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)
A very rare case of the choroid plexus carcinoma of the left lateral ventricle with metastasis to bone was reported. A two-month-old baby was suffering from irritability and
vomiting
. Her vital signs became progressively worse. On admission she showed an increased head circumference and meningeal irritation signs. An emergency tapping of the right lateral ventricle at the anterior fontanel revealed the bloody csf and an opening pressure of over 700 mm of water. All laboratory findings were negative. Cerebral angiograms showed only an internal hydrocephalus. CT scan and conray-ventriculography gave the finding of a tumor at the trigone of the left lateral ventricle. The tumor was removed "en bloc". Histological examination of the tumor revealed a choroid plexus carcinoma, which was considered met the criteria given by Russell and Rubinstein. The postoperative course was very complicated with metastasis to the right tibia, which was verified by needle biopsy. The patient died from a
cachexia
. This case was the youngest of all reported cases and very unique in the point of which the tumor metastasized to outside of the central neural axis.
...
PMID:[Choroid plexus carcinoma with metastasis to bone (author's transl)]. 49 63
Three female patients with
cachexia
are reported in whom a psychogenic emaciation (anorexia nervosa) had been assumed. The postpubertal onset of the disease, deliberate limitation of diet,
vomiting
and subsequent emaciation and--in 2 patients--amenorrhea, as well as demonstrable experience of conflict supported this. The disease ran a lethal course. Autopsy revealed serious somatic diseases (stenosis of the ileum in two cases and brain tumor in one); their symptoms had been largely overlapped by those of anorexia nervosa.
...
PMID:[The differential diagnosis of anorexia nervosa. Coincidence of somatic disease and psychogenic emaciation (author's transl)]. 81 92
Four patients having high-level quadriplegia developed elevated serum calcium concentrations (11 to 15.8 mg/100 ml) within three months of injury. All were young males (ages 15 to 19 years) and quadriplegic (C4-C7). Presenting symptoms were nausea,
vomiting
, polydipsia, polyuria and lethargy. In two patients severe muscle wasting and
cachexia
with clinical symptoms developed and persisted for several months. Laboratory studies in all patients showed negative calcium balance with hypercalciuria. Reduced renal function was seen in all patients but returned to normal with return of normal serum calcium. Alkaline phosphatase level was normal in three and elevated in one. Serum parathormone levels were normal. Roentgenograms revealed diffuse demineralization. Nephrocalcinosis and soft tissue calcifications developed in one patient. Primary treatment included reduced calcium intake, correction of dehydration, sodium infusion and remobilization. Corticosteroids, oral phosphates, furosemide and mithramycin were used with varying success to control prologned symptoms and severe hypercalcemia.
...
PMID:Immobilization hypercalcemia in spinal cord injury. 83 59
Congenital diaphragmatic hernia (CDH) is a common cause of severe respiratory distress in the newborn. However, the presentation of CDH in older children and adults is rare, and, therefore, little is known concerning its symptoms, operative management, and postoperative complications. Thirteen patients (age range: 2 months to 26 years; 5 males, 8 females) presented with CDH. Four patients had right-sided hernias, eight left-sided hernias, and one bilateral hernias. Symptoms included chronic respiratory tract infections in 6 patients,
vomiting
in 5, weight loss in 1, severe failure to thrive in 2, and severe respiratory distress in 3; one patient was asymptomatic. Physical signs included the absence of breathing sounds or bowel sounds in the chest in eight patients, hyperresonance in one, and
cachexia
in two. The diagnosis was confirmed in each patient by chest roentgenogram or gastrointestinal contrast radiograph. All patients underwent immediate repair. After reduction of the viscera, 12 of 13 patients underwent primary diaphragm repair, whereas one patient required a prosthetic diaphragm patch. Twelve of 13 patients (92%) survived. Postoperatively, 7 of the 12 survivors (58%) developed severe gastric atony, and four required further operative therapy. In contrast to newborns, CDH in the older child and adult is frequently seen on the right side, rarely presents with severe respiratory distress, and is occasionally asymptomatic. Postoperative gastric atony is a major cause of morbidity, making transabdominal repair with simultaneous pyloroplasty and/or feeding jejunostomy the preferred operative approach.
...
PMID:Congenital diaphragmatic hernia beyond infancy. 167 Feb 42
Survival of 74 patients with proven gallbladder carcinoma was studied retrospectively. Initial treatment consisted of cholecystectomy, cholecystectomy and common bile duct exploration, bypass procedure (hepatojejunostomy) or laparotomy and biopsy or percutaneous biliary drainage. Staging (according to the American Joint Committee on Cancer) was the most important determinant for survival (chi 2 = 29.34; df 3; p less than 0.001). Most individual complaints such as pain (chi 2 = 1.66;), nausea/
vomiting
(chi 2 = 0.35), and palpable mass (chi 2 = 2.62) were not related significantly with survival. However
cachexia
(chi 2 = 17.12; df I; p less than 0.001) was correlated with decreased survival. Establishing the diagnosis preoperatively was associated with significantly shorter survival (chi 2 = 22.67; df I; p less than 0.001) than establishment at the moment of hospitalisation. In a hospital where a radical surgical treatment is not performed, less invasive non surgical therapy (insertion of an endoprosthesis) could probably be considered for this group of patients. Selected patients should be referred to a centre for a radical surgical approach.
...
PMID:[Prognostic factors for the survival time in gallbladder carcinoma]. 173 43
After observations concerning the cultivation, the trade and the use of coca by the Peruvian population, several Spanish physicians--among whom MONARDES--had already in the XVIth century, proposed to use this plant as a medicine. Therapeutical experiments however were not effected until the second half of the XIXth century. In 1559 the Italian neurologist MANTEGAZZA was the first to try out the remedy on himself and to advocate the use of coca as an internal medicine. Experiments with cocaine were still made during about twenty years, until more and more therapeutical applications clearly appeared. In psychiatry cocaine was used--also on Freud's recommendation--as an euphoriant excitant in cases of melancholia, both physical and psychic exhaustion and of
cachexia
. It was further used as a substitution therapy for morphine-addicts. 1884 also meant a break-through for the use of cocaine as a local anesthetic. It was first used in eye-surgery and was applied later on in dentistry and in cases of minor surgery. Local pain-killing injections seems to have been used at the beginning of our century in all sorts of indications. Cocaine was also applied to cure asthma, mountain-sickness, sea-sickness, pregnancy
vomiting
and all possible sorts of cramping pains. Although in the last years of the XIXth century the medical literature already clearly warned against the danger of therapeutically induced cocaine mania, it is only several years after World War I that the use of cocaine pills for painful diseases of the mouth and of the upper digestion organs still appeared. Between 1880 and 1930, we may assert that cocaine had taken the place of the universal panacea of the Middle Ages, the Theriaca.
...
PMID:[Cocaine: half a century of therapeutic use (1880-1930)]. 181
Anorexia,
cachexia
, and resultant weight loss are major clinical problems in a substantial proportion of patients with advanced cancer. Effective means of alleviating these problematic symptoms are lacking. Extensive clinical data demonstrate a weight enhancing effect for the serotonin antagonist, cyproheptadine, in several clinical situations. In addition, sound basic research suggests that cyproheptadine may be helpful in patients with cancer anorexia/
cachexia
. Because of this, the authors performed a randomized, placebo-controlled, double-blinded clinical trial using cyproheptadine, 8 mg orally three times a day in 295 patients with advanced malignant disease. Patients assigned to cyproheptadine had less nausea (P = 0.02), less
emesis
(P = 0.11), more sedation (P = 0.07), and more dizziness (P = 0.01) than placebo patients. Patients' appetites, measured by serial patient-completed questionnaires, appeared to be mildly enhanced by cyproheptadine. Unfortunately, cyproheptadine did not significantly abate progressive weight loss in these patients with advanced malignant disease; patients assigned to cyproheptadine lost an average of 4.5 pounds per month compared to 4.9 pounds per month for patients assigned to a placebo (P = 0.72).
...
PMID:A controlled trial of cyproheptadine in cancer patients with anorexia and/or cachexia. 218 85
Preliminary information has suggested that megestrol acetate leads to appetite stimulation and nonfluid weight gain in patients with breast cancer, other cancers, and AIDS. Pursuant to this, we developed a randomized, double-blind, placebo-controlled trial of megestrol acetate in patients with cancer-associated anorexia and
cachexia
. We randomly assigned 133 eligible patients to receive 800 mg of megestrol acetate per day or a placebo. Patients assigned to megestrol acetate more frequently reported improved appetite (P = .003) and food intake (P = .009) when compared with patients receiving the placebo. A weight gain of 15 lb or more over baseline was seen in 11 of 67 (16%) patients receiving megestrol acetate compared with one of 66 (2%) given the placebo (P = .003). Patients receiving megestrol acetate reported significantly less nausea (13% vs. 38%; P = .001) and
emesis
(8% vs. 25%, P = .009). No clinically or statistically significant toxic reactions were ascribed to megestrol acetate, with the exception of mild edema. This study convincingly demonstrated that megestrol acetate can stimulate appetite and food intake in patients with anorexia and
cachexia
associated with cancer, leading to significant weight gain in a proportion of such patients.
...
PMID:Controlled trial of megestrol acetate for the treatment of cancer anorexia and cachexia. 199 53
Brain stem glioma is the third most common childhood brain tumor, comprising 10-15% of this group of neoplasms. Typical presenting symptoms include ataxia, diplopia and headache, while signs of increased intracranial pressure occur later in the clinical course. Although prolonged failure to thrive, characterized by
cachexia
and
vomiting
are rare manifestations of brain stem lesions, in this study we report a 9.5-year-old boy with failure to thrive since infancy which remitted after excision of a brain stem astrocytoma.
...
PMID:Chronic dysphagia, vomiting and gastroesophageal reflux as manifestations of a brain stem glioma: a case report. 248 55
Abdominal tuberculosis is a rare disease in Western countries and remains difficult to diagnose. The most frequent symptoms are abdominal pain, weight loss, fever,
vomiting
, constipation and/or diarrhea. Clinical findings include abdominal tenderness, a palpable mass (often in the right fossa due to ileocecal infection), paleness,
cachexia
and ascites. Suggested radiological investigations include plain abdominal film, upper GI-series and barium enema. Chest X-rays often show signs of either active or inactive tuberculosis. Sputum and gastric juice should be cultured. Coloscopy serves to sample specimens for histology and bacteriology and may help to confirm the diagnosis, which is, however, not ruled out by negative findings. The same holds good for peritoneal biopsy and laparoscopy. Bowel perforation and ileus are frequent complications and always require surgery, whereas uncomplicated cases can be treated by drugs only.
...
PMID:[Abdominal tuberculosis and open lung tuberculosis caused by mycobacterium bovis]. 265 75
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
Next >>