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 case of a dissecting aneurysm of the left posterior inferior cerebellar artery caused by giant cell angiitis is presented. A 22-year-old woman was admitted on August 30, 1990, with sudden onset of severe occipital headache and
vomiting
. Neurological examination on admission only showed severe
meningismus
. CT scan demonstrated subarachnoid hemorrhage and a small hematoma in the 4th ventricle. A left vertebral angiogram demonstrated that the left posterior inferior cerebellar artery was occluded at the lateral medullary segment. We diagnosed subarachnoid hemorrhage from a dissecting aneurysm. On the day following admission, the patient underwent a left suboccipital craniectomy. The posterior inferior cerebellar artery was enlarged for a distance of about 8 mm and there was typical purplish-red appearance in the dissecting aneurysm. This aneurysm was excised after trapping. The histological diagnosis was primary localized giant cell angiitis without systemic involvement. The etiology of the intracranial dissecting aneurysm is obscure, but this report suggests that cerebral angiitis can be considered as an important factor.
...
PMID:[Dissecting aneurysm of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery; a case report]. 155 79
About half of the aneurysm patients admitted to neurosurgical departments experience warning symptoms in the form of minor bleeding episodes days or even several months before a major haemorrhage occurs. Headache is the most common symptom of this warning leak, occurring in 9 out of 10 patients. The onset of headache is sudden and is unusual in severity and location, being unlike any headache the patient has otherwise experienced. It is frequently accompanied by transient nausea,
vomiting
, visual disturbances or
meningism
. Medical advice may be sought by the patient but all too often the diagnostic importance of a warning headache is missed. It is misinterpreted as attacks of migraine, tension headache, the 'flu, sinusitis, or a "sprained neck". A more vigilant attention to the presence of a warning headache probably offers the greatest opportunity for altering the otherwise serious natural history of aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage. If a warning headache is suspected, lumbar puncture is the examination of choice, once CT scanning has ruled out an intracranial mass lesion.
...
PMID:Headache as a warning symptom of impending aneurysmal subarachnoid haemorrhage. 203 71
An epidemic of group A meningococcal disease began in Auckland in May 1985. There were 122 paediatric cases of meningococcal disease in the next 25 months including 98 cases due to group A. The commonest clinical symptoms were
vomiting
, headache and photophobia, while frequent signs included fever, seizures, petechial rash and
meningism
or a bulging fontanelle. Complications were uncommon and included sterile arthritis and prolonged fever. The majority had disease confirmed by positive blood or cerebrospinal fluid culture. Significantly fewer positive cultures were seen in those treated with antibiotics prior to admission. The overall mortality was 7%. If the acute illness was survived, the only detected long term sequela was sensorineural hearing loss seen in 6%. A vaccine programme has been undertaken to control this epidemic.
...
PMID:The clinical features of paediatric meningococcal disease Auckland, 1985-87. 249 88
All cases of mumps meningoencephalitis diagnosed at our institution during the past 15 years were reviewed. There were 24 cases, 16 between 1973 and 1977, 3 between 1978 and 1985 and 5 in 1986 to 1988. Four of the recent cases occurred 19 to 26 days after receipt of a new mumps vaccine (Urabe Am 9 strain) released in Canada in 1986. The remaining 20 cases were clustered in winter and spring. The average age was 6.2 years and the ratio of males to females was 5:1. Clinical presentations were fever (90%),
vomiting
(90%),
meningismus
(70%), headache (65%), parotitis (50%) and seizures (30%). The mean cerebrospinal fluid white blood cell count was 513/mm3 (lymphocyte predominance); 55% of patients had a cerebrospinal fluid protein level of greater than 0.4 g/liter, and the cerebrospinal fluid:blood glucose ratio was greater than 0.4 in all. Two patients had adverse sequelae. The clinical and laboratory features of these cases were not significantly different from the vaccine-associated cases.
...
PMID:Clinical and epidemiologic features of mumps meningoencephalitis and possible vaccine-related disease. 259 49
Experience with typhoid fever in 111 children over a 5-year period was reviewed. There were 66 boys and 45 girls, ranging in age from 1 to 11.5 years. The symptoms of typhoid fever were quite non-specific. Fever was the most common presenting symptom (in 98.3%). Other common presenting features were diarrhoea (25.7%), constipation (22%),
vomiting
(21.1%), cough (25%), abdominal pain (27.5%), headache (9.2%), epistaxis,
meningism
and convulsions. Rose spots were detected in 20% of cases, occurring mainly during the first 2 weeks of illness. Significant Widal reactions were present in 84.7% of cases. Blood and stool cultures were positive in 57% and 44% of cases, respectively. Peripheral blood white cell counts were not found to be of great diagnostic value. Chloramphenicol remained the drug of choice in the treatment of typhoid fever. It was more effective than ampicillin or co-trimoxazole. Complications were uncommon, occurring in only two patients. There were two deaths; both were admitted late and in moribund state. Early diagnosis and treatment is vital in typhoid fever and, as the presenting features are non-specific, a high index of suspicion is required.
...
PMID:Typhoid fever in Hong Kong children. 278 7
Leptomeningeal gliomatosis is reported in three patients in whom the tumor involved the central nervous system diffusely. Clinically, these patients presented with varying combinations of both non-localizing and focal symptoms and neurologic signs. Most notable were
meningismus
,
vomiting
, headache, altered level of consciousness and papilledema. Laboratory findings included high CSF protein, high CSF pressure and hydrocephalus but no direct evidence of neoplasia. All three patients received surgical treatment for hydrocephalus. Brains were swollen on gross examination with leptomeningeal thickening resulting from diffuse infiltration of tumor cells in the leptomeninges. In two of the patients small parenchymal gliomas in the brain were probably the source of the meningeal tumor.
...
PMID:Diffuse leptomeningeal gliomatosis: report of three cases. 365 62
Some aspects of typhoid fever in 77 children are discussed. There were 48 boys and 29 girls and their ages ranged from 1 month to 12 years. The patients were treated with chloramphenicol 100 mg/kg/d during the first 2 weeks and with either amoxycillin (100 mg/kg/d) or ampicillin (200 mg/kg/d) during the third week. The average duration of fever was 5.2 days. There was 1 relapse and 1 child, a baby aged 1 month, died. The correct diagnosis was not suspected by the referring doctor in 38% of the patients. On admission the commonest complaints were fever, abdominal pain, diarrhoea, headache and
vomiting
. The commonest findings on examination were tenderness or distension of the abdomen, apathy or delirium, rhonchi or crepitations, liver enlargement and
meningism
. There was anaemia (Hb less than 10 g/dl) in 23% and lymphopenia (less than 1500/microliter) in 43% of the patients. The differential white blood cell count revealed 5% or more unsegmented neutrophils in 32% of the patients, while 25% had 10% or more band cells. Two patients (sisters) failed to respond after 15 and 16 days of therapy with chloramphenicol and ampicillin because of resistant Salmonella typhi and were successfully treated with co-trimoxazole. Practitioners caring for black patients should always be on the alert for typhoid fever; some patients may not respond to chloramphenicol or amoxicillin. During the acute phase milk feeds are best replaced by soya products because of abdominal distension or aggravation of diarrhoea by milk.
...
PMID:[Aspects of typhoid fever in children]. 376 9
Twenty-one patients with primary empty sella were studied with computed tomography iopamidol cisternography. Ten milliliters of iopamidol at a concentration of 200 mg I/mL was administered intrathecally via the lumbar route. Eleven patients had a partial and 10 a complete empty sella. In six cases the third ventricle had prolapsed to the level of the interclinoid plane. There was no relationship between the clinical presentation and the grade of empty sella. The quality of the images obtained was always good or excellent. Cisternographies were performed in all of the patients although in 13 of them the correct diagnosis could have been achieved with a standard contrast-medium-enhanced computed tomography scan. The overall complication rate was 29%. Four patients (19%) had mild headaches and nausea; two patients (10%) had more severe side effects:
vomiting
, discomfort, and
meningism
. Computed tomographic cisternography with low-concentration iopamidol is a safe diagnostic procedure that allows a definite visualization of the anatomic alterations that occur in patients with empty sella. We think that this procedure should always be employed in symptomatic patients.
...
PMID:Computed tomographic cisternography with iopamidol in the diagnosis of primary empty sella. 401 53
Eight-hundred eleven case records of patients with hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome (HFRS) caused by Puumala virus were reviewed, and particular attention was given to data regarding severe neurological manifestations. The most common symptoms were headache (97%), blurred vision (40%), and
vomiting
(31%); 27% of the patients had all three. Nine patients (1%) had severe neurological manifestations:
meningism
and cerebral hemorrhage occurred during the first week of illness, whereas epileptiform seizures and urinary bladder paralysis developed during the second week. In terms of the severity of renal failure, as evidenced by maximum serum creatinine levels, there was no difference between patients with or without severe neurological conditions. There was one fatal case due to cerebral hemorrhage; the other patients with severe neurological manifestations clinically recovered and did not have any neurological signs during 6 months of follow-up. HERS caused by Puumala virus, or a variant of it, may be associated with severe, potentially life-threatening neurological complications.
...
PMID:Neurological manifestations of hemorrhagic fever with renal syndrome caused by Puumala virus: review of 811 cases. 774 25
Listeria monocytogenes rhombencephalitis has never been studied in a significant group of patients. We describe 14 adult cases who were seen over a 10-year period. A biphasic illness was characteristic: (1) prodromes (5-15 days) with malaise, fatigue, headache, nausea or
vomiting
, and fever; (2) cranial nerve palsy with facial palsy, diplopia, dysphagia, dysarthria, usually multiple.
Meningism
and hemi- or tetraparesis were present in 11 patients and cerebellar dysfunction in 9 patients. In 4 cases, CT showed widening of the brain stem with disappearance of the surrounding cisterns. The cerebrospinal fluid was abnormal in all patients in whom this investigation was done (pleocytosis, elevation in protein content). The patients received antibiotic therapy for 2-6 weeks. In the 9 patients who recovered, the neurological dysfunction improved within 2 days to 1 week of the initiation of therapy. There were 5 deaths. At autopsy in 2 cases, there was severe purulent meningitis and rhombencephalitis with predominantly polymorphonuclear cellular infiltration in 1 case, while numerous microabscesses in the midbrain, pons and medulla were observed in the other. We conclude that L. monocytogenes infection should be considered in patients who develop fever and focal neurological signs particularly localized to the brain stem.
...
PMID:Early symptoms and outcome of Listeria monocytogenes rhombencephalitis: 14 adult cases. 849 12
1
2
3
4
5
Next >>