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)

Approximately 250 sheep were poisoned and died from ingesting death camas (Zygadenus paniculatus) within a 2-day period on a foothill range in southeastern Idaho. Sixty to 70% of the poisoned sheep were 80-90 lb lambs and the rest were mature ewes. Poisonings were confirmed by field investigation, microhistological analysis of plant fragments from rumen contents of dead sheep, clinical signs, gross and microscopic analysis of tissues, and by experimentally feeding death camas collected on the poisoning site to 3 ewes at the Poisonous Plant Research Laboratory at Logan, UT. Clinical signs and gross and microscopic analysis of tissues were similar in ewes from the field investigation to those in ewes experimentally fed death camas. Ataxia, muscular weakness, trembling, incoordination, discharge of frothy saliva from the mouth and nose, vomition, dyspnea, collapse and death were the most common clinical signs. Gross changes included severe pulmonary congestion and subcutaneous hemorrhage. Microscopic lesions were those of severe pulmonary congestion.
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PMID:Death camas poisoning in sheep: a case report. 382 76

From a group of 11 recently weaned pigs, 4 were reported to be sick. Clinical examination of the sick pigs revealed marked dyspnoea, bluish-red discolouration of the skin, incoordination and difficulty in walking. Bacteriological examination of the gut contents of 2 pigs that had died earlier yielded pure cultures of haemolytic Escherichia coli. Post mortem examination of the remaining 2 pigs that died subsequently revealed progressive pulmonary collapse. One of these also showed subcutaneous oedema of the head and marked oedema of the mesentery of the spiral colon and oedema of the brain. Microscopically there was pulmonary alveolar collapse and degenerative changes in the liver. On the basis of the clinical signs, isolation of haemolytic E. coli and the post mortem findings, a diagnosis of oedema disease was made.
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PMID:An unusual presentation of suspected oedema disease of swine in Kenya. 1085 32

Zenker's diverticulum is the single most common diverticular event arising in the esophagus. Its physiopathology is universally recognized. Lack of coordination between the propulsive pharyngeal contractions and the release of the upper esophageal sphincter creates abnormally high pressure in the pharyngeal chamber, resulting in the collapse of the posterior wall of the hypopharynx, i.e., the Laimer-Killian triangle (or Killian's dehiscence). The mucosal hernia that develops constitutes the diverticulum, which grows in volume and above all in length and is compressed between two rigid structures, namely, the spine posteriorly and the trachea anteriorly. Swallowing progressively fills the diverticulum, which in turn leads to compression of the esophagus and hence to the characteristic symptom of "delayed dysphagia" or "dysphagia of the 3rd bite". These physiopathological considerations underpin the rationale for surgical treatment, namely upper esophageal sphincter myotomy and diverticulectomy, which is the standard approach used in the 44 cases presented here. A diverticulopexy was performed only once due to the patient's advanced age. Myotomy alone was performed in only one case, given the small size of the diverticulum. In two patients the standard procedure was carried out following emergency therapy for iatrogenic perforation of the diverticulum. The patient with cancer underwent chemo-radiotherapy after futile surgical attempts. Complications included transitory salivary leakage (1 case), and a transitory laryngeal nerve deficit (1 case). Gastroesophageal reflux disease was present in two-thirds of the patients. A Nissen-Rossetti fundoplication was performed one year after treatment of the diverticulum in 5 patients. The following important aspects emerged: i) the incidence of neoplasia on the diverticulum; ii) the association and possible pathogenetic relationship with gastro-esophageal reflux disease iii) the validity of myotomy plus diverticulectomy as a treatment option in view of the negligible complications and the absence of relapse and/or persistence of dysphagia.
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PMID:[Our experience with pharyngo-esophageal Zenker's diverticulum]. 1472 16

Labrador retrievers are the most common dog breed in the world, with over 200,000 new kennel club registrations per year. The syndrome of exercise-induced collapse (EIC) in this breed is manifested by muscle weakness, incoordination and life-threatening collapse after intense exercise. Using a genome-wide microsatellite marker scan for linkage in pedigrees, we mapped the EIC locus to canine chromosome 9. We then used SNP association and haplotype analysis to fine map the locus, and identified a mutation in the dynamin 1 gene (DNM1) that causes an R256L substitution in a highly conserved region of the protein. This first documented mammalian DNM1 mutation is present at a high frequency in the breed and is a compelling candidate causal mutation for EIC, as the dynamin 1 protein has an essential role in neurotransmission and synaptic vesicle endocytosis.
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PMID:A canine DNM1 mutation is highly associated with the syndrome of exercise-induced collapse. 1880 95

Twenty-nine wild Cape sugarbirds ( Promerops cafer) died acutely after ingestion of a homemade xylitol nectar solution from a bird feeder. The most aggressive feeders were first affected. Most birds showed clinical signs within 15 minutes of nectar ingestion, including incoordination, weakness, falling from perches, collapse, and death. A few birds showing clinical signs seemed to spontaneously recover and fly away. Full necropsy examinations done on 27 birds were hampered by freezing artifact and autolysis, but results indicated death was caused by the consequences of acute hypoglycemia. A presumptive diagnosis of xylitol toxicity was made based on the history, clinical signs, and absence of other obvious causes of death. This is potentially the first record of xylitol toxicity in wild birds.
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PMID:Acute, Fatal, Presumptive Xylitol Toxicosis in Cape Sugarbirds ( Promerops cafer). 2932 62