Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0392680 (shortness of breath)
5,217 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 66-year-old man was admitted for shortness of breath and showed fever, abdominal fullness and paraplegia. Monocytosis amounting to 25% and an elevation of serum LDH (4,281 mIu), were remarkable in the laboratory findings. He died of pulmonary insufficiency about a month after admission. On autopsy hepatomegaly (1950 g), splenomegaly (780 g), but no lymphadenopathy and small infarction in the thoracic spinal cord causing paraplegia was noted. Histopathologically, the invasion of the tumor cells into the liver, spleen, lymph nodes, bone marrow and other organs was observed. Malignant histiocytosis was diagnosed by histologic and immunohistochemical studies (lysozyme positive, S-100 protein negative).
...
PMID:[A case of malignant histiocytosis with paraplegia]. 362 41

A 27-year-old man, two 54-year old men and a 64-year-old woman presented with aspecific symptoms: acute pain and tingling in the shoulders plus paraplegia; exertional dyspnoea and tingling in both feet for the past week; increasing shortness of breath and cold, pale legs and feet for the past week; acute retrosternal pain, incontinence and paraparesis. The cause was dissection of the ascending aorta (type A). Following the operation, the legs were amputated because of ischaemia. The 27-year-old man and one of the 54-year-old men died; the other two patients made a satisfactory recovery. Acute type-A aortic dissection is a life-threatening disease that must be recognised early because it is an absolute indication for emergency surgery. The initial manifestation of type-A dissection may be very aspecific. Post-operative lower limb ischaemia, as the first symptom of this disease, is rare and usually disappears after surgery for type-A dissection. In some cases, however, ischaemia persists and alters the post-operative course dramatically.
...
PMID:[Ischemia of the lower limbs as a symptom of acute dissection of the ascending aorta]. 1456 Jun 84

Inadvertent injection of nonepidural drugs into the epidural space is a rare situation, which is under-reported, and can lead to serious complications, such as cardiovascular and respiratory complications, paraplegia, or quadriplegia, and can worsen the patients' outcome from surgery. Succinylcholine administered epidurally leads to the appearance of fasciculation and shortness of breath and can prolong neuromuscular blockade. We report a case of accidental administration of 100 mg of succinylcholine via an epidural catheter as a test dose instead of 2 ml 0.5% bupivacaine in a patient planned for major abdominal surgery. After 2 min, the patient complained of shortness of breath; dysarthria; and fasciculation in the trunk, upper limbs, and face. This was managed with induction to general anesthesia (GA). In the postoperative period, no neurological or cardiovascular complications were observed. There is no adequate drug as an antidote of accidentally given nonepidural drugs via an epidural catheter. Succinylcholine given via epidural catheter has been shown to prolong neuromuscular blockade. Proper labeling and storage of syringes are of utmost importance for avoiding these unpleasant situations.
...
PMID:Accidental injection of succinylcholine into epidural space as a test dose. 3231 84