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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (
encephalopathy
)
18,178
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Reye's syndrome (RS) consists of
encephalopathy
, fatty degeneration of viscera, and elevation of
ammonia
, certain amino acids, and liver enzymes in the blood. It is most characteristically a disease of children and has been considered to have a poor prognosis despite the use of various treatment regimens. Exchange transfusion (ET) with fresh blood (less than 24 hours old) for the removal of toxic metabolic byproducts in TS is a relatively recent development which appears to have improved the survival rates. However, because RS may occur in epidemic proportions at any time the demand for fresh blood can place an excessive stress on blood resources. We have, therefore, utilized saline-washed (to remove potentially toxic metabolites) red blood cells (RBC's) less than six days old, and fresh frozen citrate-phosphate-dextrose (CPD) plasma in treating this disorder. Nine patients in the Milwaukee community with severe
encephalopathy
secondary to RS were treated with ET. These patients collectively required 151 units of washed RBC's for 21 ET. Eight of nine patients survived without sequelae. Age of blood used did not correlate with the number of exchanges required or the eventual outcome. A continual computerized EEG in five patients provided objective evidence of the effectiveness of ET. We conclude that ET with saline-washed RBC's reconstituted with fresh frozen plasma (FFP) is a fast, safe, and effective means of treating patients with RS.
...
PMID:Exchange transfusion in Reye's syndrome with saline-washed red blood cells. 125 13
Reye's syndrome is difined as fatty degeneration of the viscera with
encephalopathy
. The signs are change in consciousness after recovery of a viral illness, vomiting, high fever, and progresseve deterioration of the level of consciousness. Signs of brain stem involvement quickly follow. The clinical findings are: mild elevations of serum transaminases (SGOT and SGPT), normal to slightly elevated bilirubin, abnormal blood-clotting functions, normal to low blood glucose, high blood
ammonia
, and normal cerebrospinal fluid which may be under increased pressure. Death is due to increased intracranial pressure. Therapy is used to stabilize these signs. It includes: infusion of hypertonic glucose followed by insulin, peritoneal dialysis, and exchange transfusion. Intracranial pressure was monitored continually to determine when therapy should be administered.
...
PMID:Intracranial pressure monitoring in Reye's syndrome. 127 55
Hyperammoniemic
encephalopathy
has been reported after ureterosigmoidostomy. Its development is related to a problem of bacterial overgrowth and, most often, is favored by the presence of an underlying liver dysfunction. We report the case of a 43-year-old woman with a ureterosigmoidostomy done 28 years earlier who developed hyperammoniemic coma induced by an acute rectocolitis and in the absence of any detectable liver dysfunction. Neither administration of Lactilol and neomycin nor rectal tube drainage were effective; systemic antimicrobial therapy effective against the urease-producing gram-negative bacilli was required and led to a decrease in serum
ammonia
levels and a dramatic clinical improvement.
...
PMID:Hyperammoniemic coma in a patient with ureterosigmoidostomy and normal liver function. 142 76
beta-Oxidation of [1-14C]palmitic acid was examined in homogenates of astrocytes cultured from neonatal mouse brain. Under optimal reaction conditions (< or = 50 micrograms protein, 10 min at 37 degrees C), oxidation increased as a function of palmitate concentration (15 microM to 2 mM) and reached a maximum rate of 1.98 +/- 0.29 nmol/min/mg protein (mean +/- SEM) at 0.2 mM substrate. Eadie-Hofstee analysis of data from four experiments yielded apparent values for Vmax of 1.87 nmol/min/mg protein, and for Km, 35-40 microM. There were no dramatic changes in the oxidation rate in cells between 10 and 36 days in culture. During the 10-min assays, less than 0.05% of the radioactivity was converted to 14CO2 by the astrocytes; water-soluble products accounted for 1-2% of the total substrate added. Studies with KCN indicated that 60-70% of the total activity occurred in the mitochondria. We have been studying the structural and functional changes associated with the cerebral
encephalopathy
of Reye's syndrome (RS). Three-week-old astrocytes exposed to serum from RS children for the final 7 days of culture exhibited minor mitochondrial pleomorphism and had increased numbers of other intracellular organelles. Examination of the effects of agents implicated in RS indicated that oxidation of [1-14C]palmitate was not altered by Na+ salicylate (1-3 mM), but was inhibited by the industrial surfactant, Toximul MP-8 (> or = 10 micrograms/ml), 4-pentenoic acid (> or = 0.1 microM), or with 4 days' exposure to
ammonia
(10 nM). The latter treatment also resulted in an increase in protein synthesis, cell volume, and malondialdehyde formation. These results suggest that some of the "toxins" implicated in RS inhibit fatty-acid oxidation in the astrocytes and produce other lipid-related abnormalities that could be related to
encephalopathy
.
...
PMID:Beta-oxidation of [1-14C]palmitic acid by mouse astrocytes in primary culture: effects of agents implicated in the encephalopathy of Reye's syndrome. 146 46
Several toxic factors have been implicated in the pathogenesis of hepatic encephalopathy (PSE) among which
ammonia
plays a dominant role. More recently, the gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) hypothesis in which an increase in the GABA-ergic tone and the presence of one or more GABA/benzodiazepine receptor ligands which interact with that receptor, has been proposed. We investigated the levels of GABA and
ammonia
in plasma of patients with acute PSE to test the hypothesis that elevated plasma GABA levels would be found in acute
encephalopathy
and that GABA levels would correlate with the degree of hepatic encephalopathy. We measured plasma levels of GABA and
ammonia
during an acute episode of PSE, spontaneous or precipitated by gastrointestinal bleeding or sepsis, and performed assessments of PSE by the PSE index. Patients were evaluated before and two days after standard treatment with lactulose. We also measured plasma GABA levels in the hepatic vein of a selected group of patients undergoing hemodynamic studies. Plasma GABA levels were significantly higher in patients with acute PSE (458 +/- 108 pmol/mL) when compared with normal subjects (110 +/- 23 pmol/mL) (p < 0.01) although no correlation was found between plasma GABA concentration and the degree of PSE. Changes in plasma
ammonia
, however, correlated with improvements in the PSE index (r = 0.56; p < 0.02) and with abnormalities in the EEG (r = 0.65; p < 0.01).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Association of plasma ammonia and GABA levels and the degree of hepatic encephalopathy]. 148 27
The pathogenesis of brain edema in acute liver failure is poorly understood. We have previously shown that rats with ischemic acute liver failure (portacaval anastomosis followed by hepatic artery ligation) exhibit brain edema and intracranial hypertension, with swelling of cortical astrocytes as the most prominent neuropathological abnormality. Because
ammonia
has been shown to induce swelling of astrocytes in vivo and in vitro, we examined the relationship between brain
ammonia
, amino acids generated from
ammonia
metabolism and brain water content in this model. Four groups of animals were studied: rats subjected to two sham operations, rats subjected to portacaval anastomosis and a sham operation, rats subjected to a sham operation and hepatic artery ligation and rats subjected to portacaval anastomosis and hepatic artery ligation. The last group of animals was studied at three progressive stages of
encephalopathy
. Cortical gray matter water increased from 80.26% +/- 0.22% (sham + sham) to 82.46% +/- 0.06% (last stage of devascularization). In cerebral cortex, brain
ammonia
increased to a maximum of 5.4 mmol/L. Glutamine, generated in glial cells from
ammonia
and glutamate, increased sixfold to 24 mmol/L and remained at this level throughout all stages of
encephalopathy
. Alanine, which may be generated from the transamination of glutamine, increased in parallel to the increase in water (r = 0.80, n = 15). In this model of fulminant liver failure and associated brain edema, brain
ammonia
increases to levels associated with in vitro swelling of brain slices and glial cells. The accumulation of osmogenic aminoacids such as glutamine and alanine may contribute to the selective astrocyte swelling seen in this condition.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Ammonia and related amino acids in the pathogenesis of brain edema in acute ischemic liver failure in rats. 154 26
We report an unusual case of a large inferior mesenteric-caval shunt in a 25-year-old man without cirrhosis with hypoproteinemia and hypochromic anemia. In this large shunt the direct communication was between the inferior mesenteric vein and the internal iliac vein. Hemodynamic change as a result of the shunt was thought to cause his present clinical problems and future portosystemic
encephalopathy
. Percutaneous transcatheter embolization of the shunt with fibrin glue was performed through the internal iliac vein, and this offered amelioration of hypoproteinemia and reduction of serum
ammonia
levels without any complications. An interventional radiologic approach instead of surgical ligation should be attempted for portosystemic shunts, and fibrin glue, as well as coils or a detachable balloon, is also valuable as an embolizing material.
...
PMID:Interventional embolization with fibrin glue for a large inferior mesenteric-caval shunt. 159 79
Ten children with advanced cirrhosis and malnutrition (less than 90% weight for height) were fed for eight weeks with a nasogastric feed comprising whey protein (enriched with branched chain amino acids), fat as 34% medium chain and 66% long chain triglycerides, and glucose polymer. Six of the children were studied for an eight week control period before feeding. Weight, triceps skinfold thickness, mid-arm circumference, mid-arm muscle area, and fasting plasma
ammonia
and amino acid concentrations were measured before and after the control period and after the consequent feed period. Results showed that despite high energy and protein intakes the children remained malnourished over the control period. All anthropometric indices improved significantly during the feed period, and no child developed clinical
encephalopathy
. The feed period was associated with a small, and not clinically significant, increase in the plasma
ammonia
concentration, but no consistent trend in the plasma amino acid concentrations. Thus, in children with advanced hepatobiliary disease awaiting liver transplantation, enteral feeding improved nutritional status without adverse clinical or biochemical effects.
...
PMID:Intensive enteral feeding in advanced cirrhosis: reversal of malnutrition without precipitation of hepatic encephalopathy. 159 97
A prospective randomized double-blind study was conducted to evaluate the efficacy of sodium benzoate in the treatment of acute portal-systemic encephalopathy. Seventy-four consecutive patients with cirrhosis or surgical portasystemic anastomosis and hepatic encephalopathy of less than 7 days duration were randomized to receive lactulose (dose adjusted for 2 or 3 semiformed stools/day) or sodium benzoate (5 gm twice daily). Assessment of response included mental status, asterixis, arterial
ammonia
level, electroencephalogram and number-connection test. Each was given a score between 0 and 4+. A portal-systemic encephalopathy index was calculated with these scores. Visual, auditory and somatosensory evoked potentials and a battery of psychometric tests for intelligence and memory were also performed to assess improvement. Thirty-eight patients received sodium benzoate; 36 took lactulose. Thirty patients (80%) receiving sodium benzoate and 29 (81%) receiving lactulose recovered; the remaining patients died. Improvement in portal-systemic encephalopathy parameters occurred in both treatment groups and was similar (p greater than 0.1). Electroencephalogram and evoked potentials were not as helpful as mental status in assessing of recovery. Psychometric test scores remained abnormal after recovery of mental status (21 to 42 days) and were probably too sensitive for monitoring of these patients. The incidence of side effects was similar in the two treatment groups. The cost of lactulose for one course of therapy was 30 times that of sodium benzoate. We conclude that sodium benzoate is a safe and effective alternative to lactulose in the treatment of acute portasystemic
encephalopathy
.
...
PMID:Sodium benzoate in the treatment of acute hepatic encephalopathy: a double-blind randomized trial. 161 65
Hepatic encephalopathy is a neuropsychiatric syndrome, which can occur in the clinical course of acute (fulminant) or chronic hepatic failure of various aetiology; reversible metabolic abnormalities without neuronal structural changes are frequently found in this condition. High blood
ammonia
levels, an imbalance between plasma concentrations of branched-chain and aromatic amino acids, false neurotransmitters and neurotransmitters receptor changes in CNS are the commonly recognized pathogenetic mechanism of this syndrome. Protein malnutrition is a frequent occurrence in liver cirrhosis, especially of alcoholic aetiology. High protein diets may precipitate hepatic encephalopathy; protein restriction leads to malnutrition and enhances a negative nitrogen balance. Several clinical studies have shown that vegetable proteins are tolerated better than animal in patients with liver cirrhosis and chronic portal-systemic encephalopathy:
encephalopathy
index is usually lower after vegetable-protein than animal-protein diet. The favourable therapeutic effect of vegetable diets on nitrogen metabolism can be mainly accounted for by the increased intake of dietary fibers and increased incorporation and elimination of nitrogen in fecal bacteria. Mixture of amino acids enriched with branched-chain amino-acids may contribute to maintain a positive nitrogen balance and minimize muscle wasting in cirrhotics.
...
PMID:[The dietary protein contribution and hepatic encephalopathy in cirrhosis]. 162 17
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