Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0242429 (sore throat)
2,760 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Strongyloidiosis is widely distributed in tropical and subtropical areas but is a rarely reported parasitic infestation in Turkey. Disseminated strongyloidiosis may develop in patients with immunodeficiencies. We report a case of Strongyloides stercoralis infection and Loeffler's syndrome that developed in a patient who had received systemic prednisolone. The patient was a 20 year-old man, born in Hatay, Turkey. The patient presented at our department complaining of abdominal pain and leg pain. After he was admitted for further examination; headache, sore throat and cough developed. The differential-leukocytic count was characterized by 14% eosinophils. When a stool examination was performed, Strongyloides stercoralis larvae were observed. The patient was treated successfully with albendazole. His symptoms improved and Strongyloides stercoralis was not detected in subsequent follow-up examinations thereafter.
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PMID:[Strongyloidiosis and Loeffler's syndrome detected in a patient who used a short term steroid treatment]. 1835 51

It has been shown that, in subjects with high hypnotizability (Highs), imagined somatosensory stimulation can involuntarily activate the neural circuits involved in the modulation of reflex action. In this vein, aim of the study was to investigate whether the imagery of nociceptive stimulation in one leg may produce both subjective experience of pain and congruent postural adjustments during normal upright stance. The displacement of the centre of pressure (CoP) was studied during imagery of leg pain (LP) and during the control conditions of imagery of tactile stimulation of the same leg and of throat pain (TP) in 12 Highs and 12 low hypnotizable subjects (Lows). The results showed that the vividness of imagery was higher in Highs than in Lows for all tasks and that only Highs reported actually feeling pain during LP and TP. Congruently, during LP only Highs displaced their CoP towards the leg opposite to the one that was the object of painful imagery and increased their CoP mean velocity and area of excursion. Since the Highs' postural changes were not accounted for only by vividness of imagery and perceived pain intensity, high hypnotizability is apparently responsible for part of the postural effects of pain imagery.
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PMID:Postural effects of imagined leg pain as a function of hypnotizability. 2208 Jan 5