Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0344329 (collapse)
28,634 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Strychnine intoxication is manifested by agitation, muscle spasms, and convulsions. We report a case in which intractable convulsions led to severe lactic acidosis which secondarily resulted in visceral (lung, heart, kidney, liver, and brain) collapse and death. Aggressive therapy instituted in the emergency department and aimed at control of seizure activity and lactic acidosis may be lifesaving.
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PMID:Strychnine intoxication. 51 8

We evaluated eight infants with bronchopulmonary dysplasia (BPD) at ages from 2 to 13 months who had repeated episodes of clinical respiratory deterioration associated with agitation. These episodes limited further weaning from ventilation or necessitated recurrent intubation and reinstitution of ventilation. All infants underwent spirometric evaluation and six also had endoscopic examination during simulated agitation episodes (elicited by toe pinching). All babies were found to have a very prolonged near zero expiratory airflow pattern, accompanied by vigorous diaphragmatic and abdominal muscle activity and rapid development of hypoxia. Six patients had endoscopically documented tracheal collapse under the same simulated circumstances. The episodes ceased with calming or sedation of the infants.
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PMID:Spirometric and endoscopic evaluation of airway collapse in infants with bronchopulmonary dysplasia. 143 39

Cocaine use and abuse continue to overwhelm urban economic, social, and health care systems. Patients frequently present to the emergency department with life-threatening manifestations of cocaine use, including trauma, acquired immune deficiency syndrome, psychomotor agitation, and cardiovascular collapse. Adequate treatment of the cocaine-intoxicated patient requires a critical understanding of the risk-to-benefit ratios for pharmacologic, toxicologic, and surgical or obstetric interventions. The pharmacologic and physiologic bases for the vascular manifestations of cocaine toxicity and experimental evidence for treatment strategies are reviewed.
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PMID:The cardiovascular effects of cocaine. 199

Despite the widespread use of non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs (NSAIDs), the current number of reported cases of poisoning is small. However, with the introduction of 'over-the-counter' preparations of NSAIDs in some countries (e.g. ibuprofen in the UK and USA) an increased incidence of acute poisoning from this group of drugs can be expected. Conventionally, NSAIDs are divided into the following groups based on their chemical structure: arylpropionic acids, indole and indene acetic acids, heteroarylacetic acids, fenamates, phenylacetic acids, pyrazolones and oxicams. Unless NSAIDs are ingested in substantial overdose, acute poisoning with these agents does not usually result in significant morbidity or mortality. In most cases the clinical features are mild and confined to the gastrointestinal and central nervous systems, though acute renal failure, hepatic dysfunction, respiratory depression, coma, convulsions, cardiovascular collapse and cardiac arrest may complicate severe poisoning. Arylpropionic acid derivatives were thought initially to have a low order of toxicity in overdose but, in addition to anticipated gastrointestinal symptoms, headache, tinnitus, hyperventilation, sinus tachycardia, hypoprothrombinaemia, haematuria, proteinuria and acute renal failure have been described. In addition, drowsiness, coma, nystagmus, diplopia, hypothermia, hypotension, respiratory depression and cardiac arrest have been reported in severe cases of poisoning. Oxyphenbutazone and phenylbutazone are considerably more toxic in overdose. Complications of severe poisoning include coma, convulsions, hepatic dysfunction, acute renal failure, sodium and water retention, haematuria, cardiovascular collapse, respiratory alkalosis, metabolic acidosis, hypoprothrombinaemia and thrombocytopenia. In contrast, indomethacin appears to be much less toxic. In addition to gastrointestinal symptoms, indomethacin taken in overdose induces headache, tinnitus, dizziness, lethargy, drowsiness, confusion, disorientation and restlessness. Only 1 case of acute sulindac poisoning has been reported in the literature. A 16-year-old boy was admitted with hypokalaemia (2.2 mmol/L), transient granulocytosis and 'scanty' haematemesis after ingesting 12 g sulindac. No case of acute tolmetin poisoning have been reported. The fenamates (flufenamic acid, meclofenamic acid, mefenamic acid, tolfenamic acid) are, with the exception of mefenamic acid, not as widely prescribed as other groups of NSAIDs. In overdose, mefenamic acid may result in nausea, vomiting, diarrhoea, muscle twitching, convulsions and coma.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Acute poisoning due to non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs. Clinical features and management. 353 13

1041 women underwent abortions under total anesthesia in 1985 (286 women) and 1986 (755 women). The preparation Sombrevin in 250-500 mg iv doses was used in 135 cases, and Thiopental in 200-300 mg iv doses was administered in 906 cases along with methoxyflurane after premedication with .5 mg of atropine. The patients stayed in bed for at least 4 hours attached to a cardiovascular apparatus. Anesthesiological complications requiring hospitalization were: 2 cases of restlessness necessitating increased doses, 2 instances of collapse and 6 cases of postural hypotension with neurological findings. The women who underwent total anesthesia were forbidden to drive a car or drink alcohol for 24 hours. Outpatient abortions are suitable where the proper organizational prerequisites exist because of the low rate of complications.
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PMID:[Total anesthesia in outpatient mini-abortions]. 360 8

The potential for the use of contrast echocardiography to study myocardial perfusion has generated efforts to develop standardized echo contrast agents. The two methods used in this laboratory to generate microbubbles in solutions serving as contrast agents included the widely used hand-agitation method and the newer ultrasonic microcavitation (sonication) method. The latter has been demonstrated to generate smaller and more uniform microbubbles in an in vitro system. The present study was designed to observe, by direct microscopic examination of a cat mesentery preparation, the behavior and fate of the microbubbles in an in vivo system. The in vivo mesentery observations confirm the critical role of microbubble size in its unhindered passage through the capillary vasculature. The smaller and more uniform sonicated microbubbles passed rapidly through the microcirculation along with the red blood cells, whereas the larger microbubbles were observed to coalesce and interrupt the flow of blood and subsequently collapse or shrink.
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PMID:Microbubble dynamics visualized in the intact capillary circulation. 647 Mar 41

Tracheomalacia is a rare congenital malformation of the tracheobronchial cartilages in which the supporting cartilaginous rings permit expiratory collapse of the airway. The condition is usually mild and self-limited. There is a severe variant, however, that is life-threatening and warrants separate categorization. Four children with severe primary tracheomalacia were treated recently. The clinical symptoms, diagnostic findings, and eventual treatment of these patients were highly distinctive and almost identical in all 4, permitting us to make the following observations: (1) primary severe tracheomalacia must be suspected in infants with unexplained respiratory distress manifested by stridor and cyanosis; (2) symptoms are not present at birth but appear insidiously after the first weeks of life, are markedly aggravated by respiratory tract infections, and are made worse by agitation; (3) bronchoscopy is essential for definitive diagnosis and should be employed early in the diagnostic process; (4) tracheostomy is probably essential in most instances; and (5) resolution, although spontaneous, does not occur until after 2 years of age.
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PMID:Primary tracheomalacia. 684 90

Beta-adrenergic agonists and theophylline are both capable of producing tremor, agitation, tachycardia, metabolic acidosis, hypokalemia, hyperglycemia, cardiac arrhythmias, and seizures. However, theophylline preparations, especially in the sustained-release formulations, are associated with a much higher incidence of morbidity and mortality secondary to status epilepticus and cardiovascular collapse. Overdoses of sustained-release preparations place patients at exceedingly high risk. This article describes the differentiation of the patient with acute and chronic theophylline overdoses and the implications for management of both clinical states.
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PMID:Concepts and controversies of bronchodilator overdose. 791 May 56

A case of fulminant hepatitis with microvesicular steatosis resembling Labrea's fever, diagnosed in Vitoria (ES) is reported. The 16 year old boy presented with severe epistaxis, agitation, jaundice and hemorrhagic vomiting and died two days after admission to the emergency unit of the University Hospital. The disease started five days before with fever, myalgias, dark urine and jaundice and progressed with psychic agitation, torpor and coma. The liver and spleen were not palpable. HBsAg was negative in the serum. The autopsy showed acute hepatitis with lytic necrosis confluent in the midzonal and periportal areas with massive microvesicular steatosis in the remaining hepatocytes. Mononuclear cells predominated in the exudate. The reticulum showed condensation in the necrotic areas without typical bands of collapse. The portal tracts were edematous with mononuclear infiltration and mild bile duct proliferation. Absence of cholestasis. Except for the confluent midzonal and periportal necrosis this case showed several clinical and morphological aspects of the Labrea fever described from the East Amazon, demonstrating that the anatomical picture of this disease probably is not in related to a factor peculiar to the Amazon region.
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PMID:Labrea-like hepatitis in Vitoria, Espirito Santo State, Brazil: report of a case. 815 25

Eight conscious chronically instrumented sheep were exposed to 1% inspired carbon monoxide (CO) for 35 min. In all sheep, carboxyhaemoglobin (COHb) levels at the end of the exposure were approximately 65%. Mean arterial blood pressure was unchanged with the exception of 2 sheep in which administration was stopped at 25 min following the sudden onset of hypotension. Oxygen delivery to the brain was sustained throughout the administration of CO due to a significant increase in cerebral blood flow (CBF). There was no evidence of either a metabolic acidosis or of lactate production by the brain suggesting the brain did not become hypoxic during the time-course of this study. Despite the apparent lack of hypoxia, oxygen consumption by the brain fell progressively and the sheep showed behavioural changes which varied from agitation to sedation and narcosis. The mechanism of these changes was therefore probably unrelated to hypoxia, but may have been due to raised intracranial pressure or a direct effect of CO on brain function. It is proposed that the time-course of progressive CO poisoning includes a phase in which CBF is elevated, blood pressure is unchanged and the brain is normoxic despite high COHb levels, but that this situation can rapidly evolve into a phase of haemodynamic collapse and severe hypoxia.
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PMID:The effect of carbon monoxide on oxygen metabolism in the brains of awake sheep. 898 Jul 11


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