Cases reported "Infection"

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1/3. Differences in water diffusion and lactate production in two different types of postinfectious encephalopathy.

    We compared two different types of postinfectious encephalopathy using magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), including diffusion-weighted images and MR spectroscopy. Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) and acute necrotizing encephalopathy (ANE) showed different distribution of abnormal intensity areas and different diffusion of water measured by diffusion-weighted imaging (DWI). Proton MR spectroscopy (MRS) showed lactate production in both cases, which returned to a normal range; the rate of increased lactate production was much lower in the ANE case. water diffusion showed a difference in pathophysiological background between the two encephalopathies, but the lactate elevation observed by proton MRS did not correlate with clinical severity.
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ranking = 1
keywords = water
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2/3. Progressive idiopathic cholestasis presenting with profuse watery diarrhoea and recurrent infections (Byler's disease).

    The second child of healthy unrelated parents presented with chronic diarrhoea since the age of two months, initially associated with non-characteristic liver involvement. Recurrent infections, severe failure to thrive and various metabolic deficiencies complicated the further course, as well as profuse watery diarrhoea with elevated regulatory gut peptides, responding only to somatostatin analog treatment. At 22 months of age, intermittent cholestasis with permanently normal serum gamma-glutamyltransferase was evident. The child died of fulminant purulent meningitis at the age of three years six months. liver histology showed intrahepatic cholestasis, bile duct paucity with focal proliferation as well as slight portal and intralobular fibrosis. The clinical, biochemical and histopathological findings were indicative of Byler's disease.
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ranking = 1
keywords = water
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3/3. movement disorders possibly induced by traditional chinese herbs.

    The authors describe the neurological presentation and CT/MRI findings in 4 patients exposed to overdoses of decoctions of two different Chinese herbs. Case 1, a 15-year-old boy, ingested herba serissae along with the safe-dosage salvia miltiorrhiza for treating a left renal stone. sophora subprostrata root (SSR) was primarily used for treating three other diseases: viral B hepatitis in case 2, a 9-year-old boy; infection of the throat and a low fever in case 3, a 11-year-old girl, and a minor facial infection in case 4, a 12-year-old boy. All patients showed complex neurological manifestations primarily including convulsions, mental changes and dystonia syndromes. Their CT and/or MRI revealed abnormal density lesions in the striatum and globus pallidus bilaterally. They excluded the possibility of Wilson's disease in each of the 4 patients and suggested that overdosage of SSR and herba serissae could cause intoxications of the central nervous system, particularly damage to the basal ganglia. Chemically, coumarin (case 1) and matrine and oxymatrine (cases 2-4) in the two medicinal herbs are suggested to be possibly responsible for the morbidity.
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ranking = 0.47574715590175
keywords = chinese
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