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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (
encephalopathy
)
18,178
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Many HIV-infected children have neurological involvement. We present our observations in 49 cases, 58% of which had some form of clinical neurological impairment. Most of the patients affected (71%) presented with progressive
encephalopathy
, characterized by
developmental delay
with loss of acquisitions and cognitive decline, an impaired growth curve, microcephaly and corticospinal dysfunction. CT-scan imaging shows cerebral atrophy in all cases and basal ganglia calcifications in 29%. Non-specific abnormalities are found on the EEG in two-thirds of cases and in the CSF in slightly less than half the cases. Pathological studies sometime revealed HIV encephalitis or lateral corticospinal tracts degeneration. Neurological impairment secondary to vascular events, neoplasms or opportunistic infections were rare, especially when compared with the adult HIV population.
...
PMID:Neurological findings in HIV-infected children: a review of 49 cases. 138 47
The neurological findings in 41 HIV-seropositive children are described. 23 children were symptomatic, eight seropositive but without symptoms and 10 seropositive children less than 15 months of age had no other evidence of immunodeficiency. Acquired microcephaly, developmental regression and progressive motor deterioration indicated HIV encephalopathy, as did
developmental delay
, mental retardation, cerebellar symptoms and behavioural changes. Three children with progressive
encephalopathy
improved after treatment with azidothymidine (AZT). In eight children treated with prophylactic intravenous immunoglobulin therapy (IVIG) and seven treated with both IVIG and AZT, no mental deterioration has been observed since the beginning of therapy. One child with advanced
encephalopathy
and severe pyramidal tract involvement did not improve.
...
PMID:Central nervous system involvement of children with HIV infection. 186 79
Eleven children were identified as being seropositive for HIV-1 at the Ethio-Swedish Children's Hospital, Addis Abeba, Ethiopia between January 1988 and September 1989. The diagnosis was confirmed by both ELISA and Western blot methods performed at the National Research Institute of Health, Special Laboratory for AIDS. The mean age was 2 years and 5 months, with a range of 1 week to 10 years. There were 7 boys and 4 girls. The most common admitting diagnoses were pneumonia (5), gastroenteritis (5), marasmus (5), disseminated tuberculosis (4), and abandonment (3). One patient had extensive facial molluscum contagiosum. Symptoms at admission or during hospitalization included diarrhoea (9), failure to thrive (8), fever (7), and cough (7). Physical findings included hepatosplenomegaly (5), lymphadenopathy (3), and oral candidiasis (2). No patient with an opportunistic infection or radiographic evidence of lymphocytic interstitial pneumonitis (LIP) was identified. Five patients were classified as marasmic and 4 as underweight. Evidence suggestive of
encephalopathy
(
developmental delay
and/or microcephaly) was present in 5 patients. The VDRL was non-reactive in the 5 patients in whom it was tested. Nine children were presumed to have acquired the infection by perinatal transmission, though the passive transfer of maternal antibodies or postnatally acquired infection could not be excluded. One child was thought to have acquired the infection by blood transfusion. Three children died during their hospital stay. Paediatric HIV infection exists in Ethiopia; however, these children do not present with characteristic opportunistic infections but with signs and symptoms reflecting the most common paediatric problems seen in the country. Prevention of HIV infection in children entails the prevention of infection in women of childbearing age, counselling of infected women, and effective screening of blood products.
...
PMID:Clinical and epidemiological features of HIV-1 seropositive hospitalized Ethiopian children. 206 May 7
We report a girl with the Rett syndrome who had acute
encephalopathy
probably induced by calcium hopantenate (HOPA). This 4-year-6-month-old girl had a history of moderate
developmental delay
and had received HOPA administration when first admitted at 2 years 6 months of age with hypoglycemia, hyperammonemia, lactic and pyruvic acidemia, and non-ketotic dicarboxylic aciduria. After this episode, she showed the rapid destructive stage of the Rett syndrome, i.e., severe psychomotor retardation with loss of speech, peculiar stereotypic hand movements, autistic behavior and seizures. Despite subsequent investigations, including analysis of urinary metabolites of organic and amino acids, measurement of serum carnitine and a muscle biopsy, we could not clarify the primary metabolic abnormalities in this girl.
...
PMID:A case of the Rett syndrome with acute encephalopathy induced during calcium hopantenate treatment. 206 99
A retrospective study was performed to determine the clinical and pathologic features, etiology, and outcome of children with the reversal sign. The reversal sign, a striking CT finding, probably represents a diffuse, anoxic/ischemic cerebral injury. CT features of the reversal sign are diffusely decreased density of cerebral cortical gray and white matter with a decreased or lost gray/white matter interface, or reversal of the gray/white matter densities and relatively increased density of the thalami, brainstem, and cerebellum. Twenty children with the reversal sign were retrospectively analyzed. We divided the patients into three groups: (1) acute reversal, (2) intermediate group, and (3) chronic reversal. There were nine cases of trauma (seven of child abuse); nine hypoxia/anoxia incidents (birth asphyxia, drowning, status epilepticus); one bacterial meningitis; and one degenerative encephalitis. All acute- and intermediate-group patients had respiratory problems requiring ventilator support and intensive care. In five of seven patients who died, autopsy findings were consistent with anoxic/ischemic
encephalopathy
. Surviving patients have profound neurologic deficits with severe
developmental delay
. The CT reversal sign carries a poor prognosis and indicates irreversible brain damage.
...
PMID:Reversal sign on CT: effect of anoxic/ischemic cerebral injury in children. 210 31
A case with acute disturbance of consciousness associated with calcium hopanthenate (HOPA) administration was reported. He was a 3-year-old boy with autistic
developmental delay
, had orally taken 1.5 g of HOPA daily for 3 months. Clinical manifestations consisted of fever, vomiting and coma. Laboratory examination revealed severe hypoglycemia and metabolic acidosis, but there were no hepatic enzyme abnormalities. Analysis of urinary organic acid profile showed that very large amounts of medium and long chain dicarboxylic acids and omega-1 hydroxy-fatty acids were excreted. In particular, 2-hydroxysebacic acid, the accumulation of which has only been reported in the urine of patients with Zellweger syndrome and neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy (NALD), was observed. Analysis of urinary acylcarnitines showed that acetylcarnitine was predominant and C6-C10 dicarboxylic acylcarnitines were also excreted. He was treated with and rapidly responded to intravenous glucose and bicarbonate. After withdrawal of the drug he has had no problems and dicarboxylic aciduria disappeared. A CT scan showed symmetric, low density areas in periventricular white matter, especially around the posterior horns of the lateral ventricles. A T2-weighted MRI scan revealed high-intensity signal in the white matter corresponding to areas of low density on CT scan. We conclude that that a large amount of HOPA administration may cause
encephalopathy
by the inhibition of both mitochondrial and peroxisomal beta-oxidation.
...
PMID:[Clinical and biochemical studies in a case of acute encephalopathy associated with calcium hopanthenate administration]. 219 43
The predominantly heterosexual transmission of human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) in Africa suggests that pediatric acquired immunodeficiency syndrome (AIDS) could develop into a significant child health problem in this region. To assist clinicians in recognizing HIV infection in African children, the clinical features of 185 children with symptomatic HIV-related disease diagnosed at the 2 central hospitals in Harare, Zimbabwe, from April 1986-July 1987 were enumerated. In this period, 185 such cases were diagnosed. 83 (47%) involved children 0-12 months of age and another 61 (35%) represented children 13-24 months old. The male/female ratio was 1.0:1.03. The most frequently recorded clinical feature (52% of cases) was generalized lymphadenopathy, with or without hepatosplenomegaly. 45% of HIV-infected children presented with respiratory symptoms and pulmonary infiltrates on chest x-ray. Failure to thrive was present in 38% of cases. Also relatively common were hepatomegaly and splenomegaly (35% and 26%, respectively). Chronic, recurrent diarrhea was present in 21%. Less frequently observed (under 10% of cases) clinical findings were maculopapular eczematoid rashes, parotid swelling, chronic suppurative otitis media, chronic mucopurulent rhinitis, meningitis, and
encephalopathy
. 3 main clinical modes of presentation were identified--children with failure to thrive or marasmus in association with chronic diarrhea and
developmental delay
, those with generalized lymphadenopathy and hepatosplenomegaly, and children who present with chronic cough with pulmonary infiltrates on chest x-ray.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation of symptomatic human immuno-deficiency virus in children. 226 23
Recurrent heritable childhood myoglobinuria is a potentially fatal entity (mortality up to 35%) in which prompt diagnosis and treatment are critical. Sixty childhood cases have been reported between 1910 to 1988, most with undiagnosed etiologies. We have studied an additional 40 cases referred to CPMC (1980-1988), suggesting that this condition is largely underdiagnosed or unreported. We have found important differences between the childhood and adult-onset cases. Of 77 cases of adult-onset recurrent myoglobinuria, 45% have been diagnosed biochemically. In contrast, only 30% of the 60 childhood cases from the literature have been diagnosed; 11 with CPT deficiency and 7 with various glycolytic defects, and only 5 of our 40 childhood cases have been diagnosed, all with CPT deficiency. The 100 combined childhood cases can be divided into an exertional group (type I) with exertion as the leading precipitating factor (46 literature and 10 CPMC cases), a toxic group (type II) with infection and/or fever as the primary precipitant (14 literature and 23 CPMC cases), and 7 undefined cases. The type I group resembles the adult-onset group in which exercise is also the leading precipitating factor. There is a slight female predominance (male/female = 1:1.3) in the toxic group vs. a marked male predominance in the exertional and adult groups (4:1). Only 4 of 37 cases (11%) of the toxic group are diagnosed (all with CPT deficiency) vs. 19 of 56 cases (34%) of the exertional group (12 CPT, 7 glycolytic) and 45% of the adult group. The toxic group is also differentiated by a higher mortality rate and by the presence of additional clinical features, including ictal bulbar signs (8 of 18),
encephalopathy
(4 of 19), and seizures (2 of 7), as well as persistent cardiac abnormalities,
developmental delay
(4 of 17), and dysmorphic features (2 of 9). These clinical characteristics clearly differentiate the childhood from the adult cases and suggest the presence of more generalized disease processes and different biochemical etiologies. A study of the heritable causes of myoglobinuria is important because identification of the biochemical defect may elucidate the pathogenetic mechanism of the myoglobinuria and facilitate the development of rational treatment strategies aimed at circumventing or correcting the metabolic block.
...
PMID:Recurrent childhood myoglobinuria. 226 36
A retrospective study was performed to determine the clinical and pathologic features, etiology, and outcome of children with the reversal sign. The reversal sign, a striking CT finding, probably represents a diffuse, anoxic/ischemic cerebral injury. CT features of the reversal sign are diffusely decreased density of cerebral cortical gray and white matter with a decreased or lost gray/white matter interface, or reversal of the gray/white matter densities and relatively increased density of the thalami, brainstem, and cerebellum. Twenty children with the reversal sign were retrospectively analyzed. We divided the patients into three groups: (1) acute reversal, (2) intermediate group, and (3) chronic reversal. There were nine cases of trauma (seven of child abuse); nine hypoxia/anoxia incidents (birth asphyxia, drowning, status epilepticus); one bacterial meningitis; and one degenerative encephalitis. All acute- and intermediate-group patients had respiratory problems requiring ventilator support and intensive care. In five of seven patients who died, autopsy findings were consistent with anoxic/ischemic
encephalopathy
. Surviving patients have profound neurologic deficits with severe
developmental delay
. The CT reversal sign carries a poor prognosis and indicates irreversible brain damage.
...
PMID:Reversal sign on CT: effect of anoxic/ischemic cerebral injury in children. 251 81
Vascular complications occurred in 3.3% (6 of 180) of children with chronic inflammatory bowel disease. Clinical disease activity was severe in four of six patients who presented with these symptoms. In contrast to adults, in whom deep-vein thrombotic complications predominate, the majority of children had involvement of the CNS including
encephalopathy
, arteritis, arterial occlusion, and thromboembolism. One patient died 3 1/2 years later from progressive intestinal and neurological deficits: morbidity included blindness, epilepsy, and
developmental delay
. Hematological parameters varied widely. Prevention is not always possible, but risk factors include: (a) family history of collagenosis (83% incidence), (b) severe inanition and immobility, (c) delayed hospitalization, and (d) clinical presentation with cutaneous vasculitis. Therapy must be individualized.
...
PMID:Neurovascular and thromboembolic complications of inflammatory bowel disease in childhood. 262 24
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