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Related Concept Videos

Drug Toxicity: Overview01:00

Drug Toxicity: Overview

313
Drug toxicity quantifies the harm a compound causes to an organism, varying by dose and potentially impacting whole systems or specific organs like the liver. Toxic reactions may arise from venomous insect or spider bites, with effects ranging from mild symptoms to severe outcomes such as brain damage or death. Common forms of acute poisoning include ethanol intoxication and overdose of pain or fever medications, with substances like GHB and heroin being particularly lethal at doses close to...
313
Drug Toxicity: Risk factors01:24

Drug Toxicity: Risk factors

250
Adverse Drug Reactions (ADRs) are potential complications that arise during pharmacotherapy, influenced by multiple risk factors. Age plays a significant role; both neonates and the elderly are at heightened risk due to their respective immature and diminished metabolic and elimination processes. Gender also impacts ADRs, with females experiencing a 1.5 to 1.7-fold greater risk than males, which may be linked to pharmacokinetic, pharmacodynamic, and hormonal differences. Notably, neonates, the...
250
Drug Toxicity: Dose-Dependent Reactions01:24

Drug Toxicity: Dose-Dependent Reactions

245
Drug toxicities can be stratified into pharmacological, pathological, or genotoxic based on their mechanisms. The incidence and severity of these toxicities generally increase with the drug's concentration in the body and exposure time.Pharmacological toxicity is evident when the therapeutic effects of drugs overshoot into adverse reactions in a predictable, dose-dependent manner. Central nervous system (CNS) depression from barbiturates is a classic example, with effects escalating from...
245
Drug toxicity: Idiosyncratic Reactions01:16

Drug toxicity: Idiosyncratic Reactions

232
Idiosyncratic drug reactions represent abnormal chemical responses that vary significantly among individuals, ranging from extreme sensitivity to low doses to insensitivity to high doses. These reactions often occur due to the drug's covalent binding with serum proteins, forming a foreign hapten that triggers an immunotoxicological response. The variability in drug reactions has a strong pharmacogenetic foundation, with genetic differences crucial in how individuals metabolize drugs. For...
232
Encephalitis l: Introduction01:19

Encephalitis l: Introduction

29
Encephalitis is inflammation of the brain parenchyma, most often due to infections or autoimmune processes. It presents with neuropsychiatric features such as fever, altered mental status, behavioral changes, cognitive dysfunction, seizures, focal deficits, and sometimes autonomic instability. In some cases, the meninges are also involved, resulting in meningoencephalitis.Infectious CausesInfectious encephalitis is most commonly viral but can also result from bacterial, fungal, or parasitic...
29
Hepatic Encephalopathy01:29

Hepatic Encephalopathy

71
DefinitionHepatic encephalopathy is a reversible neurologic syndrome that results from advanced liver dysfunction or portosystemic shunting. It leads to disturbances in cognition, behavior, and motor function due to the brain’s exposure to gut-derived toxins that the liver fails to detoxify.EtiologyThis condition develops either in the setting of acute fulminant hepatitis or progressively during chronic liver disease, such as cirrhosis and portal hypertension. Portosystemic...
71

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A Rare Case: Is It Hemodialysis Encephalopathy, Dialysis Anxiety, or Both?

Cureus·2024
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Isolation of Brain-infiltrating Leukocytes
06:44

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Heroin-Induced Leukoencephalopathy: A Case Report.

Daniel I Casal1, Asya Wallach2

  • 1Psychiatry and Behavioral Sciences, Neurology, Rowan-Virtua SOM (School of Osteopathic Medicine), Stratford, USA.

Cureus
|September 30, 2024
PubMed
Summary
This summary is machine-generated.

Heroin-induced leukoencephalopathy (HLE) is a rare neurological condition linked to inhaling heroin. This case study details a patient

Area of Science:

  • Neurology
  • Toxicology
  • Radiology

Background:

  • Heroin-induced leukoencephalopathy (HLE) is a rare neurological disorder.
Keywords:
flairheroin inhalationheroin-induced leukoencephalopathyphysical medicine & rehabilitationreversible dementiatoxic leukoencephalopathywhite matter hyperintensity

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  • It is associated with the practice of inhaling heroin, known as "chasing the dragon."
  • HLE can manifest with diverse neurological symptoms, ranging in severity.