Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Anorexia nervosa (AN) and bulimia nervosa (BN) are potentially fatal eating disorders which primarily affect adolescent females. Differentiating eating disorders from primary gastrointestinal (GI) disease may be difficult. GI disorders are common in eating disorder patients, symptomatic complaints being seen in over half. Moreover, many GI diseases sometimes resemble eating disorders. Inflammatory bowel disease, acid peptic diseases, and intestinal motility disorders such as achalasia may mimic eating disorders. However, it is usually possible to distinguish these by applying the diagnostic criteria for eating disorders and by obtaining common biochemical tests. The primary features of AN are profound weight loss due to self starvation and body image distortion; BN is characterized by binge eating and self purging of ingested food by
vomiting
or laxative abuse. GI complications in eating disorders are common. Recurrent
emesis
in BN is associated with dental abnormalities, parotid enlargement, and electrolyte disturbances including
metabolic alkalosis
. Hyperamylasemia of salivary origin is regularly seen, but may lead do an erroneous diagnosis of pancreatitis. Despite the weight loss often seen in eating disorders, serum albumin, cholesterol, and carotene are usually normal. However, serum levels of trace metals such as zinc and copper often are depressed, and hypophosphatemia can occur during refeeding. Patients with eating disorders frequently have gastric emptying abnormalities, causing bloating, postprandial fullness, and
vomiting
. This usually improves with refeeding, but sometimes treatment with pro-motility agents such as metoclopromide is necessary. Knowledge of the GI manifestations of eating disorders, and a high index of suspicion for one condition masquerading as the other, are required for the correct diagnosis and management of these patients.
...
PMID:Gastrointestinal and nutritional aspects of eating disorders. 840 9
We report the case of a 16-month-old boy who presented with chronic
vomiting
, failure to thrive, arterial hypertension and medullary nephrocalcinosis. Laboratory results revealed hypokalaemia,
metabolic alkalosis
, increased urinary potassium excretion and a hyporeninaemic hypoaldosteronism. Chromatographic determination of urinary steroid metabolites showed an abnormal elevation of tetrahydrocortisol and allo-tetrahydrocortisol compared to tetrahydrocortisone; this pattern of urinary steroid excretion is essential for the diagnosis of the syndrome of apparent mineralocorticoid excess type 1 and believed to be a result of the underlying metabolic defect, a decreased activity of the 11 beta-hydroxysteroid dehydrogenase. A second variant, called syndrome of apparent mineralocorticoid excess type 2, has similar clinical features but lacks the typical urinary steroid profile. Therapy with spironolactone resulted in growth, weight gain and blood pressure control.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of a child with the syndrome of apparent mineralocorticoid excess type 1. 883 92
The characteristic clinical features of Bartter syndrome consist of hypokalemia, hypochloremic
metabolic alkalosis
, and normal blood pressure despite hyperreninemia and hyperaldosteronism. Some are constantly present, such as juxtaglomelular hyperplasia, decrease of the pressor response for angiotensin II infusion, impairment of concentrating ability, and elevated prostaglandin E2 and I2, while others such as hypomagnesemia are observed in some cases. The primary cause remains unknown, but the most likely candidate is reduced sodium chloride reabsorption in the thick ascending limb of Henle's loop. Exclusion of pseudo-Bartter syndrome, mainly of surreptitious
vomiting
and diuretic abuse, is necessary to diagnose the syndrome. The current therapy focuses on multiple agents to reduce massive potassium loss and to inhibit the syntheses of prostaglandin.
...
PMID:[Bartter syndrome]. 890 40
Bartter's syndrome (BS) is a disease with severe hypokalaemia due to renal potassium wasting. The potassium loss is due to lesions at different sites within the renale tubule. Additional features include
metabolic alkalosis
, excess renal production of prostaglandins, hyperreninaemia, hyperaldosteronism and impaired pressor responses to exogenous angiotensin II. These secondary features are the result of renal potassium wasting. Symptoms are due to potassium deficiency, but many adult patients feel well despite marked hypokalaemia. The hypocalciuric variant of BS is called Gitelman's syndrome. These patients have a more benign course. The diagnosis of BS is one of exclusion, mainly of surreptitious
vomiting
, diuretic or laxative abuse. The primary treatment is potassium supplementation often in combination with potassium-sparing diuretics, prostaglandin inhibitors or ACE-inhibitors. With coexisting magnesium deficiency, magnesium supplementation might be effective.
...
PMID:[Bartter's syndrome. A condition with chronic hypokalemia]. 896 74
We undertook the present study to examine the acid-base and electrolyte disturbances in relation to hydration status in patients with diabetic ketoacidosis (DKA). A total of 40 insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus patients (22 male, 18 female), aged 18-61 years with DKA admitted to our hospital during the last 2 years, were studied. The duration of diabetes averaged 9 +/- 2 years. In all cases a detailed investigation of the acid-base status and electrolyte parameters was performed. Twenty-one patients had a pure metabolic acidosis with an increased serum anion gap, seven had DKA combined with hyperchloremic metabolic acidosis, nine had DKA coexisting with
metabolic alkalosis
, while three had DKA with a concurrent respiratory alkalosis. Hydration status as evidenced by the ratio of urea/creatinine seems to play an important role in the development of mixed acid-base disorders (detected by changes in the ratios delta anion gap/delta bicarbonate (delta AG/delta HCO3) and sodium/chloride (Na/Cl)). In fact, hyperchloremic acidosis developed in the patients with the better hydration status. However, contradictorily, the severely dehydrated patients who experienced recurrent episodes of
vomiting
developed DKA with a concurrent
metabolic alkalosis
. Finally, patients with pneumonia or gram-negative septicemia exhibited DKA combined with a primary respiratory alkalosis. We conclude that patients with DKA commonly develop mixed acid-base disorders, which are partly dependent on patients' hydration status.
...
PMID:Acid-base and electrolyte disturbances in patients with diabetic ketoacidosis. 896 87
Between January 1993 and April 1994, 5 patients with cystic fibrosis, aged 4-9 months, were admitted to the Department of Pediatrics, University of Berne, Switzerland, with acute, severe
metabolic alkalosis
(sodium < 133 mmol/l, plasma potassium < 3.5, chloride < 85, bicarbonate > 35.0 mmol/l, blood pH > 7.43). 87 cases of acute
metabolic alkalosis
complicating cystic fibrosis reported in the literature between 1951 and 1995 were also reviewed. Our cases and those described in the literature demonstrate that acute
metabolic alkalosis
occurs in patients aged 2 years or less. Anorexia,
vomiting
, respiratory exacerbation, fever, and body weight loss often precede
metabolic alkalosis
. Furthermore,
metabolic alkalosis
is a common initial presentation of cystic fibrosis, suggesting that this diagnosis should be considered in the context of unexplained
metabolic alkalosis
.
...
PMID:Acute metabolic alkalosis in cystic fibrosis: prospective study and review of the literature. 1043 8
A case of 23-years old patient with tetany, sporadic
vomiting
and
metabolic alkalosis
with hypercreatinemia in laboratory investigations is presented. The exciting course was chronic ulcer disease complicated by pyloric stenosis. The painless course of a chronic disease combined with good general condition called attention.
...
PMID:[A case of tetany in a 23-year old patient as the first manifestation of chronic pyloric stenosis]. 937 89
A 67 year old woman was admitted with a three week history of
vomiting
, having become increasingly confused for three days. Investigations revealed deranged serum biochemistry consistent with a combination of a diabetic non-ketotic hyperosmolar state and a
metabolic alkalosis
consistent with gastric outflow obstruction. She was treated with intravenous saline, intravenous insulin, and subcutaneous heparin, but did not improve clinically and had an asystolic cardiac arrest the following day; she was transferred to the intensive care unit and despite treatment with inotropes she died 40 hours after admission. Necropsy revealed that the stomach was massively dilated with gas and stomach contents, and contained many small black faceted gall stones. In addition a large nonfaceted brown-yellow gall stone was wedged in the pyloric antrum causing total obstruction. The patient had died from a complex metabolic derangement including non-ketotic hyperosmotic diabetic coma and
metabolic alkalosis
precipitated by the acute gastric outflow obstruction complicated by previously undiagnosed type II diabetes mellitus.
...
PMID:Gastric outflow obstruction caused by gall stones and leading to death by complex metabolic derangement. 946 52
We report a hypertrophic pyloric stenosis case with an unusual initial presentation of seizures and Bartter's syndrome like symptoms. This case suffered from
vomiting
, diarrhea and poor appetite for several days, and seizures developed after these symptoms. From laboratory tests, hypochloremic and hypokalemic
metabolic alkalosis
associated with hyperreninemia, hyperaldosteronism and normal blood pressure were noted. Pseudo-Bartter's syndrome was diagnosed through these clinical and laboratory tests. Although the first abdominal echo was negative, we still speculated about the peculiar symptoms of
vomiting
and it's relationship to pseudo-Bartter's syndrome. After all, we found the hypertrophic pyloric stenosis through an upper gastrointestinal series. From these experiences, we postulated that it's very important to put the hypertrophic pyloric stenosis into the differential diagnosis of pseudo-Batter's syndrome.
...
PMID:Infantile hypertrophic pyloric stenosis presenting as pseudo-Bartter's syndrome and seizures: report of one case. 968 26
In July 1996 a 43-year-old illiterate Hispanic woman presented with uncontrollable
vomiting
, palpitations and confusion. In 1994, despite several hospitalisations in other medical centres where a cerebral CT-scan, oesogastroduodenoscopy, colonoscopy and abdominal ultrasound were performed, no satisfactory diagnosis could be found. A psychiatric origin was finally considered. On admission, the laboratory findings showed severe
metabolic alkalosis
with associated hypokalaemia, confirmatory evidence of
vomiting
. The ECG showed tremendous P waves (5 mV) in the standard derivations, which can be explained by the hypokalaemia, with multiple supraventricular extrasystoles. Echocardiography and pulmonary scintigraphy ruled out pulmonary hypertension and a pulmonary embolus. After additional discussion with her daughter we discovered that the patient had been treating chronic headaches for years with 4-5 Cafergot-PB suppositories per day. This drug contains 2 mg ergotamine tartrate, 100 mg butalbital, 100 mg caffeine and 0.25 mg belladona alkaloids. As is known,
vomiting
is a classical symptom of ergotamine intoxication. After rehydration we discovered a megaloblastic anaemia with a folate deficiency compatible with chronic barbiturate intoxication. Folate and iron supplementation allowed a rapid normalisation of the haemoglobin values. Five months after having stopped the Cafergot-PB, the patient was well and did not vomit anymore. The headaches were treated with chlorpromazine with a good result. Despite sophisticated technical means, the diagnosis could only be established after a thorough history taking. This message should be heard in times when high tech medicine tends to obscure the place of a good history taking!
...
PMID:[Intractable vomiting, convulsions and megaloblastic anemia: anamnesis, key to diagnosis]. 1043 23
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>