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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (
encephalopathy
)
18,178
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 21
-day-old infant presented with anemia, conjugated hyperbilirubinemia, hypoproteinemia, and a severe coagulopathy. The hospital course was marked by progressive hepatic failure,
encephalopathy
, and renal insufficiency. The infant died on day 15 of hospitalization. Postmortem examination showed diffuse hepatic fibrosis and marked siderosis of the liver, pancreas, kidney, adrenal glands, and the duodenal epithelium, with sparing of the reticuloendothelial system. These findings were characteristic of idiopathic neonatal iron-storage disease. Previously reported cases are summarized and discussed. An increased awareness and understanding of this rapidly fatal disorder will be important for genetic counseling and possibly in defining an aberrant mechanism in the handling of iron.
...
PMID:Idiopathic neonatal iron-storage disease. 156
A 21
month old girl who presented with what seemed to be hypertensive encephalopathy is described. Although her
encephalopathy
resolved with antihypertensive treatment, subsequent investigations revealed haemophilus meningitis.
...
PMID:Meningitis presenting as hypertension. 382 98
A 21
-year-old Black male with painful neuropathy, abdominal pain, tachycardia and
encephalopathy
developed striking scalp alopecia 1 week after admission. Thallium poisoning was suspected and confirmed by urinalysis. The clinical course, investigations and management are presented.
...
PMID:Thallium poisoning. A case report. 687 93
Hepatic encephalopathy (HE) is associated with elevated arterial ammonia levels. The relationship is variable, in part due to ammonia methodology. One method, based on the indophenol reaction (IPh), is interfered with a number of amino acids including all aromatic amino acids. We have determined arterial ammonia simultaneously with the Blood Ammonia Checker II (BAC) as reference method and with the IPh method. The difference BAC-IPh, mumol/l, was assumed to express the interference in the indophenol method (IFI) by amino acids. It may be positive or negative. The aim was to establish the value of BAC in comparison with IPh in the diagnosis of liver disease and overt HE and to assess any added value of IFI. Of two reference groups without disturbances, A (n = 39) had not and B (n = 13) had
encephalopathy
. Group C consisted of 125 liver patients (34 no cirrhosis, 91 cirrhosis) of which 55 had no manifest HE (C:HE-) and 70 had HE (C:HE+). Median BAC ammonia nitrogen (NH3-N), mumol/l:
A 21
, B 35, C 80, C:HE - 57 and C:HE+ 98 (A < B < C and A < B < C:HE - < C:HE +, P < 0.001). Median IPh NH3-N, mumol/l: A 27, B 30, C 30, C:HE - 25 and C:HE + 35 mumol/l (A = B = C and C:HE - < C:HE+, P < 0.01). IFI medians: A -6, B 3, C 40, C:HE - 29 and C:HE + 58 mumol/l (A < B (P < 0.05) < C (P < 0.0001); A, B < C:HE - and C:HE+; C:HE- < C:HE + (all P < 0.0001)). While BAC correlated weakly with IPh in the (sub)groups C, C:HE-, C:HE+ (r = 0.3, 0.3, 0.4, P < 0.05), it correlated strongly with IFI (r = 0.9, 0.9, 0.8, P < 0.0001). There was no correlation between IPh and IFI. BAC, as well as IFI, could discriminate all liver patients (C) from both reference groups A and B with 100% positive likelihoods. BAC, IPh and IFI could discriminate between HE- and HE+. To differentiate cirrhosis from non-cirrhosis the specificity of IPh was uniformly high and the sensitivity satisfactory, whereas BAC had a high sensitivity but an insufficient specificity. In conclusion, in blood, BAC is the ammonia determination of choice. It differentiates between reference groups (encephalopathic or not) and liver disease and the more so HE. The combination of BAC and IPh (indicating IFI) may eventually be shown useful to rapidly assess the severity of underlying liver disease in HE patients. In other biological fluids, IPh is excellent when the inhibiting influence of non-protein nitrogen substances is absent or can be eliminated.
...
PMID:Arterial ammonia with Blood Ammonia Checker II and with indophenol reaction to assess presence of hepatic encephalopathy. 881 63
Cocaine abuse is a well known cause of cerebrovascular complications. An inflammatory vasculopathy hypothesis has been proposed, but the medical literature has only reported a few pathological confirmations. We report a case with a biopsy demonstrating cerebral inflammatory vascular changes that are associated with cocaine abuse.
A 21
-year-old male, a twice weekly cocaine abuser, developed
encephalopathy
, apraxia and left hemiparesis with hemisensory loss during the first week after his last cocaine intake; postural tremor and dystonia appeared later. Laboratory data were unrevealing. Cerebral angiography showed a lack of vascularization in the left precentral and central arterial groups. A corticomeningeal cerebral biopsy demonstrated perivascular cell collection and transmural lymphomonocytic infiltration of the small cortical vessels. All symptoms improved with corticosteroid treatment, but 4 years later, the patient returned with a worsening of his
encephalopathy
and a severe memory impairment, emotional lability and apraxia. A cerebral magnetic resonance image (MRI) showed subcortical and periventricular lesions suggesting ischemic damage in small-size vessel areas as well as cortical atrophy. This new case supports the existence of an
encephalopathy
associated with vascular inflammatory changes in a cocaine abuser, although more clinical and experimental data are necessary to define its physiopathology.
...
PMID:Encephalopathy and biopsy-proven cerebrovascular inflammatory changes in a cocaine abuser. 1021 Aug 20
A 21
-year old man with marked developmental delay was referred for the diagnosis of myoclonic jerks (MJ), which were sometimes responsible for sudden falls without loss of consciousness, that had begun 2 years before, and for a recent generalized tonic-clonic seizure preceded by a cluster of MJ. Physical examination revealed a small stature, bilateral pyramidal signs, severe mental retardation, and retinis pigmentosa. Etiological factors for this
encephalopathy
were not found (muscle and skin biopsies, karyotype and extensive blood chemistry). Waking interictal EEG showed a normal background activity and generalized poly-spike-and wave (PSW) discharges. Photic stimulation disclosed a marked photoparoxysmal response, sometimes associated with myoclonic jerks. Three spontaneous jerks accompanied by a burst of generalized PSW were recorded on awakening from a nap. The MRI disclosed wide ventricles, a thin corpus callosum, brainstem atrophy and a so-called "redundant gyration"; these changes were evocative of acquired perinatal damage. Juvenile myoclonic epilepsy (JME) was diagnosed and valproate was started resulting in complete control of seizures. During a 5-year follow-up, the patient has remained seizure-free and the EEG consistently normal. In our opinion, JME can be diagnosed in very uncommon settings, including patients with significant brain damage, as long as all the other criteria for the diagnosis are present.
...
PMID:Is it juvenile myoclonic epilepsy? 1093 68
A 21
-year-old woman with severe aplastic anemia received an allogeneic bone marrow transplant (allo-BMT) from an HLA-matched and ABO-matched sibling donor after conditioning with cyclophosphamide, rabbit ATG (Lymphoglobuline; Aventis-Pharma), and total lymphoid irradiation. She had a long history of cyclosporin A (CsA) therapy before conditioning. She complained of severe headache and convulsions on day 0, and findings on magnetic resonance images suggested CsA-induced
encephalopathy
. CsA was immediately stopped, and tacrolimus for prevention of graft-versus-host disease (GVHD) was started on day 2. Hematological engraftment was observed on day 14 without serious GVHD. Prompt diagnosis, replacement of immunosuppressive agents, and careful monitoring of serum drug concentrations are thought to have contributed to the patient's good clinical course, since CsA-induced
encephalopathy
tends to be recurrent but to improve completely without any sequelae.
...
PMID:Cyclosporin A-induced encephalopathy after allogeneic bone marrow transplantation with prevention of graft-versus-host disease by tacrolimus. 1170 97
Recurrent medulloblastoma carries a poor prognosis. Long-term survival has been obtained with high-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell transplantation and secondary irradiation.
A 21
-year-old woman with recurrent medulloblastoma after previous chemotherapy and radiotherapy is presented. The patient was treated with high-dose chemotherapy and autologous stem cell transplantation. She developed a severe treatment-related
encephalopathy
which affected her quality of life and neurocognitive functioning for the rest of her life. Possible causative factors are discussed and central nervous system toxicity by high-dose chemotherapy in brain tumour patients is reviewed. Case reports on severe central nervous system toxicity have been reported, but data from prospective studies on neurocognitive functioning are not available. These data strongly support a systematic long-term follow-up of brain tumour patients treated with high-dose chemotherapy with emphasis on neurocognitive function tests.
...
PMID:Severe encephalopathy after high-dose chemotherapy with autologous stem cell support for brain tumours. 1673 45
A 21
-month-old boy with steroid-dependent asthma presented to the emergency room with Glascow Coma Score (GCS) 3 and retinal hemorrhages. He was found to have subdural and subarachnoid hemorrhage on computed tomography plus findings of hypoxic-ischemic
encephalopathy
(HIE). The caretaker history was thought to be inconsistent with the clinical and imaging features, and the patient was diagnosed with nonaccidental injury (NAI) and "shaken baby syndrome." The autopsy revealed a cranial impact site and fatal injury to the cervicomedullary junction. Biomechanical analysis provided further objective support that, although NAI could not be ruled out, the injuries could result from an accidental fall as consistently described by the caretaker.
...
PMID:Traumatic spinal cord injury: accidental versus nonaccidental injury. 1907 23
A 21
-year-old man attempted suicide by burning charcoal in a car for more than one day and was admitted to a regional hospital. On admission, his blood carboxyhemoglobin concentration was 4.4%. The patient was transferred to our emergency department because of suspected carbon monoxide poisoning. Hyperbaric oxygen therapy (HBO) was performed 5 times over 3 days. Fluid-attenuation inversion recovery (FLAIR) and diffusion-weighted (DWI) magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) performed on day 3 showed high signal-intensity lesions in the cerebral white matter. Additional HBO was performed once per day until day 16. Wecheler Memory Scale-Reviced (WMS-R) and Mini-Mental State Examination (MMSE) performed on day 17 showed his cognitive impairment. He gradually recovered the cognitive function and was discharged from the hospital without neurological sequelae on day 49. Delayed
encephalopathy
after acute carbon monoxide poisoning with dementia, mental impairment, and psychosis is a serious complication. Hyperintensity in FLAIR and DWI MRI predicts delayed
encephalopathy
and indicates cellular edema and demyelination of the white matter. One of the risk factors is prolonged carbon monoxide exposure. This case suggests that the patient, who was exposed to carbon monoxide for many hours, was at a high risk of delayed
encephalopathy
despite the low blood carboxyhemoglobin concentration and therefore must be monitored using MRI.
...
PMID:[Case of carbon monoxide poisoning with delayed encephalopathy assessed by magnetic resonance imaging]. 2360 Feb 69
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