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)

A 35-year-old obese black American woman presented with nausea, vomiting, diarrhea, fever, cough, and chest pain of 2 weeks duration. She was pancytopenic and acidotic, with respiratory failure and hypotension. A diagnosis of septic shock was made, and the patient died 48 hours after admission. Blood cultures were positive for organisms that were reported to be Klebsiella rhinoscleromatis. At autopsy she had massive hepatic necrosis with numerous Mikulicz's cells. The lungs, spleen, and bone marrow were also involved. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a case of systemic infection with K rhinoscleromatis.
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PMID:Disseminated Klebsiella rhinoscleromatis infection. 268 80

Features of the courses in 12 children who died of an acute attack of asthma were compared with those in 12 children of comparable age and sex who had a life-threatening attack of asthma but survived. Information obtained by structured interviews with the families and physicians and from the medical records was used to characterize (1) the patient, family, severity, and treatment of asthma primarily in the 6 months before the attack and (2) medical circumstances and patient characteristics present on the day of and/or during the acute episode. Patients in the study (mean age, 14.1 years) and controls (mean age, 13.8 years) were in early to late adolescence, had similar long-term medication use histories and an overall rating of the severity of asthma. For the analysis of the information concerning the 6 months before the attacks, the study patients had a greater frequency of respiratory failure requiring intubation, a decrease in steroid use in the month before the attack, history of family disturbance, abnormal reaction to separation or loss, and expressed hopelessness and despair. For the period more immediately surrounding the acute attack, study patients more often had attacks starting during sleep, but less frequently experienced vomiting during the course of the attacks. Treatment of the attack by the parents was poor (primarily because of delays) in 7 of the 12 children who died, but was also a factor in 6 of the 12 controls. Our data suggest that certain characteristics of asthmatic children may place them at greater risk for death due to their asthma. In addition, we postulate that there may be inherent differences in the mechanisms of the acute attacks between the children who died and those who survived.
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PMID:Circumstances surrounding the deaths of children due to asthma. A case-control study. 235 91

A severe infantile form of nemaline myopathy has a high mortality rate when untreated because of subsequent malnutrition and respiratory failure. Three infants with this condition demonstrated persistent vomiting, poor weight gain, and recurrent pneumonias. Esophageal manometry demonstrated decreased lower esophageal sphincter pressures and low amplitude peristalsis; 24-hour esophageal pH monitoring revealed significant gastroesophageal reflux. Medical therapy was ineffective in relieving symptoms. After antireflux surgery, vomiting and respiratory symptoms ceased, and there was no longer significant gastroesophageal reflux during pH monitoring. Our experience indicates that in some infants with nemaline myopathy a severe form of gastroesophageal reflux develops that is not responsive to medical therapy. Early surgical intervention may decrease life-threatening complications associated with gastroesophageal reflux in these infants.
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PMID:Gastroesophageal reflux associated with nemaline myopathy of infancy. 333 76

Seventy-two patients with rheumatoid arthritis had been treated with pulse weekly oral methotrexate with a mean followup of one year. Minor side effects (oral ulcers, transient elevation of liver enzymes, nausea, vomiting) were present in 46 patients (63.8%), whereas major side effects (severe infection, cytopenia, respiratory failure, seizures, gastrointestinal bleeding) were present in 7 (9.7%), 2 of whom died. Patients with major side effects had shorter disease duration and increased frequency of extraarticular manifestations as compared to those with no side effects. No association between a particular clinical or genetic variable and occurrence of side effects to methotrexate was found.
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PMID:Toxicity of methotrexate in rheumatoid arthritis. 357 37

An outbreak of influenza virus type B infection occurred in Philadelphia from December, 1985, to April, 1986. During this epidemic 24 patients were admitted to Children's Hospital from whom influenza B was isolated from routine respiratory viral cultures. All were younger than 3 years of age. Clinical findings included fever (greater than or equal to 38 degrees C) (88%), rhinorrhea (62.6%), cough (50%), otitis (50%), rhonchi (42%), vomiting (38%), diarrhea (33%), rales (21%), pharyngitis (13%) and croup (4%). Remarkably 75% of the patients had underlying diseases which may have contributed to the severity of the infection. Nine (41%) patients had pneumonia. Two patients died of respiratory failure caused by overwhelming influenza B virus infection. Patients admitted to the hospital with respiratory and underlying diseases should have viral respiratory cultures which include influenza B.
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PMID:Children hospitalized with influenza B infection. 361 69

This is the first report in which a marine mollusc, Oliva vidua fulminans (olives), generally not known to be poisonous, was responsible for death in five children after consuming boiled olives with tamarind. The onset of symptoms was rapid 10 to 20 min after consumption of the olives. Signs and symptoms included nausea, vomiting, abdominal pain, tingling sensation around the lips, numbness around the mouth, drowsiness, lethargy and generalized weakness with paraesthesia in the limbs. The five deaths occurred within 3 to 4 hours after eating the poisoned olives and resulted from respiratory failure. Left-over olives from the affected household and freshly collected live olives had a toxicity of 14,200 mouse units (M.U.) and 15,000 M.U. per 100 g meat respectively. No other common chemical poison and organophosphorus insecticides were detected. The neurotoxic agent was acid and heat stable and was toxic at pH less than 4. Its action was similar to that of paralytic shellfish poisoning which was caused by toxins from certain dinoflagellates.
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PMID:Oliva vidua fulminans, a marine mollusc, responsible for five fatal cases of neurotoxic food poisoning in Sabah, Malaysia. 372

Familial dysautonomia (FD) is a rare incurable genetic disorder with multisystem involvement. Most of its clinical manifestations are related to disorders of the autonomic nervous system. The disease is associated with specific disturbances of the upper gastrointestinal tract: pharyngoesophageal dyskinesia, gastroesophageal reflux, and prolonged gastric emptying. About 40% of the dysautonomic children manifest repeat vomiting crises. In view of the extensive gastrointestinal symptomatology, children with FD are prone to repeated aspiration pneumonia and chronic respiratory failure, while inadequate calory and fluid intake may lead to a chronic state of hypovolemia and severe failure to thrive. Control of vomiting, prevention of aspiration due to abnormal swallowing, and the assurance of adequate calory intake are three major objectives in the treatment of the dysautonomic child. Medical treatment of the gastrointestinal disorders using different drugs has had limited success. This study reviews the surgical experience in ten children with FD. The type of the procedure used was determined by the severity of the upper GI disturbances. Nine children underwent gastroesophageal Nissen fundoplication and gastrostomy. In seven of them, a pyloroplasty was added. Gastrostomy alone was done in one patient only. Postoperative complications included transient dysphagia in four patients, gastric dilatation in four patients, and dumping syndrome in one. There has been no incidence of immediate postoperative death. One child died 6 months after operation from severe and irreversible respiratory failure. Following operation, the patients still suffered from dysautonomic crises but these were not associated with vomiting.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:The surgical management of children with familial dysautonomia. 408 89

1. Perfusion of 1% procaine into the cerebral ventricles of conscious dogs produced mild paresis, defaecation, vomiting, jerky movements of eyelids, brisk nystagmus, increase in amplitude of respiration and sometimes loss of consciousness. Procaine 2% produced paralysis, loss of consciousness and sometimes respiratory depression.2. Procaine 2% perfused into the cerebral ventricles of dogs under chloralose anaesthesia produced an initial increase in amplitude of respiration, which preceded its final depression, which is due primarily to procaine and only partly to a change in pH.3. The site of action for the initial increase in amplitude of respiration was in the fourth ventricle, for it did not occur on perfusion of procaine into the cranial subarachnoid space.4. Perfusion of spinal subarachnoid space with procaine is enough to cause respiratory failure even when the procaine does not reach the medulla.
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PMID:Procaine perfused into cerebral ventricles and subarachnoid space in conscious and anaesthetized dogs. 568 94

The article reviews the number of deaths in which anesthesia played a part, which occurred from 1958 to 1964 in an 800-bed hospital. 21 cases were found in which anesthesia was partially or entirely responsible for the deaths, i.e. a death rate of 1/6158; such cases are described in detail in the article. The major cause of death was respiratory failure, followed by hypovolemia and regurgitation or vomiting with aspiration. The article concludes with a review of the published literature on the subject.
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PMID:Anaesthesia and death. 596 3

The palliative treatment of esophageal carcinoma has included intubation, bypass, dilation, irradiation, and esophagogastrectomy. The last has been criticized by some on the basis of high operative morbidity and mortality. To assess the success of this method at our institution, we reviewed the 60 consecutive resections performed for carcinoma of the esophagus from January, 1972, through June, 1983. Forty-six patients had squamous cell tumors and 14, adenocarcinomas. There were 47 men and 13 women, and the mean age was 59.9 years (range, 38.5 to 78.9 years). The most frequent preoperative findings included dysphagia (55), weight loss (34), chest pain (22), and vomiting (49). Fifty (83%) out of the 60 resections were performed by the resident staff under the supervision of an attending surgeon. Four patients died within 30 days of operation, an operative mortality of 6.7%. Immediate causes of death included respiratory failure, myocardial infarction, hemorrhage, and renal failure. One of the patients who died and 3 of the survivors had an anastomotic leak. There were 27 additional complications in 24 patients: respiratory problems (8), arrhythmias (5), pleural effusion (4), gastric outlet obstruction (2), wound infection (2), and 1 each of pulmonary embolus, acute brain syndrome, congestive heart failure, myocardial infarction, chylothorax, and empyema. The one-, two-, three-, and five-year actuarial survival rates were 46%, 27%, 10%, and 5%, respectively. Mean survival for the 46 patients dead at the time of this study was 13.5 months. Outpatient follow-up data were available on 53 (95%) of the operative survivors and showed an absence of dysphagia in 87.5% during most of the follow-up period.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Esophagogastrectomy as palliative treatment for esophageal carcinoma: results obtained in the setting of a thoracic surgery residency program. 621 66


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