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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (
encephalopathy
)
18,178
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Inorganic bismuth salts are poorly soluble in water: solubility is influenced by the acidity of the medium and the presence of certain compounds with (hydr)oxy or sulfhydryl groups. The analysis of bismuth in biological material is not standardised and is subject to large variation; it is difficult to compare data from different studies, and older data should be approached with caution. The normal concentration of bismuth in blood is between 1 and 15 micrograms/L, but absorption from oral preparations produces a significant rise. Distribution of bismuth in the organs is largely independent of the compound administered or the route of administration: the concentration in kidney is always highest and the substance is also retained there for a long time. It is bound to a bismuth-metal binding protein in the kidney, the synthesis of which can be induced by the metal itself. Elimination from the body takes place by the urinary and faecal routes, but the exact proportion contributed by each route is still unknown. Elimination from blood displays multicompartment pharmacokinetics, the shortest half-life described in humans being 3.5 minutes, and the longest 17 to 22 years. A number of toxic effects have been attributed to bismuth compounds in humans: nephropathy,
encephalopathy
, osteoarthropathy, gingivitis, stomatitis and colitis. Whether hepatitis is a side effect, however, is open to dispute. Each of these adverse effects is associated with certain bismuth compounds. Bismuth
encephalopathy
occurred in France as an epidemic of toxicity and was associated with the intake of inorganic salts including bismuth subnitrate, subcarbonate and subgallate. In the prodromal phase patients developed problems in walking, standing or writing, deterioration of memory, changes in behaviour, insomnia and muscle cramps, together with several psychiatric symptoms. The manifest phase started abruptly and was characterised by changes in awareness, myoclonia, astasia and/or abasia and dysarthria. Patients recovered spontaneously after discontinuation of bismuth. Intestinal lavage, forced diuresis and haemodialysis have been tried without positive effects on the clinical condition of the patient or on blood bismuth concentration, and the use of dimercaprol as an antidote has produced reports of both positive and negative findings. To confirm the diagnosis of bismuth
encephalopathy
, it is essential to find elevated bismuth concentrations in blood, plasma, serum or
CSF
. A safety level of 50 micrograms/L and an alarm level of 100 micrograms/L have been suggested in the past, but no proof is available to support the choice of these levels.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Pharmacokinetics and toxicity of bismuth compounds. 268 29
Drug delivery to the central nervous system (CNS) is of vital concern to the therapy for primary CNS disorders and the development of drug neurotoxicity. The factors influencing drug entry into the
CSF
include the status of the blood-brain barrier (BBB) and lipid solubility, molecular weight, pKa, protein binding, and removal of the drug from the
CSF
by an exit pump in the choroid plexus. The most important of these factors is the status of the complex BBB systems. The morphologic equivalent of the BBB and its specialized functions (e.g., transport of D-glucose, amino acids, and ions) are discussed in depth. Methods developed for increasing drug delivery to the CNS by circumvention and/or manipulation of the BBB have included direct injection into the
CSF
, administration of prodrugs or chemical delivery systems, or reversible "opening" of the BBB by hyperosmotic agents, pentylenetetrazole, etoposide, DMSO, or other agents. The relevance of these general principles to selected examples of CNS infections (i.e., gram-negative aerobic bacillary meningitis and subacute
encephalopathy
associated with AIDS) is emphasized.
...
PMID:Drug delivery to the central nervous system: general principles and relevance to therapy for infections of the central nervous system. 269 Mar 2
The different methods of measuring the intracranial
CSF
spaces on CT images are described. The values obtained are demonstrated to separate the normal aging brain from the brain in senile dementia of Alzheimer's type. The CT criteria for the diagnosis of multi-infarct dementia are shown. The significance of CT studies in senile depression is discussed. The problem of vascular
encephalopathy
(leuko-araiosis) in normal aging of the brain and in dementia is considered in particular, and even the occurrence of intracranial space-occupying lesions and normal pressure hydrocephalus, as treatable causes of dementia and depression, are mentioned. The data and results of my own CT research on normal brain aging, dementia and depression are presented with reference to the literature.
...
PMID:[Problems in CT diagnosis of the aging brain]. 269 69
A male with mitochondrial myopathy,
encephalopathy
, lactic acidemia, and strokelike episodes is reported. He had also recurrent episodes of ileus. Muscle biopsy revealed ragged-red fibres. The cytochemistry of cytochrome c oxidase (CCO) showed scattered nonstained fibres, while all muscle fibres were heavily stained by immunocytochemistry using CCO antibody. These findings suggest that partical CCO deficiency may be present in the skeletal muscles of the patient. NADH cytochrome c reductase in the patient's muscle mitochondria was low compared with normal controls (about 26%), although succinate cytochrome c reductase was normal. Coenzyme Q10 administration (90 mg/day) did not improve
CSF
lactate levels, but did decrease plasma lactate levels. His muscle weakness slightly improved.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike episodes with recurrent abdominal symptoms and coenzyme Q10 administration. 282 4
A review of 15 cases of pancreas transplantation at the Presbyterian University Hospital in Pittsburgh showed that all of the neurologic complications occurred outside of the pancreas transplantation surgery itself. Major CNS complications included hypoxic
encephalopathy
(20 per cent), cerebral and spinal-cord infarction (7 per cent), and seizures (13 per cent). These appeared to be closely associated with cardiovascular collapse or cardiac arrest that often occurred following septic, hemorrhagic, or additional surgical-anesthetic stresses, removed in time from the transplantation. When patients who died of sudden cardiorespiratory arrest were included, the overall frequency of global cerebral ischemia was 33 per cent. The occurrence of herpes zoster neuritis (13 per cent) was contrasted with the lack of CNS infections. The possible associations of visual hallucinations with cyclosporine therapy (7 per cent),
CSF
pleocytosis with OKT3 therapy (7 per cent), and compressive neuropathy with operative-anesthetic monitoring (7 per cent) were discussed in relation to previous reports in the literature. Randomized controlled clinical studies were suggested to distinguish more clearly the complications due to pancreas transplantation from those due to the natural history of the underlying diabetes and to distinguish the beneficial and adverse effects of pancreas transplants from those of coexisting renal transplants.
...
PMID:Neurologic complications of pancreas transplants. 304 46
Human immunodeficiency virus type I (HIV-1) is associated with a spectrum of neurological disorders. At the time of primary HIV-1 infection, an acute aseptic meningitis or encephalitis indicates central nervous system invasion. Evidence of HIV-1 infection is found in the
CSF
of most asymptomatic seropositive individuals, suggesting viral persistence in the nervous system. After a long incubation period, viral activation is signaled by expression of HIV-1 antigen in the
CSF
, which correlates with a profound dementia in adults or with an analogous progressive
encephalopathy
in children. The neuropathological substrate of this dementing process consists of multinucleated giant cells and diffuse white matter pallor. Immunocytochemical and in situ hybridization studies demonstrate that antigen presenting cells, including blood derived macrophages and resident brain microglia, are directly infected by HIV-1, and participate in the formation of the syncytial giant cells. Astrocytes and endothelial cells may also be infected, but evidence for infection of oligodendroglia and neurons is lacking. Studies of lentiviral encephalitides in ungulates and non-human primates emphasize the importance of specific viral antigenic stimulation and the role of inflammatory cells as direct or indirect mediators of tissue damage. The disorders of the peripheral nervous system described in patients with HIV-1 infection have not been convincingly linked to direct viral infection. At least two of the neuromuscular complications, the inflammatory motor neuropathy and polymyositis are likely to have an autoimmune pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Human immunodeficiency virus type 1 (HIV-1) infection of the nervous system: a review. 307 11
This case report is about an eleven year old boy with new developed symptoms of a cellular immundeficiency and a positive HIV-serology 33 months after a CNS-leukemia relapse. After 18 weeks a progredient neurological symptomatology is beginning with motor, cognitive and behavioral disturbances and a brain atrophy in the CT-scan. These cerebral manifestations are explainable as an
encephalopathy
both through HIV and after CNS-leukemia. A SSPE has been excluded. CT, EEG, Evoked Potentials do not show differential diagnostic pathognomonic findings regarding both diseases. The
CSF
findings hint at a persistent virus infection compatibel with the postulated slow virus pathogenesis of the AIDS-
Encephalopathy
. We conclude, that in this case an etiological diagnoses is only possible through histological brain examination and through demonstration of HIV or HIV-antigen in brain tissue respectively. AZT, which is reported to be effective against the cerebral AIDS-manifestations could not be applicated because of the existing pancytopenia.
...
PMID:[AIDS encephalopathy in childhood or the late sequela of central nervous system leukemia?]. 316 63
We report two cases with abnormal
CSF
accumulation in the cranium. One case had marked dilatation of the ventricular system, for which a ventriculoperitoneal shunt was carried out. The shunt was not beneficial and it turned out that the patient was suffering from ornithine transcarbamylase deficiency. The second case developed marked subdural effusion after fulminating hepatic failure and septicemia, for which drainage of the subdural space and subsequent insertion of Ommaya reservoirs were carried out. In spite of successful
CSF
control, the outcome was bad, both cases being incapacitated due to severe
encephalopathy
probably caused by hyperammonemia. The results of serial computed tomographic follow-up are presented.
...
PMID:Marked cerebrospinal fluid collection associated with hepatic failure. 321 13
Using noninvasive (echoventriculometry (Echo-VM), REG and invasive (planimetric PEG, graphic recording of the
CSF
pressure) methods of examination, the authors determined the size of cerebral ventricles and the status of the cerebral hemo- and
CSF
dynamics in 606 patients with various chronic diseases of the brain (consequences of craniocerebral injury, epilepsy, discirculatory
encephalopathy
, etc.). According to PEG and Echo-VM findings, two groups of patients were distinguished. In moderate dilatation of cerebral ventricles the most significant finding was an increase in the pulse pressure of the
CSF
, whereas its mean pressure was normal or slightly elevated. In patients with pronounced hydrocephaly the pulse and mean pressure of the
CSF
tended to decrease. The progress of hydrocephaly was parallelled by increasing disorders of the cerebral hemodynamics expressed in hindered venous outflow from the cranial cavity and elevated peripheral vascular resistance. Four
CSF
-related syndromes have been identified (normotension, total
CSF
hypertension, intraventricular tension, total
CSF
hypotension) differing in their diagnostic and prognostic significance and in the pathogenesis of disorders of the hemo- and
CSF
dynamics.
...
PMID:[Status of the ventricular system and dynamics of the cerebrospinal fluid changes in chronic brain diseases]. 325 71
With the modern noninvasive brain imaging methods, cerebral lesions of different types and degrees can frequently be determined in infants with West syndrome. In CT examinations preceding the spasms and the ACTH therapy, "idiopathic" forms of infantile spasms were rare. The CT findings consistent with perinatal or postnatal
encephalopathy
were more frequent than those found with embryonic or fetal lesions alone. The fact that pathognomonic changes cannot be determined, may reflect the low specificity of CT diagnosis in infants with chronic CNS diseases. A slight and mostly transient enlargement of
CSF
spaces during ACTH therapy is a probable side-effect of the medication. In infants with persistent or progressive enlargement of the
CSF
spaces, however, this alteration appears to be mainly due to pre-existing brain damage. CT examinations of infants with West syndrome should be performed because prognostic information may be obtained and in a few cases operations to drain
CSF
may be necessary.
...
PMID:Neuroradiological aspects of infantile spasms. 332 93
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