We previously described a syndrome of congestive heart failure occurring in healthy young men at extreme altitude (Anand et al. Lancet 335: 561-565, 1990). The pathogenesis of this condition is unclear. We therefore measured body fluid compartments, renal blood flow, and a variety of plasma hormones in 10 asymptomatic young men staying above 6,000 m for > 10 wk and compared the results with controls at sea level. Body compartments were measured with isotope dilution techniques and renal blood flow with o-[125I]iodohippurate sodium. There was a marked expansion of all the fluid spaces: total body sodium was 14% above normal (P < 0.05), total body water was 18% above normal (P < 0.05), plasma volume was 33% above normal (P < 0.05), and blood volume was 84.5% above normal (P < 0.001). The effective renal plasma flow was lower than normal by 55% (P < 0.001), but the reduction in the effective renal blood flow was 37% below normal (P < 0.001) because the hematocrit was high (41.6% above normal). Plasma norepinephrine was nearly 3 times normal (P < 0.01), cortisol 3 times normal (P < 0.001), and growth hormone 18 times normal (P < 0.01). Aldosterone was twice normal (P < 0.03). Plasma epinephrine, atrial natriuretic peptide, and plasma renin activity were unchanged. The degree of fluid retention in these normal subjects was similar to that in patients with severe untreated congestive heart failure (Anand et al. Circulation 80: 299-305, 1989), whereas sodium retention and reduction in effective renal blood flow were less.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Dengue fever has a variable clinical spectrum ranging from asymptomatic infection to life-threatening dengue haemorrhagic fever and dengue shock syndrome. However, neurological complications, in general, are unusual. Dengue encephalopathy is not an unknown entity; however, dengue encephalitis, a direct neuronal infiltration by the dengue virus, is an extremely rare disease. Although dengue is classically considered a non-neurotropic virus, there is increasing evidence for dengue viral neurotropism, suggesting that, in a proportion of cases, there may be an element of direct viral encephalitis. An MRI brain rarely shows focal abnormalities in dengue encephalitis. We report an interesting case of dengue encephalitis during an outbreak in Delhi, India. The diagnosis was confirmed by blood and cerebrospinal fluid dengue serology and (NS1) antigen assay. The case showed extensive lesions involving the midbrain, cerebellum, thalamus and medial temporal region on both sides of the MRI brain, which is an uncommon manifestation of dengue fever.
Alport syndrome (AS) is a heterogeneous basement membrane disease characterised by haematuria with progressive hereditary nephritis, high-frequency sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) and pathognomonic ocular lesions. It is one of the spectra of diseases representing hereditary nephritis, which inevitably leads to end-stage renal disease (ESRD). Microscopic or frank haematuria persistent from childhood constitutes the clinical clue for its early recognition. It occurs as a result of genetically inherited or de novo mutations in type IV collagen genes. The most common mode of inheritance is X-linked and men are more severely affected. We report a case of a young woman, in her fourth decade of life presenting with overt nephropathy, having persistent haematuria associated with SNHL and lenticonus with dot and fleck retinopathy on detailed clinical examination, diagnosed as a previously undetected case of Alport syndrome.
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