which may be under increased pressure. Death is due to increased intracranial pressure. Therapy is used to stabilize these signs. It includes: infusion of hypertonic glucose followed by insulin, peritoneal dialysis, and exchange transfusion. Intracranial pressure was monitored continually to determine when therapy should be administered.
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PMID:Intracranial pressure monitoring in Reye's syndrome. 127 55

A case of sudden death associated with fatty liver and encephalopathy is described in a 4-year old white boy with medium-chain acyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency. The death was caused by hypoglycemia triggered by fasting and vomiting associated with a minor viral infection. The differential diagnosis of the hepatoencephalopathy is discussed in relation to other conditions, especially Reye's syndrome. The forensic pathologist should be familiar with MCAD and other deficiencies of beta-oxidation of fatty acids as a cause of sudden unexpected death in children in order to advise parents in genetic counseling to prevent disability or death of other affected, but still asymptomatic siblings.
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PMID:Fatty liver, encephalopathy, and sudden unexpected death in early childhood due to medium-chain acyl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase deficiency. 128 65

We describe 3 children with a progressive encephalopathy that was characterised by irritability, convulsions, cranial nerve palsies, ataxia, nystagmus, walking difficulties, delayed psychomotor development, hemiplegia/tetraplegia, visual disturbance, vomiting, neck stiffness, and non-specific signs of raised intracranial pressure. A final diagnosis was made in all 3 patients from necropsy material. The clinical features were ascribed to multiple inflammatory, predominantly lymphocytic, reactions and raised intracranial pressure. This condition is an atypical form of haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis, which normally presents with fever, hepatosplenomegaly, and cytopenias. By contrast, the disease pattern in our 3 children was dominated by cerebromeningeal involvement, which can precede the typical systemic symptoms of haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis. An awareness of this condition is important because treatments are available.
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PMID:Cerebromeningeal haemophagocytic lymphohistiocytosis. 134 23

Two children with osteosarcoma are presented in whom Wernicke encephalopathy with vomiting occurred during the chemotherapy. One of the children died with symptoms of toxic cardiomyopathy. Autopsy revealed Wernicke encephalopathy. The other child had similar symptoms (ocular signs, ataxia, somnolence). Parenteral thiamine had been given and after this therapy the child recovered from the encephalopathy. The authors emphasize the importance of the recognition of this neurological disorder occurring rarely in childhood: it can be cured with parenteral thiamine. Without thiamine treatment this condition is lethal.
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PMID:[Wernicke encephalopathy in childhood osteosarcoma]. 140 86

We describe the full history and postmortem findings in one of the first identified cases of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with stroke-like episodes (MELAS). To clarify diagnostic criteria, we analyzed 69 reported cases. The syndrome should be suspected by the following three invariant criteria: (1) stroke-like episode before age 40 yr; (2) encephalopathy characterized by seizures, dementia, or both; and (3) lactic acidosis, ragged-red fibers (RRF), or both. The diagnosis may be considered secure if there are also at least two of the following: normal early development, recurrent headache, or recurrent vomiting. There are incomplete syndromes in relatives of patients with the full syndrome and incomplete syndromes might also be encountered in sporadic cases. Some MELAS patients have features of the Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS) or myoclonic epilepsy with ragged-red fibers (MERRF), but none had the full KSS syndrome. In partial or confusing cases, analysis of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) may point to the correct diagnosis; however, not all patients with clinical MELAS have had the typical mtDNA point mutation and some patients with the mutation have clinical syndromes other than MELAS.
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PMID:Melas: an original case and clinical criteria for diagnosis. 142

Dengue encephalopathy or dengue hemorrhagic fever (DHF) with CNS involvement used to be considered a relatively rare condition; but the number of cases reported in human studies has been increasing every year. Diagnosis of dengue encephalopathy is based on clinically diagnosed DHF according to the W.H.O. criteria (1980), with CNS manifestations consisting of abrupt onset of hyperpyrexia, non-transient alteration of consciousness, headache, vomiting--with or without seizures--and normal CSF. Many factors may be considered to be directly or indirectly associated with CNS signs and symptoms in DHF, the main pathology being leakage of plasma into serous spaces and abnormal hemostasis, leading to hypovolemic shock and hemorrhage in many organs of the body. Acute liver failure is considered to be one of the main factors causing brain pathology. One hundred fifty-two cases of dengue encephalopathy admitted during 3 periods at the Cipto Mangunkusumo Hospital in Jakarta were studied retrospectively. The overall incidence was 152 out of 2,441 DHF cases, or 6.2%. The most pronounced symptoms were hyperpyrexia, alteration of consciousness and convulsions. Laboratory examination showed an unusually high increase of serum transaminases, hyponatremia, and hypoxia. Neurologic abnormalities detected were hemiparesis and tetraparesis of the extremities, and second nerve atrophy; such abnormalities were found in 10 out of the 152 cases, or 6.5%.
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PMID:Dengue encephalopathy. 150 81

The designation of "Infantile Bilateral Striatal Necrosis" (IBSN) was first given by Friede in 1975. However, this unusual condition was first described by Paterson and Carmichael in 1924. The disease is rare with uncertain etiology. The clinical picture includes choreoathetosis, abnormal eye movements, seizures and mental dullness. These circumstances often follow symptoms such as fever, vomiting and impaired consciousness. The final diagnosis is confirmed by pathological examination, which reveals symmetrical degeneration of bilateral basal ganglia. With present technology IBSN can be well demonstrated in the brain Ct scans or MRI scans nowadays. This article reports four cases with clinical manifestations which had appeared before the age of one year. Three cases had prodromal upper respiratory tract infection symptoms with vomiting, while seizure and impaired consciousness ensued. One case had several bouts of pneumonitis followed by seizures, impaired consciousness and abnormal eye movement. Brain sonogram of one of these cases showed hyper-echoic basal ganglia, while CT scans or MRI scans revealed symmetrical hypodensity or signal change over bilateral basal ganglia, respectively. All of these led to a bedridden life. These four cases are reported based on their clinical presentations and brain imaging findings, in spite of the absence of pathological confirmation. Some of the literature are also reviewed. To sum up, IBSN should be kept in mind in the differential diagnosis of symmetrical bilateral basal ganglia lesion after the exclusion of other disorders such as neurometabolic disorders, central nervous system infection, carbon monoxide intoxication, hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy, tumors and cerebrovascular disorders etc.
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PMID:[Infantile bilateral necrosis of the striatum of corpus: report of four cases]. 151 18

A 5-year-old girl was admitted to our hospital because of fever, vomiting, diarrhea, convulsion and disturbance of consciousness. She was diagnosed as having acute encephalopathy, which is characterized by the symmetrical low density area in the thalami on CT. Serial MRI findings revealed the bleeding with edema in the thalami, and multifocal lesions with prolonged T1 and T2 relaxation time in the acute phase of the illness. Multifocal lesions were no longer found two months later. The sequential changes on the images about the bleeding in the thalami were not confirmed by simultaneous CT scans. The findings of the bleeding in the thalamic lesion are consistent with those of an autopsy report previously described and indicate the vascular involvement in the thalami in acute encephalopathy, which is characterized by the symmetrical thalamic lesions with the characteristic finding of low density on CT scans.
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PMID:[A case of acute encephalopathy with symmetrical low density areas in the thalami on CT; serial CT and MRI findings]. 152 May 14


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