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Query: UMLS:C0002622 (
amnesia
)
5,520
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Rats were first trained to press a bar for
water
reinforcement. The day after reaching criterion, the animals received a subcutaneous injection of cycloheximide (CXM-2.5 mg/kg) or saline, 15 minutes before a single punishment (P) session where bar pressing was followed by a strong inescapable footshock (CXM-P and saline-P groups). No punishment was given to control groups (CXM-NP and saline-NP groups). Retention for this learning experience was tested 24 hr, one week or two weeks later. Performances of the control groups were similar at the three retention intervals although some CXM-induced aversion appeared at 24 hr. The saline-P groups always demonstrated good retention of prior aversive experience. By contrast, a long-lasting CXM-induced
amnesia
was apparent among the CXM-P groups. This deficit is not easily explained by nonspecific effects of the drug such as altered motor activity or motivational changes. Moreover, CXM-induced
amnesia
seems to be the result of impaired memory formation rather than impaired memory retrieval.
...
PMID:Transient aversion and long-lasting amnesia following cycloheximide injection in the rat. 668 4
In a randomised cross-over trial, midazolam, a new
water
soluble benzodiazepine was compared with the conventional diazepam preparation (Valium) in 34 patients aged 16-45 years who were undergoing outpatient conservation dentistry. Midazolam hydrochloride (0.17 mg/kg) was virtually free of venous complications and showed advantages over diazepam (0.32 mg/kg) in providing a faster onset of action, higher incidence of
amnesia
and more rapid recovery. Midazolam produced a higher incidence of respiratory side effects hiccough (17.6% compared with 2.9%), brief apnoea following induction (11.8% compared with 5.8%), and airway obstruction during maintenance (8.8% compared with 0%). These may be related to the greater potency of midazolam as suggested by the smaller total dose required. Cardiovascular changes and operating conditions were similar.
...
PMID:A comparison of midazolam and diazepam for intravenous sedation in dentistry. 674 94
Midazolam was given intravenously to 100 children over the age of 8 years to induce anaesthesia and a similar control group was anaesthetised with diazepam. The actions of midazolam in children were found to be similar to those of diazepam. Midazolam acted more quickly in children than has been reported in adults. The effects on the circulation and respiration, and the incidence of postoperative
amnesia
were similar in children to that which has been reported in adults. The incidence of postoperative vomiting after midazolam was 1% in the recovery room and 32% during the first two postoperative days. Laboratory investigations did not demonstrate any adverse effects. Midazolam has a considerable advantage over diazepam being
water
soluble and injectable safely without dilution. This clinical trial suggests that midazolam is a satisfactory induction agent for children.
...
PMID:Midazolam in paediatric anaesthesia. 706 92
Diazepam is widely used as a sedative for loco-regional anesthesia. The venous irritation and long duration of action and hangover may be a drawback. We compared 8-chloro-6-(2-fluorophenyl)-1-methyl-4H-imidazo[1,5-a] [1,4]benzodiazepine (midazolam, Ro 21-3981, Dormicum), a new
water
-soluble benzodiazepine, with diazepam for cardio-respiratory changes, onset time, duration of action,
amnesia
and venous irritation after a single i.v. shot in loco-regional anesthesia.
...
PMID:Midazolam as a sedative on regional anesthesia. Preliminary results. 719 28
Mature (10-month-old) and aged (25-month-old) rats were trained on a passive avoidance task. Following training, rats in each age group were exposed to a hypothermia treatment, restraint alone, or no treatment. The hypothermia treatment involved immersing the mature rats in 4 degrees C
water
for 12 min and immersing the aged rats in 1 degrees C
water
for 12 min. This treatment reduced the body temperature of both age groups to an equivalent temperature (22 degrees C). Following immersion, the body temperature of the aged rats continued to decline to a lower level and recovered at a slower rate than the mature rat's temperatures. When all rats were tested 24 hr after training for retention of the avoidance task, mature rats performed better than aged rats when trained with the same shock intensity. Increasing the shock duration for the aged rats eliminated the performance differences on the passive avoidance task between ages. Rats exposed to hypothermia showed poorer retention of the task (i.e., retrograde amnesia) than all control conditions. However, no age differences in the degree of
amnesia
induced by the hypothermia treatment were apparent once age groups were equated on the intensity of the amnesic agent (hypothermia) and degree of initial learning.
...
PMID:Hypothermia-induced retrograde amnesia in mature and aged rats. 725 May 24
Both nitric oxide and arachidonic acid have been suggested to play a role as a retrograde messenger in synaptic plastic changes which underlie memory formation. However, inhibitors of nitric oxide (NO) synthesis or of arachidonic acid release have produced contradictory results. We suggest a model which involves simultaneous release of both messenger types which can compensate for the loss of one type. To test this theory, rats were injected either with a drug that inhibits release of arachidonic acid, or a drug that inhibits synthesis of NO, or with both drugs. Acquisition of a
water
maze task was not different between groups. In the test sessions, however, animals injected with both drugs showed marked amnesic symptoms, while the groups injected with a low dose of nordihydroguaiaretic acid (NDGA) or with nitro-L-arginine (L-NARG) showed a trend towards
amnesia
. The effect of both drugs appears to be additive. The results support the proposed theory.
...
PMID:Inhibitors of PLA2 and NO synthase cooperate in producing amnesia of a spatial task. 754 55
To detect possible molecular determinants of
amnesia
-reverting activity, the conformational properties of a number of rigid and flexible piracetam-type cognition enhancers have been assessed by X-ray diffraction, NMR spectroscopy, and ab initio and high-temperature-quenched molecular dynamics (QMD) calculations. The structures of the preferred conformers in solution derived from 1H-NMR spectral analysis were in good agreement with those found by QMD calculations. Interestingly, the calculation of the average molecular lipophilicity potential on the
water
-accessible surface of the selected conformers was helpful in interpreting the partitioning behavior observed by measuring octanol-
water
partition coefficients and capacity factors in reversed-phase high-performance liquid chromatography. While lipophilicity does not play a relevant role, the distance between polar groups, accounted for by the distance between carbonyl oxygens, emerges as a factor, among others, which should influence the
amnesia
-reversal activity of piracetam-type nootropics.
...
PMID:X-ray crystal structure, partitioning behavior, and molecular modeling study of piracetam-type nootropics: insights into the pharmacophore. 783 28
The effects of contextual changes were examined in a group of divers performing a test of face recognition. No evidence was found that the shift from above to below
water
, or vice versa, disrupted recognition. The fact that the same test of visual recognition is sensitive to amnesic subjects poses a challenge to certain versions of the contextual deficit theory of
amnesia
.
...
PMID:The failure of context shifts to alter the recognition of faces: implications for contextual deficits in amnesia. 792 57
Previous research in this laboratory has shown that preweaning and postweaning juvenile meadow voles, Microtus pennsylvanicus, can acquire a spatial task, the Morris
water
-maze task. The present study examined the influence of age of juvenile acquisition ("before weaning" (BW; Day 10 and 15 after birth) and "after weaning" (AW; Day 20 and 25 after birth)) of a spatial task on subsequent re-acquisition of the same hidden-platform spatial
water
-maze task. This study also compared sex differences and litter sex-ratio effects on reacquisition performance. Fifteen litters of adults were re-tested in the same
water
maze 6 weeks after being initially tested as juveniles. All analyses were conducted using a covariate that removed the group differences in the original task performance. Adult voles from female-biased litters, that had previously learned the task at an older juvenile age (AW), reacquired the same task faster than adults that had previously learned the task at a younger juvenile age (BW). In the adult BW group there was also a significant litter sex-ratio effect such that voles born into a female-biased litter re-acquired the task more slowly than did voles born into a male-biased litter. There were no significant sex or litter sex-ratio effects on spatial learning in the AW group. These results show that adult meadow voles can require a spatial task more quickly if they initially learned the task at an older juvenile age, suggestive of a period of infantile
amnesia
. In addition, these results indicate that the litter sex-ratio can affect adult spatial performance, suggesting that the relative amount of androgens in utero may influence the development of sexually-dimorphic spatial ability in adulthood.
...
PMID:Performance (re-acquisition) of a water-maze task by adult meadow voles: effects of age of initial task acquisition and in utero environment (litter sex-ratio). 799 1
The use of sedation and monitoring in gastrointestinal endoscopy is still open for debate. In The Netherlands, generally, no systemic sedation is used for relatively simple procedures like diagnostic upper GI endoscopy and sigmoidoscopy. In most centres, for more time-consuming and burdensome endoscopies like colonoscopy, ERCP, sclerotherapy and therapeutic procedures, some form of sedation is applied. In a survey among a number of University Hospitals in The Netherlands it was shown that the sedatives mostly used are midazolam and diazepam. In more complex endoscopies these sedatives are often combined with narcotics like pethidine, morphine, fentanyl or thalamonal. Equipment to monitor the effect of these compounds on respiratory or cardiovascular function is not routinely available. However, there is a tendency towards the use of monitoring equipment and more specific to the use of pulse oximetry. Endpoints of conscious sedation are anxiolysis,
amnesia
and cooperation; it should not lead to ptosis, dysarthria and drowsiness. Features of drugs for conscious sedation should include these aforementioned points as well as a defined dose-effect relationship and a broad therapeutic window. Furthermore, they should be
water
soluble and give rapid recovery. Signs of oversedation are hypotension, bradycardia and respiratory depression. Competitive antagonists to the receptor, like flumazenil, can reverse overdosage of benzodiazepine sedatives. The sedative of choice at this moment is midazolam. When a benzodiazepine is combined with a narcotic, the narcotic should be given first and the dosage of the sedative adjusted.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Sedation and monitoring in gastrointestinal endoscopy. 801 67
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