Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Portuguese man-of-war and jellyfish stings are common occurrence in the coastal waters of the southern United States. Signs and symptoms of Portuguese man-of-war envenomation usually appear immediately following a sting but may be delayed for several hours. Reactions are commonly localized and comprise pain, paresthesia, and intense burning with a linear, red, papular eruption or urticaria at the contact site. Systemic signs may include nausea, myalgia, headache, chills, or pallor. Cardiovascular collapse and death have been reported. Venom can be inactivated with dilute acetic acid (vinegar), proteolytic meat tenderizer, or baking soda. Tentacle debris should be removed. Resolution of symptoms usually occurs within 72 hours, without sequelae.
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PMID:Portuguese man-of-war envenomation. 135 Dec 83

Metabolic fatigue is a characteristic muscle response to intense exercise that has outstripped the rate of ATP replacement. The accumulation of metabolic by-products, namely hydrogen ions and diprotonated phosphate, interferes with actin-myosin interaction, effectively preserving muscle ATP levels by preventing further ATP hydrolysis. Muscle force and metabolite concentrations return to normal in about 5 minutes. Less intense exercise causes a more subtle, non-metabolic fatigue due to a still-undefined disturbance of excitation-contraction coupling, which can last for several hours. In this type of fatigue, greater effort is required to generate submaximal forces. Endurance exercise is mainly limited by the size of muscle glycogen stores and how efficiently they are used. Endurance training permits an athlete to work aerobically at high rates, consuming a mixture of lipid and carbohydrate fuels. When muscle glycogen is used up, exercise can only continue at the relatively low rate supportable by lipid metabolism. Anaerobic exercise is also limited by subjective factors such as dyspnoea and muscle pain, which have objective determinants. Extremely prolonged exercise can lead to general collapse because of dehydration, hyperthermia, or hypoglycaemia. None of these factors explains the phenomenon of asthenia, a subjective sense of exhaustion that produces no objective impairment of physical performance. The metabolic myopathies are experiments of nature that promise to shed new light on the biochemical basis of muscle fatigue. This will require quantitative studies of the kind provided by topical magnetic resonance spectroscopy, correlating physiology and metabolism in vivo.
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PMID:Muscle metabolism during fatigue and work. 226 24

Azathioprine has been used as an immunosuppressant for over 20 years in cancer chemotherapy, organ transplantation and diseases with confirmed or suspected immune mechanisms. A hypersensitivity reaction manifesting as fever, rash, myalgia and a neutrophil leucocytosis occurring about 2 weeks after exposure is well documented and has been confirmed by challenge testing. Hypotensive reactions are less common but potentially fatal; a case is reported where repeat exposure resulted in profound circulatory collapse responding only to intervention with inotropic agents.
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PMID:Azathioprine shock. 374 35

Among all the drugs used for general anaesthesia, neuromuscular blockers appear to play a prominent role in the incidence of severe adverse reactions. It now seems likely that most serious adverse drug reactions occurring during anaesthesia are immunological in type. The frequency of life-threatening anaphylactic or anaphylactoid reactions occurring during anaesthesia has been estimated to be between 1 in 1000 and 1 in 25,000 anaesthetic procedures, with the neuromuscular blockers being involved in 80% of cases. The mortality from such serious reactions is reported to be in the range of 3.4 to 6%. The highly immunogenic drug, suxamethonium chloride (succinylcholine), was found to be the most hazardous agent. Drug-specific immunoglobulin E antibodies to suxamethonium chloride and other neuromuscular blockers have been demonstrated. This sensitivity to neuromuscular blockers seems to be a long-lasting phenomenon. During anaesthesia, the clinical features of an allergic reaction are often masked. Tachycardia and circulatory collapse may be the only signs of an allergic reaction, and they are easily misdiagnosed. Bronchospasm is reported to be present in about 40% of cases. Successful management of these patients includes stabilisation during the acute reaction and avoidance of future reactions. The latter is based on the identification of the causative drug and potentially cross-reacting compounds. The use of suxamethonium chloride is associated with many other adverse effects, such as fasciculations, myalgia, potassium release, changes in the heart rate, increases in intragastric and intraocular pressures, and malignant hyperthermia. Because of the dangers of hyperkalaemic cardiac arrest after suxamethonium chloride administration in children with unrecognised muscular dystrophy, there have now been moves to limit the use of this drug in children. Although neuromuscular blockers are designed to specifically block nicotinic cholinergic receptors at the neuromuscular junction, many bind to muscarinic cholinergic receptors on ganglia and smooth muscle, and alter parasympathetically mediated heart rate and airway calibre. Most benzylisoquinolinium muscle relaxants can induce histamine release, especially when they are administered rapidly, which can lead to disturbances of cardiovascular function. In addition, nondepolarising neuromuscular blockers have been implicated in causing generalised weakness following their long term administration to patients on an intensive care unit. The problem with these adverse drug reactions is their unpredictable nature. Therefore, prompt recognition with appropriate therapy can help to improve the outcome.
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PMID:Adverse effects of neuromuscular blockers and their antagonists. 951 17

Among all the drugs used for general anesthesia, neuromuscular blockers appear to play a prominent role in the incidence of severe adverse reactions. It now seems likely that most serious adverse drug reactions occurring during anesthesia are immunological in type. The frequency of life-threatening anaphylactic or anaphylactoid reactions occurring during anesthesia has been estimated to be between 1 in 1000 and 1 in 25,000 anesthetic procedures, with the neuromuscular blockers being involved in 80% of cases. The mortality from such serious reactions is reported to be in the range of 3.4 to 6%. The highly immunogenic drug, suxamethonium chloride (succinylcholine), was found to be the most hazardous agent. Drug-specific immunoglobulin E antibodies to suxamethonium chloride and other neuromuscular blockers have been demonstrated. This sensitivity to neuromuscular blockers seems to be a long-lasting phenomenon. During anesthesia, the clinical features of an allergic reaction are often masked. Tachycardia and circulatory collapse may be the only signs of an allergic reaction, and they are easily misdiagnosed. Bronchospasm is reported to be present in about 40% of cases. Successful management of these patients includes stabilisation during the acute reaction and avoidance of future reactions. The latter is based on the identification of the causative drug and potentially cross-reacting compounds. The use of suxamethonium chloride is associated with many other adverse effects, such as fasciculations, myalgia, potassium release, changes in the heart rate, increases in intragastric and intraocular pressures, and malignant hyperthermia. Because of the dangers of hyperkalemic cardiac arrest suxamethonium chloride administration in children with unrecognised muscular dystrophy, there have now been moves to limit the use of this drug in children. Although neuromuscular blockers are designed to specifically block nicotinic cholinergic receptors at the neuromuscular junction, many bind to muscarinic cholinergic receptors on ganglia and smooth muscle, and alter parasympathetically mediated heart rate and airway calibre. Most benzylisoquinolinium muscle relaxants can induce histamine release, especially when they are administered rapidly, which can lead to disturbances of cardiovascular function. In addition, nondepolarising neuromuscular blockers have been implicated in causing generalised weakness following their long term administration to patients on an intensive care unit. The problem with these adverse drug reactions is their upredictable nature. Therefore, prompt recognition with appropriate therapy can help to improve the outcome.
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PMID:Adverse effects of neuromuscular blockers and their antagonists. 978 39

An HIV-1-infected adult presented with a short history of dyspnoea, productive cough and myalgia with fever. Shortly after presentation, he developed the abrupt onset of high-volume watery diarrhoea: stool culture grew Shigella sonnei. At the same time, he became hypoxaemic, and thoracic imaging showed bilateral lower lobe consolidation/collapse. Culture of sputum and blood was negative. The patient recovered with fluid resuscitation and ciprofloxacin monotherapy. This is the first reported case of pneumonia complicating S. sonnei dysentery in an HIV-infected adult.
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PMID:Pneumonia complicating Shigella sonnei dysentery in an HIV-infected adult male. 1630 74

Prolonged spiking fever, an evanescent salmon-colored rash, arthralgia or arthritis, leukocytosis and organ dysfunction are characteristic of adult onset Still's disease (AOSD). A 25-year-old woman with fever lasting over 3 weeks presented to our clinic. The patient had a spiking fever, sore throat, tender lymph nodes, a fine pink-colored skin rash, arthralgia, myalgia with a high ESR, ferritin and elevated hepatic enzymes. NSAID and prednisolone were prescribed for AOSD with SIRS. After 4 days of therapy, with mild confusion, the patient went into status epilepticus lasting several hours and died after cardiovascular collapse. There has been only one case of status epilepticus associated with AOSD in the medical literature. Here we report a case of AOSD with SIRS complicated by fatal status epilepticus.
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PMID:A case of adult onset Still's disease with systemic inflammatory response syndrome complicated by fatal status epilepticus. 1830 88

Case report A 28 year old gentleman presented after an episode of collapse with loss of consciousness. He gave a history of non-specific malaise and myalgia over the previous 7 days, with fever, a generalised rash and a non productive cough. He developed progressive shortness of breath with sharp, pleuritic chest pain that was unresponsive to antibiotics in the community.
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PMID:A young patient with heart failure: picture quiz question. 2242 45

Sea snakes are highly venomous and inhabit tropical waters of the Indian and Pacific Oceans. Enhydrina schistosa is a common species of sea snake that lives in the coastal waters, lagoons, river mouths and estuaries from the Persian Gulf through Sri Lanka and to Southeast Asia. It is considered one of the most aggressive sea snakes in Sri Lanka where fishermen and people wading are at high risk. However, sea snake bites are rarely reported. In this report, we describe three cases where E. schistosa was the offending species. These three patients presented to two hospitals on the west coast of Sri Lanka within the course of 14 months from November 2011 with different degrees of severity of envenoming. The first patient was a 26-year-old fisherman who developed severe myalgia with very high creatine kinase (CK) levels lasting longer than 7 days. The second patient was a 32-year-old fisherman who developed gross myoglobinuria, high CK levels and hyperkalaemia. Both patients recovered and their electromyographic recordings showed myopathic features. The nerve conduction and neuromuscular transmission studies were normal in both patients suggesting primary myotoxic envenoming. The third patient was a 41-year-old man who trod on a sea snake in a river mouth and developed severe myalgia seven hours later. He had severe rhabdomyolysis and died three days later due to cardiovascular collapse. In conclusion, we confirm that E. schistosa is a deadly sea snake and its bite causes severe rhabdomyolysis.
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PMID:Enhydrina schistosa (Elapidae: Hydrophiinae) the most dangerous sea snake in Sri Lanka: three case studies of severe envenoming. 2423 58

Dengue fever (DF) is an outbreak prone viral disease transmitted by aedes mosquitoes. It is often associated with evidence of plasma leakage due to increased vascular permeability manifested by pleural effusion, ascites, hypoproteinaemia and pericardial effusion. Cases of small pericardial effusion have been reported in association with dengue fever, largely with dengue haemorrhagic fever (DHF) during epidemic outbreaks. Dengue may rarely present with cardiac tamponade as early manifestation and urgent pericardiocentesis is life saving. A 34 year old male presented with low grade fever, headache, myalgia and breathlessness. Echocardiography revealed large pericardial effusion with right ventricular diagnostic collapse requiring urgent drainage. Subsequently patient improved. Dengue serology (both IgM and IgG) was reported as markedly elevated supporting a diagnosis of classic dengue fever.
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PMID:Cardiac tamponade presenting as early manifestation in dengue fever. 2532 70


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