Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C1762617 (weakness)
37,932 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of dermatomyositis which developed one month after normal delivery and subsided spontaneously was reported. A 29-year-old woman gave birth to a healthy child. One month later, she noticed muscular pain and weakness of the upper extremities. On admission, there were diffuse edema of upper eyelids with heliotrope rash. The reddish skin rashes were observed on the extensor surfaces of the PIP and MP joints of fingers. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was 29 mm/hr. The lactic dehydrogenase (LDH), SGOT, CK levels were 470 (normal 150 to 320 IU/l), 43 (normal 6 to 25 IU/l) and 317 (normal 21 to 110 IU/l) respectively. Autoantibodies to nuclear and cytoplasmic antigens were negative. Rheumatoid factor and anti-DNA antibody were negative. Thyroid function was normal. An electromyogram (EMG) demonstrated small amplitude short-duration polyphasic motor unit potentials. The muscle biopsy specimen from left upper arm showed degenerating muscle fibers and infiltration of inflammatory cells surrounding blood vessels. The skin biopsy revealed the presence of edema and perivascular infiltration of lymphocytes. Based on these clinical features and results of various diagnostic tests, a diagnosis of dermatomyositis was established. After the admission, muscle strength has improved dramatically and the CK returned to normal level without specific drug therapy. She has since been seen as an out patient, and complete remission lasted for two years up to date. Review of the literature disclosed that 13 cases of PM/DM which developed during pregnancy or postpartum have been reported including the present case. Detailed analysis showed that these patients were characterized by mild muscular diseases, rare occurrence of internal organ involvements and good response to steroid therapy. As our case, a spontaneous remission was also observed. Although the mechanism involved in occurrence of inflammatory myositis associated with pregnancy or delivery are not clarified, these patient indicated a presence of subset of PM/DM which do not require intensive drug therapy.
...
PMID:[Spontaneous remission of dermatomyositis which developed one month after normal delivery]. 160 20

Hyperthyroidism is accompanied by significant dysfunction of both proximal and distal skeletal muscles. The purpose of this study was to quantitate the degree of muscle weakness in newly diagnosed patients with Graves' disease and to assess the response to treatment. Ten patients were prospectively studied with objective measures of strength and endurance of proximal and distal muscles while hyperthyroid (stage I), after 2 weeks of propranolol (stage II), and about 6 months later when euthyroid (stage III). Propranolol treatment for 2 weeks resulted in a subjective decrease in weakness, which was accompanied by a statistically significant improvement in grip strength (P less than 0.01), shoulder strength (P less than 0.02), and grip endurance (P less than 0.01) but not shoulder endurance. Muscle function further improved and attained control levels when the patients were chemically and clinically euthyroid. In contrast, a control group subjected to the same muscle testing protocol before and after 1 week of propranolol treatment showed no improvement in grip, shoulder strength, or shoulder endurance but had decreased grip endurance (P less than 0.01) and increased subjective weakness. These results confirm that muscle weakness commonly is associated with hyperthyroidism and can be quantitatively profound. In contrast to the effects of beta-blockade in normal controls, propranolol partially improves muscle weakness in thyrotoxic patients. We conclude that thyroid hormone and catecholamines in concert mediate the muscle dysfunction of hyperthyroidism.
Thyroid 1991
PMID:Hyperthyroid myopathy and the response to treatment. 168 15

A 58-yr-old woman presented with recurrent chest infections, breathlessness, and orthopnea. She complained of nonspecific tiredness and aching limbs. A chest radiograph showed an elevated right hemidiaphragm. Thyroid function tests showed her to be severely hypothyroid (T4 = 23 nmol/L; TSH greater than 50 mU/L). Measurement of maximal respiratory mouth pressures (expiratory: 50 cm H2O, normal, 94 +/- 33; inspiratory: 15 cm H2O, normal, 71 +/- 27) suggested global respiratory muscle weakness. Severe bilateral diaphragm weakness was demonstrated by a greatly reduced maximal transdiaphragmatic pressure (Pdi) (Pdi Pimax = 0, normal, 65 +/- 31 cm H2O; sniff Pdi = 25 cm H2O, normal, 121 +/- 25). No Pdi was detectable on stimulation of the right phrenic nerve, whereas, on the left, it was 11 cm H2O (normal 7 to 15 cm H2O). Phrenic nerve conduction time was prolonged to both sides (right, 12 ms, left, 10 ms; normal, less than 9.5 ms). The relaxation rate of Pdi after a maximal sniff and after bilateral phrenic nerve stimulation was abnormally slow (7.4%/10 ms, 6.3%/10 ms, respectively). Three months after starting treatment with thyroxine she had become euthyroid, and phrenic nerve conduction times and Pdi relaxation rates had returned to normal. Maximal respiratory pressures, vital capacity, and maximal voluntary ventilation improved progressively on treatment, although maximal respiratory pressures still had not reached the normal range after six months. We conclude that hypothyroidism may present with breathlessness due to respiratory muscle weakness and/or phrenic nerve neuropathy and is reversible with treatment.
...
PMID:Hypothyroidism presenting with respiratory muscle weakness. 319 39

Muscle and joint pains and/or weakness are not usually stressed as central symptoms in hypothyroidism. Two cases of long-standing hypothyroidism presenting with prominent myopathic symptoms are described. The first patient presented with a 12-year history of proximal myopathy, arthropathy and skin abnormalities, and florid primary myxedema was diagnosed. No evidence for a systemic autoimmune process was found. The second patient had been treated with irradiation to the neck 23 years before admission and presented with clinical and laboratory signs of both proximal myopathy and hypothyroidism. Thyroid hormone replacement resulted in a complete recovery of all the musculoskeletal symptoms, with reversion to normal of the very high muscle enzyme levels in both patients. The cases presented illustrate that hypothyroidism can lead to the development of a variety of muscular, rheumatic and dermatologic syndromes easily confused with dermatomyositis or other collagen diseases.
...
PMID:Musculoskeletal symptoms as a presenting sign of long-standing hypothyroidism. 343 93

An unusual case of isolated ACTH deficiency with coexisting chronic thyroiditis in a 53-year-old man is reported. The patient was admitted with a 2-year history of generalized fatigue, a 13-kg weight loss, muscular weakness, and frequent hypotensive and hypoglycemic attacks. On admission serum thyroxine and triiodothyronine were significantly elevated. Basal TSH concentration was not detected and TSH showed no response to TRH, but one month after replacement therapy with hydrocortisone it was shown that serum T3, T4 and TSH response were all within normal limits. Thyroid antibodies were positive and biopsy of the thyroid gland showed chronic thyroiditis. Arginine and 1-Dopa provoked a subnormal rise in GH with a maximum of 5.6 ng/ml and 5.0, respectively. One month after treatment with hydrocortisone, GH response to 1-Dopa and arginine increased to the normal range. Prolactin response to TRH was normal and FSH response to LHRH was also normal. LH showed an exaggerated response to LHRH, although a normal response was revealed after treatment with hydrocortisone. We also presented a summary of 44 Japanese cases, 23 males (mean age; 46 yrs old) and 21 females (mean age; 48 yrs old), with isolated ACTH deficiency.
...
PMID:A case with isolated ACTH deficiency accompanying chronic thyroiditis. 629 Feb

A 61-year-old Caucasian man presented with otalgia, dysarthria, and weight loss. Neurological examination revealed palatal hypomotility, and weakness of the facial and tongue muscles. Magnetic resonance imaging of the head demonstrated the presence of a soft tissue mass in the clivus. Histologic examination of resected tumor disclosed well-differentiated thyroid follicles that invaded the local osseous tissues. Physical examination and radioiodine images of the thyroid gland were normal. The serum thyroglobulin concentration was markedly elevated (1011 ng/mL). A 0.9-cm well-differentiated benign-appearing left thyroid lobe follicular neoplasm with a thick fibrous capsule was found following diagnostic thyroidectomy. This report illustrates that clinically significant distant metastases can arise from occult follicular thyroid neoplasms that, according to standard histologic criteria, are benign. The presence of a thick fibrous capsule, even in the absence of vascular or capsular invasion, may identify follicular neoplasms that have metastatic potential.
Thyroid 1995 Jun
PMID:Metastatic follicular thyroid carcinoma masquerading as a chordoma. 758 Feb 71

Thyrotoxic periodic paralysis (TPP) is an unusual complication of a fairly common disease affecting mostly Asian males. In the United States, there have been several reports of TPP in different ethnic populations and it appears that the incidence is approximately one-tenth of that found in Asian countries. Only six reports of TPP in African-Americans could be found in the literature; however, we are reporting four cases diagnosed within a 13-year period at our institution. We conclude that TPP may occur more often in Blacks than previously suspected and should be considered when patients present with unexplained hypokalemia, muscular weakness and rhabdomyolysis. The epidemiology, clinical manifestations, pathophysiology, and treatment of TPP are reviewed.
Thyroid 1994
PMID:Thyrotoxic hypokalemic periodic paralysis: report of four cases in black American males. 771 9

A 74-year-old woman developed weakness, lack of appetite and abdominal swelling 7 months after starting treatment with carbimazole (10 mg/d for 10 weeks) and, subsequently, radioiodine for hyperthyroidism. Physical examination revealed generalized oedema and ascites. Computed tomography showed a liver of normal size but infiltrated by nodules up to 4 cm in diameter. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was raised and there were abnormal concentrations of haemoglobin, total proteins, liver enzymes and creatinine, as well as decreased platelet and white cell counts. Thyroid function was normal. Viral and autoimmune diseases were largely excluded. Liver biopsy showed a severe, highly active hepatitis with parenchymal necroses, large-drop fatty infiltration and intralobular granuloma-like inflammatory reactions, as well as lympho-histiocytic inflammation of the portal areas. The most likely cause was the carbimazole treatment. In addition to symptomatic treatment she received prednisone (1 mg/kg), because an allergic diathesis could not be excluded. But she died of hepatic failure 6 weeks after admission.
...
PMID:[Necrotizing hepatitis with a fatal outcome after carbimazole therapy]. 822 96

Energy intake profoundly influences many endocrine axes which in turn play a central role in development. The specific influence of a short period of mild hypothyroidism, similar to that induced by undernutrition, in regulating muscle development has been assessed in a large mammal during early postnatal life. Hypothyroidism was induced by providing methimazole and iopanoic acid in the feed of piglets between 4 and 14 d of age, and controls were pair-fed to the energy intake of their hypothyroid littermates. Thyroid status was evaluated, and myofibre differentiation and cation pump concentrations were then assessed in the following functionally distinct muscles: longissimus dorsi (l. dorsi), soleus and rhomboideus. Reductions in plasma concentrations of thyroxine (T4; 32%, P < 0.01), triiodothyronine (T3; 48%, P < 0.001), free T3 (58%, P < 0.001) and hepatic 5'-monodeiodinase (EC 1.11.1.8) activity (74%, P < 0.001) occurred with treatment. Small, although significant, increases in the proportion of type I slow-twitch oxidative fibres occurred with mild hypothyroidism, in l. dorsi (2%, P < 0.01) and soleus (7%, P < 0.01). Nuclear T3-receptor concentration in l. dorsi of hypothyroid animals compared with controls increased by 46% (P < 0.001), a response that may represent a homeostatic mechanism making muscle more sensitive to low levels of circulating thyroid hormones. Nevertheless, Na+, K(+)-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.37) concentration was reduced by 15-16% in all muscles (l. dorsi P < 0.05, soleus P < 0.001, rhomboideus P < 0.05), and Ca(2+)-ATPase (EC 3.6.1.38) concentration was significantly reduced in the two slow-twitch muscles: by 22% in rhomboideus (P < 0.001) and 23% in soleus (P < 0.05). It is concluded that during early postnatal development of large mammals a period of mild hypothyroidism, comparable with that found during undernutrition, induces changes in myofibre differentiation and a down-regulation of cation pumps in skeletal muscle. Such changes would result in slowness of movement and muscle weakness, and also reduce ATP hydrolysis with a concomitant improvement in energetic efficiency.
...
PMID:Role of thyroid hormones in early postnatal development of skeletal muscle and its implications for undernutrition. 901 53

Primary hyperparathyroidism is seldom associated with other autoimmune disorders. The presence of normocalcemia in primary hyperparathyroidism should prompt the physician to look for vitamin D deficiency. This observation concerns a 34-year-old vegetarian woman with combined primary hyperparathyroidism, Graves' disease, and celiac disease. The patient presented with severe bone deformities; she was unable to walk, and had severe muscular weakness and weight loss. Biochemical findings revealed severe hyperparathyroidism with normocalcemia, hypophosphatemia, very low urinary calcium, and low 25-hydroxy vitamin D level. Thyroid tests showed hyperthyroidism with positive thyroid receptor antibodies, confirming the presence of Graves' disease. Positive antigliadin and antireticulin antibodies and complete villous atrophy on duodenal biopsy established the presence of celiac disease. The patient underwent a near-total thyroidectomy, with the removal of a parathyroid adenoma. To our knowledge, this observation is the first finding of an association between celiac disease, Graves' disease, and primary hyperparathyroidism. It emphasizes the need to rule out intestinal malabsorption in the case of normocalcemic hyperparathyroidism.
...
PMID:Osteomalacia secondary to celiac disease, primary hyperparathyroidism, and Graves' disease. 947 14


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>