Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (ataxia)
15,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Propylene glycol (1,2-propanediol) is a solvent in numerous pharmaceuticals and a major preservative and source of carbohydrates in processed foods. In mammals, propylene glycol is metabolized similar to ethanol, proceeding via hepatic alcohol and aldehyde dehydrogenases to lactate, which can then enter gluconeogenesis. We observed that cats ingesting 1.6 gm of propylene glycol/kg body weight/day developed increased anion gap. To investigate this further, we measured D- and L-lactate concentrations in these cats; we also measured D-lactate in cats ingesting high doses of propylene glycol (8.0 gm/kg). While L-lactate actually decreased throughout the 35-day course of propylene glycol feeding, D-lactate levels were significantly increased on a dose-dependent basis and correlated positively with anion gap. In cats ingesting the high dose of propylene glycol, D-lactate concentrations were as high as 7 mmol/liter, levels associated with encephalopathy in humans. Indeed, this group of cats developed depression and ataxia, consistent with intoxication by D-lactate. These findings are significant not only for animals ingesting diets which contain propylene glycol, but for humans who receive propylene glycol-containing medications.
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PMID:Propylene glycol ingestion causes D-lactic acidosis. 229 57

Three different domains of behavioral action of ethanol (ETOH) were examined in a battery of seven inbred strains and in the selectively bred Long-Sleep (LS) and Short-Sleep (SS) mice. Sedative effects were examined with the loss of the righting reflex test at 3.8 g/kg. The variation among inbred strains was only half the size of the difference between LS and SS mice which were selectively bred for extremes in this phenotype; such a result is expected for phenotypes controlled polygenically. Blood ETOH levels at waking from the narcosis also showed a range of differences among the inbred strains that was less than the LS/SS difference. Ataxia was measured with the grid test, and the inbred strains fell into two groups, resembling the highly ataxic LS line, and the less ataxic SS line. Biphasic effects of ETOH on locomotor activity were strongly genotype dependent. Variation in degree of activation/disinhibition produced by doses up to 1.5 g/kg (IP) ranged from no activation, in the C57BL/6Abg strain which was larger than that seen for SS mice. The patterns of strain differences for both ataxia and activation were highly different from the duration of loss of righting reflex measure, suggesting multiple independent genetically based "sensitivities" to ETOH.
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PMID:Distinctions among sedative, disinhibitory, and ataxic properties of ethanol in inbred and selectively bred mice. 234 78

Seventeen percent of 196 feral vervet monkeys (Cercopithecus aethiops) spontaneously drank appreciable quantities of beverage alcohol in 3% sucrose in preference to 3% sucrose alone. Ethanol consumption increased over time, as did the concentration of ethanol tolerated. Willingness to select ethanol was stable over a three-year period, as measured by periodic retesting. Individual patterns of drinking and behavioral responses to ethanol were quite variable. Upon occasion, some animals drank to ataxia and unconsciousness; signs of withdrawal, including tremulousness, pacing, irritability and increased aggression, followed the abrupt discontinuation of ethanol availability. A variety of changes in social interaction, including increased orientation to external stimulus, increased incidence of stereotyped aggression and of other stereotyped behaviors and decreased frequency of affiliative behaviors were observed during ethanol periods, as compared to baseline scoring periods. In a small number of alcohol-preferring animals, CSF amine metabolites (5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid and homovanillic acid) were raised by drinking alcohol. These studies suggest that the alcohol-selecting vervet monkey may be complementary to established primate models of alcoholism.
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PMID:Voluntary consumption of beverage alcohol by vervet monkeys: population screening, descriptive behavior and biochemical measures. 235 9

Results of embolization and subsequent surgical resection were reviewed in 38 patients with arteriovenous malformations (AVMs) of the brain during the past 3 years. Advanced techniques were used for embolization, including real-time digital subtraction angiofluoroscopy; directable microcatheters; and a mixture of microfibrillar collagen, polyvinyl alcohol sponge microparticles, and ethanol, in addition to acrylic glue. Embolization caused a permanent deficit in four patients (10.5%) (quadrantanopia [n = 3], cerebellar ataxia [n = 1]). Thirty-two patients (84%) underwent surgery after embolization, and 28 (74%) were completely cured, as assessed with postsurgical angiography. Twenty-five patients (66%) had either no deficit or no change in deficit after treatment. Two patients had worsening of a previous deficit after postembolization resection, two patients had mild weakness not previously present, and five patients had visual field defects. One patient developed Gerstmann syndrome after resection, and one patient with ataxia after embolization also had ataxia after surgical resection. Two patients died of complications due to surgical resection. Most of the AVMs in this series were large and complex. Embolization used predominantly as a preoperative procedure enabled complete resection, as achieved in the majority of these cases.
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PMID:Arteriovenous malformations of the brain: recent results of endovascular therapy. 239 38

The effect of the methylxanthines caffeine, theophylline and isobutylmethylxanthine (IBMX) on ethanol-induced ataxia and loss of righting reflex was investigated in three strains of mice. A significant potentiation of ethanol-induced ataxia was produced in all strains of mice at 20, 45 and 75 min after ethanol in mice pretreated with 62.5 mg/kg caffeine and 12.5 mg/kg IBMX. In mice pretreated with 40 mg/kg caffeine potentiation of ethanol-induced ataxia was observed only at 20 min after ethanol. Theophylline pretreatment produced no alteration in ethanol-induced ataxia. The results of methylxanthine pretreatment on ethanol-induced ataxia were similar, regardless of a shorter (10 min) or longer (75 min) pretreatment time. The methylxanthines produced no effect on motor coordination or behavior when administered separately. Although ethanol-induced loss of righting reflex was shortened by theophylline, neither caffeine nor IBMX altered the duration of loss of righting reflex. It is possible that inhibition of adenosine uptake, a known effect of the methylxanthines, may be a more likely explanation for the modulation of the behavioral effects of ethanol.
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PMID:Behavioral interactions of ethanol and methylxanthines. 243 67

The gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) receptor-operated chloride channel complex was evaluated in mice selected for differential sensitivity to the ataxic effects of diazepam (diazepam-sensitive (DS) and diazepam-resistant (DR) lines). The ataxic effects of several drugs purported to produce some of their actions through the benzodiazepine-GABA receptor complex were examined using the rotarod test. The duration of impairment produced by diazepam, ethanol, 4,5,6,7-tetrahydroisoxazol[5,4-C]pyridine-3-ol (THIP) and phenobarbital was greater in the diazepam-sensitive than in the diazepam-resistant mice. In contrast, pentobarbital produced an equivalent duration of ataxia in the two lines. Muscimol-stimulated 36Cl- influx and the binding of [35S]t-butylbicyclophosphorothionate (TBPS) and [3H]flunitrazepam were measured using isolated brain membrane vesicles (microsacs). Depolarization-dependent 45Ca2+ uptake was measured in whole brain synaptosomes. Muscimol was a more potent stimulator of 36Cl- flux in the DS compared to the DR mice, although no difference between the lines was found in muscimol-stimulation of [3H]flunitrazepam binding. Flunitrazepam augmented the muscimol-stimulated 36Cl- uptake in the DS but not in the DR mice. However, no differences between the lines of mice were found in either density or affinity of [3H]flunitrazepam binding sites. Similarly, no differences in either the density or affinity of [35S]TBPS binding sites was found. Ethanol (10-45 mM) potentiated the muscimol-stimulation of 36Cl- in DS, with no effect in DR mice. However, ethanol inhibition of [35S]TBPS binding was equivalent in the two lines of mice. Pentobarbital produced an equal potentiation of the muscimol-stimulated 36Cl- flux in the two lines, but phenobarbital potentiated the muscimol-induced 36Cl- influx slightly more in DS mice.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Genetic selection for benzodiazepine ataxia produces functional changes in the gamma-aminobutyric acid receptor chloride channel complex. 245 24

The effects of ethanol and diazepam were examined in long-sleep (LS) and short-sleep (SS) mice using the elevated plus-maze. Ethanol had more pronounced effects in SS mice than in LS mice. In contrast, LS mice were more sensitive to the effects of diazepam on the elevated plus-maze. The ataxic effects of ethanol were measured by rotarod performance. SS mice were more resistant to the ataxic effects of a 2.0 g/kg dose of ethanol than LS mice. Ro 15-4513 reversed ethanol's ataxic effects when administered after ethanol in both LS mice and SS mice. Pentobarbital-induced ataxia was unaffected by treatment with Ro 15-4513. Studies of competition of Ro 15-4513 on 3H-flunitrazepam binding indicated that LS and SS mice did not differ in this measure in cortex, cerebellum or hippocampus.
Alcohol
PMID:The effects of ethanol and Ro 15-4513 on elevated plus-maze and rotarod performance in long-sleep and short-sleep mice. 251 Jul 66

The lethality of Poa huecu, a plant toxic to cattle and sheep, was followed by injection of chromatographic fractions in mice. The lethal aqueous extract was administered i.p. to Rockland mice of either sex and produced motor incoordination, transient ataxia, rough hair coat, tremors and muscle contractions and, occasionally, blindness. Doses greater than 1.5 g/kg mouse were always lethal. Fractionation of this lethal extract included dialysis, column chromatography on Sephadex G-25 and fractional precipitation with ethanol. Precipitates obtained with 70% and 85% ethanol were further purified on a DEAE-cellulose column. Eight fractions were obtained, each was injected into mice. Only fractions 3-6 were toxic. Fraction 3 produced slight hepatosis and hyperemia in the liver and gliosis in the brain. None of the other tissues exhibited histological lesions. Fractions 4 and 5 caused death of all animals within 30 min to 4 hr after injection. Polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis and acid hydrolysis showed that fractions 4 and 5 contained a glycoprotein of nearly the same mol. wt (67,000-94,000). Microscopic pathology in the mice treated with the lethal glycoprotein of fraction 4 included hyperemia in the kidneys, megakaryocytes in the spleen, slight hepatosis and focal coagulative necrosis with nuclear pyknosis and karyonexis in the liver, gliosis, intracellular brain edema with axon degeneration and swollen astrocytes in the brain. These brain injuries may relate to the motor incoordination of cattle that causes a delayed righting reflex. The major monosaccharides of the lethal glycoprotein are glucose and mannose, while rhamnose, arabinose, xylose and galactose are present in low percentages. Proline and the acidic amino acids (glutamic and aspartic acids) are the most abundant in the peptidic residue.
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PMID:The lethal principle of Poa huecu (coiron blanco): a plant indigenous to Argentina. 262 69

Sons of community dwelling alcoholic, depressed, and normal men were administered a comprehensive battery of neuropsychological tests. A generalized cognitive deficit was not found in the sons of alcoholics. The sons of alcoholics demonstrated greater ataxia than offspring in the two control groups and also performed more poorly on tests measuring visual scanning and attention, planning ability, and impulse control. These findings raise the possibility that an anterior cerebral dysfunction underlies the cognitive deficit observed in children of alcoholics.
Alcohol Clin Exp Res 1989 Apr
PMID:Cognitive status of sons of alcoholic men. 265 62

The aim of the present study was to compare the ability of Ro 15-4513 and FG 7142, two inverse agonists for benzodiazepine recognition sites, to antagonize the EEG effects of ethanol in freely moving rats. Ethanol (2.5 g/kg, p.o.) induced sedation and ataxia associated with a progressive suppression of the fast cortical activities and an enhancement of low frequencies in both cortical and hippocampal tracings. In contrast, Ro 15-4513 (2 mg/kg, i.p.) and FG 7142 (10 mg/kg, i.p.) both caused a state of alertness associated with desynchronized cortical activity and theta hippocampal rhythm as well as spiking activity which was predominantly observed in the cortical tracings. When rats were treated with FG 7142 or RO 15-4513 either before or after ethanol, a reciprocal antagonism of the behavioral and EEG effects of ethanol and of the partial inverse agonists was observed. These data support the view that the anti-ethanol effects of Ro 15-4513 may be related to its partial inverse agonist properties.
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PMID:The benzodiazepine recognition site inverse agonists Ro 15-4513 and FG 7142 both antagonize the EEG effects of ethanol in the rat. 285 Apr 26


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