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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Rett syndrome is a neurological disorder affecting predominantly females with regression loss of speech and purposeful hand use, after a few months of almost normal development. Postnatal microcephaly, hand dispraxia, stereotypic 'hand-washing' activities,
ataxia
, and
abnormal breathing
are among its most characteristic features. Another aspect of this disorder is growth failure. The preserved speech variant (PSV) shares with Rett syndrome the same course and the stereotypic hand-washing activities but it differs in that patients typically recover some degree of speech and hand use and usually do not show growth failure. Progressive scoliosis, epilepsy and other minor handicaps, usually present in Rett syndrome, are rare in the preserved speech variant. Here we explore the spectrum of mutations affecting the MECP2 gene in a group of 25 classic Rett syndrome girls and in three patients with the preserved speech variant. Among the Rett syndrome group, two novel mutational hot spots (R270X and R294X), four novel mutations, two novel small deletions, as well as the previously reported 806delG, R168X and R255X mutations, were identified in 20/25 patients. Of note, among the preserved speech variants, two patients carry deletions of 41 bp and 44 bp each, which are strikingly similar to those observed in classic Rett syndrome. Our results confirm the presence of mutational hot spots in MECP2, broaden the spectrum of mutations, pinpoint additional mutational hot spots and establish that the preserved speech variant is indeed allelic of the classic form. Phenotype variability is only partially dependent on the kind of MECP2 mutation and other mechanisms such as skewed X-inactivation, and/or modifier gene effects should be investigated to explain the variable recovery in speech and hand use.
...
PMID:Preserved speech variant is allelic of classic Rett syndrome. 1085 91
Methacrylonitrile is an aliphatic nitrile used extensively in the preparation of homo- and copolymers, elastomers, and plastics and as a chemical intermediate in the preparation of acids, amides, esters, and other nitriles. This aliphatic nitrile is also used as a replacement for acrylonitrile in the manufacture of an acrylonitrile/butadiene/styrene-like polymer. Methacrylonitrile was nominated for toxicity and carcinogenicity testing by the National Cancer Institute due to its high production volume and extensive use, the lack of chronic or carcinogenicity data, and its structural resemblance to the known rat carcinogen acrylonitrile. The current 13-week studies were conducted as part of an overall effort by the NTP to assess the toxicity and carcinogenicity of methacrylonitrile. During the 13-week studies, groups of 20 male and 20 female F344/N rats were administered 0, 7.5, 15, 30, 60, or 120 mg methacrylonitrile/kg body weight in deionized, purified water by gavage. Groups of 20 male and 20 female B6C3F1 mice were administered 0, 0.75, 1.5, 3, 6, or 12 mg/kg methacrylonitrile. Ten male and ten female rats and mice from each group were evaluated on day 32. The results of these studies clearly revealed that male rats are more sensitive than females to methacrylonitrile treatment. In the rat study, 19 males and one female administered 120 mg/kg and two males administered 60 mg/kg died during the first week of the study. Males in the 60 mg/kg group at the 32-day interim evaluation and at 13 weeks and females in the 120 mg/kg group at 13 weeks had significantly lower final mean body weights and body weight gains than did the vehicle controls; the surviving male in the 120 mg/kg group also weighed less than the controls at the 32-day interim evaluation. Clinical findings of toxicity were dose dependent and included lethargy, lacrimation, tremors, convulsions,
ataxia
, and
abnormal breathing
. There was hematologic evidence indicating that administration of methacrylonitrile induced minimal, normocytic, normochromic anemia. At the 32-day interim evaluation, a minimal dose-related anemia was evidenced by decreases in hematocrit values, hemoglobin concentrations, and erythrocyte counts in male and female rats. The anemia ameliorated by week 13. Administration of methacrylonitrile resulted in dose-related increases in serum thiocyanate and blood cyanide concentrations of male and female rats. These changes were expected and would be consistent with the in vivo metabolism of methacrylonitrile to cyanide. Blood cyanide concentrations were generally higher in males than in females, which may explain the higher sensitivity of males to the lethal effect of methacrylonitrile. There was also biochemical evidence of increased hepatocellular leakage and/or altered function in dosed male rats, suggesting that the liver may be a target organ for toxic effects of methacrylonitrile. Minimal, but significant, decreases in absolute right kidney and thymus weights (32-day interim evaluation) and increases in liver and stomach weights (week 13) occurred in male rats that received 60 mg/kg compared to the vehicle controls. In female rats, stomach weights of the 60 and 120 mg/kg groups were significantly greater and thymus weights of the 120 mg/kg group were significantly less than those of the controls on day 32 and at week 13; liver weights were also significantly greater in females in the 120 mg/kg group than in the vehicle controls on day 32. Male and female rats administered 60 mg/kg and females administered 120 mg/kg had significantly greater incidences of metaplasia of the nasal olfactory epithelium on day 32 and at the end of the study than did the vehicle controls; incidences of olfactory epithelial necrosis were also significantly greater in females in the 60 and 120 mg/kg groups than in the vehicle controls on day 32. Incidence and/or severity increased with increasing dose in females; however, the mortality in male rats administered 120 mg/kg made it difficult to assess the dose-response relationship in males. The no-observed-adverse-effect level for the nasal cavity of rats was 30 mg/kg. Female rats administered 60 or 120 mg/kg methacrylonitrile had significantly longer estrous cycles than did the vehicle controls. Females in the 60 mg/kg group spent more time in diestrus than the vehicle controls. One male and one female mouse in the 12 mg/kg groups died early. Methacrylonitrile administration caused no significant differences in final mean body weights or body weight gains. Clinical findings included lethargy, tremors,
ataxia
, convulsions, and
abnormal breathing
. At the 32-day interim evaluation, stomach weights of males administered 3 mg/kg or greater were significantly greater and thymus weights of males in the 12 mg/kg group were significantly less than those of the vehicle controls. At week 13, however, the stomach weights of only males in the 12 mg/kg group were increased relative to the vehicle controls. No treatment-related histopathologic lesions occurred in mice. Methacrylonitrile did not induce mutations in any of several strains of Salmonella typhimurium, with or without S9 activation, and did not induce sex-linked recessive lethal mutations in germ cells of male Drosophila melanogaster fed methacrylonitrile during the larval stage. Results of in vivo bone marrow micronucleus tests with methacrylonitrile in male rats and mice were also negative. In summary, gavage administration of methacrylonitrile to rats and mice resulted in dose-dependent lethargy, tremors, lacrimation, convulsions, and
abnormal breathing
. However, these effects were more pronounced in rats than mice; these differences may be attributed to the higher doses of methacrylonitrile administered to rats. Body weight gain and survival data of rats demonstrated that males are more sensitive to methacrylonitrile dosing than females. There is an apparent correlation between blood cyanide concentrations and survival rates, with males having greater cyanide concentrations and lower survival rates than female rats administered methacrylonitrile. Microscopically, the only target of methacrylonitrile toxicity was the olfactory epithelium of the nasal cavity. Necrotic and metaplastic effects were induced in male and female rats that received 60 or 120 mg/kg per day. No similar lesions were observed in mice administered methacrylonitrile. The no-observed-adverse-effect level for olfactory epithelial lesions in male and female rats administered methacrylonitrile for 13 weeks was 30 mg/kg per day. No clear chemical-related effects were observed in male or female mice administered methacrylonitrile for 13 weeks by gavage at doses up to 12 mg/kg per day.
...
PMID:NTP technical report on the toxicity studies of methacrylonitrile (CAS No. 126-98-7). Administered by gavage to F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice. 1180 6
Benzyltrimethylammonium chloride is widely used as a solvent for cellulose, a gelling inhibitor in polyester resins, a chemical intermediate, a paint dispersant, and an acrylic dyeing agent. It is also used in plant growth regulator compositions and synthetic processes. The National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences nominated benzyltrimethylammonium chloride for study due to its high production volume and the potential for occupational exposure, as well as the limited information on toxicity of this chemical. Male and female F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice received benzyltrimethylammonium chloride by gavage for 16 days or 13 weeks. Animals were evaluated for hematology, clinical chemistry, histopathology, neurotoxicity, and reproductive toxicity. Genetic toxicology studies were conducted in Salmonella typhimurium and in mouse peripheral blood erythrocytes. In the 16-day studies, groups of five male and five female rats received 0, 16, 32, 63, 125, or 250 mg benzyltrimethylammonium chloride/kg body weight in deionized water by gavage, 5 days per week for 16 days. Groups of five male and five female mice received 0, 63, 125, 250, 500, or 1,000 mg/kg benzyltrimethylammonium chloride in deionized water by gavage, 5 days per week for 16 days. All rats in the 125 and 250 mg/kg groups, all mice in the 250, 500, and 1,000 mg/kg groups, and one 125 mg/kg female mouse died on day 1 of the studies. Clinical findings observed in 125 mg/kg male and female rats included
abnormal breathing
,
ataxia
, lethargy (males only), nasal and eye discharge, and tremors. Salivation was slightly increased in male and female rats in the 63 mg/kg groups. Female mice in the 125 mg/kg group had a significantly greater absolute liver weight than that of the vehicle controls. No gross or microscopic changes observed in rats or mice were considered related to chemical administration. In the 13-week studies, groups of 10 male and 10 female rats and mice received benzyltrimethylammonium chloride in deionized water by gavage at doses of 0, 12.5, 25, 50, or 100 mg/kg, 5 days per week for 13 weeks. Benzyltrimethylammonium chloride generally had little effect on the body weights of rats or mice. Final mean body weights of dosed animals were within 8% (rats) or 3% (mice) of the control group body weights. The deaths of two female rats and one male and one female mouse administered 100 mg/kg were the result of pharmacologic effects on the cardiovascular system. Some cholinergic effects including chromodacryorrhea, lacrimation, salivation, pupillary constriction, altered gait, and mild tremors were observed at nonlethal doses in rats; these effects were accompanied by alterations in body position. No significant target organ toxicity was observed in dosed rats or mice. Benzyltrimethylammonium chloride was not mutagenic in S. typhimurium strain TA97, TA98, TA100, or TA1535, with or without S9 metabolic activation enzymes. However, significant increases in the frequency of micronucleated normochromatic erythrocytes were found in the peripheral blood of male and female mice administered benzyltrimethylammonium chloride by gavage for 13 weeks. Based on the mortality observed in the 16-day and 13-week studies, rats and mice appeared to be equally sensitive to benzyltrimethylammonium chloride. The minimally toxic dose for rats and mice was estimated to be 50 mg/kg.
...
PMID:NTP Toxicity Studies of Benzyltrimethylammonium Chloride (CAS No. 56-93-9) Administered by Gavage to F344/N Rats, Sprague-Dawley Rats, and B6C3F1 Mice. 1198 80
Joubert syndrome is a rare genetic neurologic disorder associated with hypoplasia or absence of the cerebellar vermis. The classic form is characterized by
ataxia
, hypotonia, eye movement abnormalities, developmental delay, and
abnormal breathing
patterns. In contrast, other patients have the additional feature of kidney cysts. This population could represent a distinct form of Joubert syndrome. One case of Joubert syndrome with subcortical neuroepithelial cysts was recently described. We report a new case of Joubert syndrome with overlapping features, including diffuse progressive central nervous system neuroepithelial cysts and kidney cysts. Our data suggest that neuroepithelial cysts occur in conjunction with Joubert syndrome associated with kidney cysts.
...
PMID:Neuroepithelial cysts in a patient with Joubert syndrome plus renal cysts. 1511 86
[Structure-see text] 2-Methylimidazole and 4-methylimidazole are intermediate/starting materials or components in the manufacture of pharmaceuticals, photographic and photothermographic chemicals, dyes and pigments, agricultural chemicals, and rubber; these chemicals have been identified as undesirable by-products in several foods and have been detected in mainstream and sidestream tobacco smoke. The National Cancer Institute nominated 2- and 4-methylimidazole as candidates for toxicity and carcinogenicity studies. Toxicity studies were carried out in male and female F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice. Animals were exposed to 2- or 4-methylimidazole in feed for 15 days or 14 weeks; clinical pathology studies were conducted in the 14-week studies on days 8, 29, and 86 and at week 14. Genetic toxicity studies were conducted in Salmonella typhimurium, rat and mouse bone marrow, and mouse peripheral blood. Groups of five male and five female rats and mice were fed diets containing 0, 1,200, 3,300, or 10,000 ppm 2-methylimidazole (equivalent to average daily doses of approximately 115, 290, or 770 mg 2-methylimidazole/ kg body weight to rats; 220, 640, or 2,100 mg/kg to male mice; 300, 800, or 2,400 to female mice) for 15 days. Groups of five male and five female rats and mice were fed diets containing 0, 300, 800, or 2,500 ppm 4-methylimidazole (equivalent to average daily doses of approximately 30, 80, or 220 mg/kg for rats and 65, 170, or 500 mg/kg for mice) for 15 days. In the 15-day 2-methylimidazole studies, all animals survived to the end of the studies. The mean body weights of 10,000 ppm male rats and female mice were significantly less than those of the controls. Feed consumption by 10,000 ppm male and female rats was reduced. Enlarged thyroid glands were observed in 3,300 and 10,000 ppm male and female rats. The incidences of diffuse hyperplasia of follicular cells of the thyroid gland in 3,300 and 10,000 ppm male and female rats and pars distalis hypertrophy of the pituitary gland in 3,300 and 10,000 ppm males and 10,000 ppm females were increased compared to the controls. In all exposed groups of male and female mice, the incidences and severities of follicular cell hypertrophy of the thyroid gland and the severities of hematopoietic cell proliferation of the spleen generally increased with increasing exposure concentration. In the 4-methylimidazole studies, all animals survived to the end of the studies, and there were no significant differences in mean body weights, clinical findings, organ weights, or gross or microscopic lesions between exposed and control groups. Groups of 10 male and 10 female rats and mice were fed diets containing 0, 625, 1,250, 2,500, 5,000, or 10,000 ppm 2- or 4-methylimidazole (equivalent to average daily doses of approximately 40, 80, 160, 300, or 560 mg/kg 2- or 4-methylimidazole to rats; and 100, 165, 360, 780, or 1,740 mg/kg 2-methylimidazole or 100, 240, 440, 915, or 1,840 mg/kg 4-methylimidazole to male mice; and 90, 190, 400, 800, or 1,860 mg/kg 2-methylimidazole or 110, 240, 540, 1,130, or 3,180 mg/kg 4-methylimidazole to females) for 14 weeks. All animals survived to the end of the 14-week 2-methylimidazole studies. Compared to the controls, the mean body weights were significantly decreased in groups of male rats and mice exposed to 2,500 ppm or greater and in 5,000 and 10,000 ppm female rats and mice. In rats, 2-methylimidazole induced a transient erythrocytosis in females and a minimal, exposure concentration-related, microcytic, normochromic, nonresponsive anemia. 2-Methylimidazole increased thyroid-stimulating hormone concentrations and decreased thyroxine and triiodothyronine concentrations of male and female rats in an exposure concentration-related manner. 2-Methylimidazole induced a mild to moderate, exposure concentration-related, macrocytic, hyperchromic, responsive anemia in mice. Triiodothyronine concentrations were increased in exposed male and female mice, and thyroxine concentrations were decreased in exposed females. Relative to the control groups, clinical chemistry evaluations on day 29 and at week 14 identified decreases in alanine aminotransferase concentrations and total protein and albumin concentrations of rats. In the 2-methylimidazole studies, absolute spleen weights were significantly increased in all exposed groups of male rats. The heart and liver weights were increased in all exposed groups of male mice, as were the spleen weights of female mice exposed to 2,500 ppm or greater. Spermatid heads per testis and mean spermatid count were significantly decreased in 10,000 ppm male rats. The estrous cycle of 10,000 ppm female rats was significantly increased. Gross pathology observations included enlarged thyroid glands, small uteri, and mottled spleen in 5,000 and 10,000 ppm mice. The incidences of diffuse follicular cell hyperplasia of the thyroid gland were significantly increased in male rats exposed to 1,250 ppm or greater and female rats exposed to 2,500 ppm or greater. The incidence of testicular degeneration was significantly increased in 10,000 ppm male rats, and two males in the 10,000 ppm group had follicular cell adenoma of the thyroid gland. In mice, there were generally significant increases in the incidences of follicular cell hypertrophy of the thyroid gland, hematopoietic cell proliferation of the spleen, and hemosiderin pigmentation of the renal tubule in males exposed to 1,250 ppm or greater and females exposed to 2,500 ppm or greater. In the 14-week 4-methylimidazole studies, one 10,000 ppm male mouse was found dead during week 4, and seven 10,000 ppm female mice were found dead during weeks 1 and 2. Mean body weights were significantly less than those of the controls for male rats exposed to 2,500 ppm or greater, 5,000 and 10,000 ppm female rats, male mice exposed to 1,250 ppm or greater, and all exposed groups of female mice. Reduced feed consumption was observed in 5,000 and 10,000 ppm male and female rats. Clinical findings included nasal/eye discharge, ruffled fur, thinness,
ataxia
, and
abnormal breathing
in rats, and ruffled fur and dull coats in female mice. On days 29 and 82, functional observations in 5,000 and 10,000 ppm rats included labored or increased respiration, mild tremors, walking on tiptoes, hunched posture, piloerection, crouching over, impaired coordination of movement,
ataxia
, and pupillary constriction. 4-Methylimidazole induced a transient erythrocytosis and a minimal, exposure concentration-related, microcytic, normochromic, nonresponsive anemia in male and female rats. Clinical chemistry evaluations generally showed a cholestatic effect in exposed male and female rats. At week 14, there was a significant decrease in total protein and albumin concentrations of female rats exposed to 5,000 or 10,000 ppm. In mice, 4-methylimidazole induced a macrocytic, hyperchromic, responsive anemia and, particularly in males, increases in triiododthyronine concentrations and transient decreases in thyroxine concentrations. In the 4-methylimidazole studies, the liver weights of male rats exposed to 2,500 ppm or greater were significantly increased; spleen weights of female rats exposed to 2,500 ppm or greater were decreased. The absolute liver weight was decreased in 10,000 ppm male mice, and relative weights were significantly increased in all exposed groups of mice. In female mice, there was a significant decrease in the absolute weights and increase in the relative weights of the heart, right kidney, and liver in groups exposed to 2,500 ppm or greater. The epididymal spermatozoal concentration was significantly increased in 5,000 ppm male rats. Gross pathology observations included pale livers in male rats exposed to 2,500 ppm or greater and small testes and uteri in 10,000 ppm male and female rats. Microscopic analysis identified significantly increased incidences of cytoplasmic hepatocyte vacuolization of the liver of male rats exposed to 2,500 ppm or greater and 10,000 ppm female rats, hypospermia of the epididymis in 10,000 ppm male rats, atrophy and inflammation of the prostate gland in 10,000 ppm male rats, and degeneration of the testes in 5,000 and 10,000 ppm male rats. 2-Methylimidazole and 4-methylimidazole were negative in the S. typhimurium mutation assay when tested in strains TA97, TA98, TA100, and TA1535, with and without S9 activation enzymes. Testing of 2-methylimidazole in vivo for induction of chromosomal damage, as measured by micronucleated erythrocyte frequency, produced mixed results. When administered by intraperitoneal injection three times at 24-hour intervals, 2-methylimidazole produced negative results in bone marrow micronucleus tests in rats and mice. However, in the 14-week study of 2-methylimidazole, a significant exposure-related increase in the frequency of micronucleated normochromatic erythrocytes was noted in peripheral blood of male and female mice. In vivo, 4-methylimidazole produced uniformly negative results in three-injection bone marrow micronucleus tests in rats and mice and in 14-week peripheral blood micronucleus tests in male and female mice.
...
PMID:NTP technical report on the toxicity studies of 2- and 4-Methylimidazole (CAS No. 693-98-1 and 822-36-6) administered in feed to F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice. 1514 14
Joubert syndrome (JS) is an autosomal-recessive disorder, characterized by hypotonia,
ataxia
, global developmental delay and molar tooth sign on magnetic resonance imaging. A variety of other abnormalities have been described in children with JS, including
abnormal breathing
, abnormal eye movements, a characteristic facial appearance, delayed language, hypersensitivity to noise, autism, ocular and oculomotor abnormalities, meningoencephaloceles, microcephaly, low-set ears, polydactyly, retinal dysplasia, kidney abnormalities (renal cysts), soft tissue tumor of the tongue, liver disease and duodenal atresia. Even within siblings the phenotype may vary, making it difficult to establish the exact clinical diagnostic boundaries of JS. We review the clinical characteristics of seven cases that fulfill the criteria of JS.
...
PMID:Joubert syndrome: review and report of seven new cases. 1527 93
Meckel syndrome (MKS) is a rare lethal autosomal recessive disorder characterized by the presence of occipital encephalocele, cystic kidneys, fibrotic changes of the liver and polydactyly. Joubert syndrome (JS)-related disorders (JSRDs) or cerebello-oculo-renal syndromes (CORS) are a group of recessively inherited conditions characterized by a molar tooth sign (MTS) on cranial MRI, a set of core clinical features (developmental delay/mental retardation, hypotonia,
ataxia
, episodic breathing abnormalities, abnormal eye movements) and variable involvement of other systems including renal, ocular, central nervous system, craniofacial, hepatic, and skeletal. A significant clinical overlap between MKS and JSRD/CORS has been recognized in the literature. We describe a group of 10 Hutterite patients, of which 7 had been previously diagnosed with MKS, with a JSRD. Clinical features include variable early mortality, cognitive handicap, a characteristic dysmorphic facial appearance, hypotonia,
ataxia
,
abnormal breathing
pattern, nystagmus, and MTS on MRI. Additional features include occipital encephalocele, posterior fossa fluid collections resembling Dandy-Walker malformation, hydrocephalus, coloboma, and renal disease. This JSRD is a recognizable dysmorphic syndrome characterized by hypertelorism, deep-set eyes, down-slanting palpebral fissures, ptosis, arched eyebrows with medial sparseness, square nasal tip, short philtrum with tented upper lip, open mouth with down-turned corners, and posteriorly rotated low-set ears. Renal disease is present in 70% of patients and is characterized by cystic kidneys, abnormalities in renal function and hypertension. Homozygous deletions of NPHP1 and the known loci for JS/JSRD and MKS were excluded by identity-by-descent mapping studies suggesting that this condition in the Hutterites represents yet another locus for a JSRD.
...
PMID:Meckel syndrome in the Hutterite population is actually a Joubert-related cerebello-oculo-renal syndrome. 1760 1
Joubert syndrome (JBTS) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by cerebellum and brainstem malformations. Individuals with JBTS have
abnormal breathing
and eye movements,
ataxia
, hypotonia, and cognitive difficulty, and they display mirror movements. Mutations in the Abelson-helper integration site-1 gene (AHI1) cause JBTS in humans, suggesting that AHI1 is required for hindbrain development; however AHI1 may also be required for neuronal function. Support for this idea comes from studies demonstrating that the AHI1 locus is associated with schizophrenia. To gain further insight into the function of AHI1 in both the developing and mature central nervous system, we determined the spatial and temporal expression patterns of the gene products of AHI1 orthologs throughout development, in human, mouse, and zebrafish. Murine Ahi1 was distributed throughout the cytoplasm, dendrites, and axons of neurons, but was absent in glial cells. Ahi1 expression in the mouse brain was observed as early as embryonic day 10.5 and persisted into adulthood, with peak expression during the first postnatal week. Murine Ahi1 was observed in neurons of the hindbrain, midbrain, and ventral forebrain. Generally, the AHI1/Ahi1/ahi1 orthologs had a conserved distribution pattern in human, mouse, and zebrafish, but mouse Ahi1 was not present in the developing and mature cerebellum. Ahi1 was also observed consistently in the stigmoid body, a poorly characterized cytoplasmic organelle found in neurons. Overall, these results suggest roles for AHI1 in neurodevelopmental processes that underlie most of the neuroanatomical defects in JBTS, and perhaps in neuronal functions that contribute to schizophrenia.
...
PMID:Species differences in the expression of Ahi1, a protein implicated in the neurodevelopmental disorder Joubert syndrome, with preferential accumulation to stigmoid bodies. 1878 27
Joubert syndrome is a rare autosomal recessive disorder, which is characterized by absence or underdevelopment of the cerebellar vermis and severe developmental delay. The other common features include
ataxia
, an
abnormal breathing
pattern, abnormal eye movements and hypotonia. We report the anesthetic management in a 13-year-old girl with Joubert syndrome, scheduled for cauterization of nasal mucosa under general anesthesia. She had episodes of tachypnea and apnea. Oral midazolam 10 mg and famotidine 20 mg were administered 30 min before surgery. Anesthesia was induced and maintained with sevoflurane and nitrous oxide in oxygen. Vecuronium 2 mg was used to facilitate tracheal intubation. Mechanical ventilation was performed with a low ventilation setting of respiratory rate 5 beats x min(-1) and peak inspiratory pressure 9 cm H2O to maintain normal end-tidal CO2. Flurbiprofen axetil 30 mg was administered intravenously for analgesia, because opioids are not recommended. After reversal of muscle relaxation by atropin 0.5 mg and neostigmine 1.5 mg, her trachea was extubated. She did not develop postoperative apnea. In this patient with Joubert syndrome, midazolam, sevoflurane, nitrous oxide and flurbiprofen axetil were used without any complications.
...
PMID:[General anesthesia for a girl with Joubert syndrome]. 2022 61
Dicyclohexylcarbodiimide (DCC) and Diisopropylcarbodiimide (DIC) are two representative chemicals in the carbodiimide class of chemicals used in industry as stabilizing agents. There is a potential of dermal exposure to these agents in chemical, pharmaceutical and recombinant DNA industries. The National Toxicology Program conducted a number of animal studies to characterize toxicity and carcinogenicity of DIC and DCC. Dermal administration of DCC and DIC in F344/N rats and B6C3F1 mice for 90-days induced skin irritation at the site of application in a dose-dependent manner. Microscopically, dose-dependent increases in epidermal hyperplasia and chronic inflammation were observed. We further evaluated the effects of dermal exposure of DCC and DIC in p53 haploinsufficient and Tg.AC mouse models. Results revealed the skin as the primary target of DCC and DIC exposure as indicated by dose - dependent skin lesions (hyperplasia, inflammation and necrosis). DCC induced squamous cell papillomas in Tg.AC mice but did not induce any neoplastic lesions in p53 haploinsufficient mice. Dermal application of DIC did not induce any neoplastic lesions in Tg.AC mice and p53 haploinsufficient mice. Based on these studies, it was predicted that DIC would be negative and DCC positive for carcinogenic activity in the traditional two-year bioassay. In the subsequent studies, the carcinogenic potential of DIC only in F344 rats and B6C3F1 mice in a traditional 2-year chronic carcinogenicity bioassay was evaluated by the dermal route. Findings revealed the skin as the major target organ of toxicity in both sexes in rats and in male mice. There were no neoplastic lesions observed in rats or mice with the administration of DIC. In rats, there were clinical signs of toxicity in the highest dose-group which included
ataxia
, excitability, impaired gait, low muscle tone,
abnormal breathing
, lethargy, and seizures. This was accompanied by non-neoplastic lesions in the brain and lung only at the highest dose level. In conclusion, both DIC and DCC are dermal toxicants. DIC did not have any carcinogenic activity in transgenic mouse models or in the traditional NTP two-year carcinogenicity studies in F344 rats and B6C3F1 mice. DCC was positive in the Tg.AC mouse model and likely to be carcinogenic in the 2-year bioassay as well.
...
PMID:Comparative dermal toxicity of dicyclohexylcarbodiimide and diisopropylcarbodiimide in rodents. 2206 Aug 20
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