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Query: UMLS:C0042963 (
vomiting
)
31,883
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Metabolic alkalosis is regarded as the "classical" electrolyte abnormality occurring with hypertrophic pyloric stenosis (HPS) but recent experience suggests that atypical electrolyte findings frequently occur and delay establishing the correct diagnosis. The records of 65 infants with HPS treated by pyloromyotomy during the past 4 years were reviewed to determine the serum electrolytes at the initial presentation. The four study groups formed included 8 (12.3%) patients in group A with serum bicarbonate (
HCO3
) below 18 mEq/L (mean 15.7 +/- 0.5 mEq/L); 19 (29%) in group B with
HCO3
between 18 and 25 (22.9 +/- 0.3); 22 (33.8%) in group C with
HCO3
between 25 and 30 (27.0 +/- 0.3) and 16 (24.6%) in group D with
HCO3
over 30 (34.0 +/- 0.9). Established values for normal
HCO3
in neonates is 20.1 +/- 2.5 (mean +/- SD). The mean values in group D for
HCO3
, potassium (4.0 +/- 0.18 mEq/L), and chloride (88.75 +/- 2.15 mEq/L) were each significantly different (p less than 0.001) from determinations of similar electrolytes in other groups. The duration of
vomiting
in group D of 10.5 +/- 1.3 days is almost double the time (p less than 0.001) in group A, and was associated with more severe dehydration, predominantly acid urine (pH less than 6), and ketonuria as compared to other groups. No significant difference in other demographic characteristics including the age at presentation, the gestational age, sex distribution, or types of formula used was observed. The results of the study emphasize that serum electrolytes in early HPS may be normal, that
HCO3
is significantly lower than established normals for older children, and that the effects of hydrogen-ion loss elevating the serum
HCO3
precedes alterations in other serum electrolytes.
...
PMID:The spectrum of serum electrolytes in hypertrophic pyloric stenosis. 662 80
We have observed 27 migraineurs whose headaches occurred in groups separated by headache-free periods. Twenty-one of the patients were women. The headaches occurred on either side in most patients. The headaches were severe lasting for an average of 25.5 hours, often preceded by scintillating scotomas, and often associated with nausea,
vomiting
, and photophobia. The attacks occurred in cycles that lasted an average of six weeks. The cycles recurred an average of five times per year; during the cycles, severe migraine occurred several times per week. In many patients, the cycles were often accompanied by a constant, low-grade headaches and depression. Twenty-two patients were treated with lithium
carbonate
. Complete or partial control of the headaches was achieved in 19 patients.
...
PMID:Cyclical migraine. 678 69
Results of arterial blood gas and acid-base analysis on initial samples prior to therapy were reviewed for 220 dogs admitted to the University of Georgia Veterinary Teaching Hospital. Acidemia or alkalemia was detected in 61 of 220 dogs (28%). The most common acid-base abnormality was metabolic acidosis (79 of 220 dogs--36%). Primary metabolic acidosis was the acid-base category associated most frequently with the combination of
vomiting
and diarrhea, dehydration, and the combination of polydipsia and polyuria, whereas normal mean arterial PCO2 and [
HCO3
-] values and primary metabolic acidosis were detected with equal frequency in
vomiting
, diarrhea, and cyanosis. Arterial hypoxemia was found most frequently in patients with restrictive respiratory tract disease (restricted lung expansion), lower respiratory tract disease, heartworm disease, and circulatory system disease. Significantly lower (P less than or equal to 0.05) arterial pH and PO2 were detected initially in dogs that eventually died, as compared with dogs that were improved at the time of discharge from the hospital. Mean [
HCO3
-] values also were lower initially in dogs that eventually died, as compared with those that improved, but the differences were not statistically significant.
...
PMID:Arterial blood gas and acid-base values in dogs with various diseases and signs of disease. 678 5
We describe our preliminary experience with five children who received acetate-free biofiltration, a modification of haemodiafiltration without buffer in the dialysate and simultaneous infusion of bicarbonate through a venous port. Adequacy of haemodialysis (HD) was achieved with 3 h treatments three times per week (mean Kt/v 1.35 +/- 0.29, mean protein catabolic rate (PCR) 1.4 +/- 0.3 mg/dl). During the session, pH increased from 7.4 pre HD to 7.5 post HD. The mean bicarbonate infused as a 0.166 M solution averaged 235 +/- 35 mEq/h. Hypertension did not occur. There were no cramps, hypotension or
vomiting
.
Bicarbonate
requirements correlated significantly with dialyser surface area and body weight (r = 0.76, P < 0.001).
...
PMID:Paediatric experience with acetate-free biofiltration. 763 33
Oral rehydration therapy (ORT) has simplified treatment of diarrheal dehydration. Hospitals in India have diarrheal treatment and training units (DTUs) to help manage the many diarrheal cases. DTU staff keep children for 4-6 hours to correct the dehydration with ORT and feeding. Health personnel undergo training in diarrhea management at DTUs. ORT is the preferred treatment in almost all cases of acute diarrhea. It is not best for diarrheal cases which exhibit shock, profuse
vomiting
(3 times/hour), glucose malabsorption, abdominal distension or paralytic ileus, and high rate of purging (15 ml/kg body weight/hour). ORT successfully treats 95% cases of infantile diarrhea, even Rotavirus-caused diarrhea. Health workers should begin treating cases of severe dehydration with intravenous (IV) therapy and then administer ORT 3-4 hours later for infants and 1-2 hours later for adults. If IV therapy is not possible, the patient should receive oral rehydration solution (ORS) nasogastrically and then referred to a facility with IV therapy. WHO's ORS formula is safe for newborns and young infants. ORT is appropriate even when diarrheal cases are
vomiting
. ORT tends to stop
vomiting
1-2 hours after initial ORS administration because it corrects acidosis. The glucose in WHO's ORS facilitates absorption of adequate sodium across the intestinal mucous membrane. ORS also restores the loss potassium ions and
HCO3
/citrate. If ORS is not available, sugar salt solution can be used. To achieve the optimum concentration, the amount of sucrose has to be twice that of glucose. ORS should be stored in a cool place, be covered, and used for no more than 24 hours. Antiemetics should not be given during ORT. Most diarrheas do not require any antibiotic. Sterile water is not necessary to prepare ORS. Rice gruel, coconut water, and pulse water are home available fluids which can treat dehydration. Breast feeding and regular feeding should continue during diarrheal episodes.
...
PMID:Answers to questions in relation to oral rehydration therapy. 783 4
Milk-alkali syndrome is characterized by progressive hypercalcemia, systemic alkalosis, and renal insufficiency. After calcium
carbonate
is ingested with diary products, hypercalcemia and alkalosis may develop in susceptible persons, particularly those with underlying renal insufficiency. We describe a young woman who neither drank milk nor had peptic ulcer disease, yet who ingested enough calcium
carbonate
to require admission to an intensive care unit for acute renal failure. Chronically bulimic, she was taking Rolaids (Warner-Lambert Co, Morris Plains, NJ), which contained calcium
carbonate
, and was eating yogurt daily to prevent osteoporosis. We discuss the characteristics and complex metabolic interactions of the milk-alkali syndrome, a critical but generally reversible electrolyte disorder. Early recognition of coincident hypercalcemia and alkalosis and prompt cessation of calcium
carbonate
ingestion are essential for successful recovery. Finally, we suggest that nephrologists should discourage patients with renal insufficiency and chronic
vomiting
from consuming calcium-containing antacids and excessive dietary calcium.
...
PMID:Rolaids-yogurt syndrome: a 1990s version of milk-alkali syndrome. 865 5
The progression of animal life from the paleozoic ocean to rivers and diverse econiches on the planet's surface, as well as the subsequent reinvasion of the ocean, involved many different stresses on ionic pattern, osmotic pressure, and volume of the extracellular fluid bathing body cells. The relatively constant ionic pattern of vertebrates reflects a genetic "set" of many regulatory mechanisms--particularly renal regulation. Renal regulation of ionic pattern when loss of fluid from the body is disproportionate relative to the extracellular fluid composition (e.g., gastric juice with
vomiting
and pancreatic secretion with diarrhea) makes manifest that a mechanism to produce a biologically relatively inactive extracellular anion
HCO3
- exists, whereas no comparable mechanism to produce a biologically inactive cation has evolved. Life in the ocean, which has three times the sodium concentration of extracellular fluid, involves quite different osmoregulatory stress to that in freshwater. Terrestrial life involves risk of desiccation and, in large areas of the planet, salt deficiency. Mechanisms integrated in the hypothalamus (the evolutionary ancient midbrain) control water retention and facilitate excretion of sodium, and also control the secretion of renin by the kidney. Over and above the multifactorial processes of excretion, hypothalamic sensors reacting to sodium concentration, as well as circumventricular organs sensors reacting to osmotic pressure and angiotensin II, subserve genesis of sodium hunger and thirst. These behaviors spectacularly augment the adaptive capacities of animals. Instinct (genotypic memory) and learning (phenotypic memory) are melded to give specific behavior apt to the metabolic status of the animal. The sensations, compelling emotions, and intentions generated by these vegetative systems focus the issue of the phylogenetic emergence of consciousness and whether primal awareness initially came from the interoreceptors and vegetative systems rather than the distance receptors.
...
PMID:Hypothalamic integration of body fluid regulation. 869 5
The increased occurrence of dental erosion from self-induced
vomiting
in bulimia nervosa is not linearly associated with the frequency or the duration of
vomiting
. Possible changes in the buffering and lubricating role of saliva in bulimia nervosa and their relationship to erosion have not been previously investigated. Chewing-gum-stimulated salivary flow rate, pH, bicarbonate concentration and viscosity were compared between two groups of
vomiting
bulimics and with 10 healthy controls. One bulimic group (n = 9) had pathological tooth wear present according to the criteria of the Tooth Wear Index and the other bulimic group (n = 10) did not. The influence of salivary pellicle on enamel acid dissolution by perchloric acid was also assessed by an enamel biopsy method.
Bicarbonate
was measured in a Natelson microgasometer. Both the bulimic groups had mean initial 3-min flow rates and overall 9-min flow rates significantly lower (p < 0.01) than the healthy subjects. The mean pH values were not significantly different between the two bulimic groups or the control group. However, the mean bicarbonate concentration in both bulimic groups was significantly less (p < 0.01) than in the control group. The mean salivary viscosity of 7.4 centipoise (cP), measured by a DV1 Brookfield viscometer, was significantly greater (p < 0.05) in the pathological tooth-wear-present group than in the tooth-wear-absent group (4.5 cP) and the control group (4.1 cP). Slightly more calcium was released from the pellicle-free surface in both groups but this was not statistically significant, whilst the dissolved calcium in enamel biopsies was significantly lower (p < 0.05) in the tooth-wear-present group.
...
PMID:Salivary factors in vomiting bulimics with and without pathological tooth wear. 887 90
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
A 41-year-old man died in 1995 during ketoacidotic coma. He suffered from chronic manic depression, used lithium
carbonate
, and consulted the psychiatrist and the general practitioner (GP) frequently. Diabetes had not been diagnosed. Late in 1994 the situation worsened, the patient complaining of general illness, fatigue, nausea,
vomiting
, diarrhoea, thirst and excessive drinking of soft drinks. The GP referred the patient to a neurologist who found no neurological disorder but who asked for determination of blood glucose and lithium levels, and of thyroid function. The day afterwards the neurologist went on holiday. The blood glucose level proved to be elevated (16.9 mmol/1) but nobody took any action and the GP was not informed. Six days after returning from his holiday, the neurologist who had an administration backlog, found the laboratory findings only after he had been informed that the patient had just died. The court gave the neurologist a warning. Lessons are that somatic problems should be treated as such, even in a psychiatric patient, and that a good administrative signalling system is a prerequisite for quality in medical practice.
...
PMID:[Medical and administrative neglect of high blood glucose levels; comments on a decision by a medical disciplinary tribunal]. 954 47
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