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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A technique of epidural catheterization in rabbits is described. Twelve albino rabbits received a totally implanted epidural catheter system. The system was implanted surgically, and the functioning of the system tested for a period of 3 months. X-ray examinations following epidural contrast injections showed a distribution up to Th4 following 1.5 ml and Th8-9 following 1.0 and 1.25 ml. Epidural injection of lidocaine throughout the study period proved the system to be functioning for all 3 months. Another 12 rabbits were included for the neurotoxicological examinations following epidural catheterization, without any injections (three rabbits), epidural injections of saline (four rabbits) and meptazinol (five rabbits) once a day for 14 days. Histopathological examinations showed a fibrous cocoon, at the tip of the catheter, in all rabbits. In the group of rabbits which did not receive any injections, the cocoon was slightly infiltrated with leukocytes and local
depression
of the spinal cord was observed in one rabbit. In the saline-injected group this infiltration was more pronounced and in one rabbit it extended into the
meninges
. Three rabbits showed local
depression
of the spinal cord and local myelopathy of the white matter in the area adjacent to the cocoon. In the group of rabbits receiving meptazinol, three out of five had local
depression
and myelopathy of the white matter. In this group these findings were more pronounced. In two rabbits the myelopathy extended transversely through the white matter into the grey matter of the spinal cord. The number of pathological changes in the group receiving meptazinol was significantly higher compared to the control and placebo groups.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Chronic catheterization of the epidural space in rabbits: a model for behavioural and histopathological studies. Examination of meptazinol neurotoxicity. 851 9
We report a middle-aged woman with a novel transthyretin (TTR) variant, Leu12Pro. She had extensive amyloid deposition in the leptomeninges and liver as well as the involvement of the heart and peripheral nervous system which characterizes familial amyloid polyneuropathy caused by variant TTR. Clinical features attributed to her leptomeningeal amyloid included radiculopathy, central hypoventilation, recurrent subarachnoid haemorrhage,
depression
, seizures and periods of decreased consciousness. MRI showed a marked enhancement throughout her
meninges
and ependyma, and TTR amyloid deposition was confirmed by meningeal biopsy. The simultaneous presence of extensive visceral amyloid and clinically significant deposits affecting both the peripheral and central nervous system extends the spectrum of amyloid-related disease associated with TTR mutations. The unusual association of severe peripheral neuropathy with symptoms of leptomeningeal amyloid indicates that leptomeningeal amyloidosis should be considered part of the syndrome of TTR-related familial amyloid polyneuropathy.
...
PMID:Transthyretin Leu12Pro is associated with systemic, neuropathic and leptomeningeal amyloidosis. 1007 Oct 47
Current theories propose that the primary dysfunction in migraine occurs within the CNS and that this evokes changes in blood vessels within pain-producing intracranial meningeal structures that give rise to headache pain. Migraine is now thought of as a neurovascular disorder. It has been proposed that genetic abnormalities may be responsible for altering the response threshold to migraine specific trigger factors in the brain of a migraineur compared to a normal individual. The exact nature of the central dysfunction that is produced in migraineurs is still not clear and may involve spreading
depression
-like phenomena and activation of brain stem monoaminergic nuclei that are part of the central autonomic, vascular and pain control centers. It is generally thought that local vasodilatation of intracranial extracerebral blood vessels and a consequent stimulation of surrounding trigeminal sensory nervous pain pathways is a key mechanism underlying the generation of headache pain associated with migraine. This activation of the 'trigeminovascular system' is thought to cause the release of vasoactive sensory neuropeptides, especially CGRP, that increase the pain response. The activated trigeminal nerves convey nociceptive information to central neurons in the brain stem trigeminal sensory nuclei that in turn relay the pain signals to higher centers where headache pain is perceived. It has been hypothesized that these central neurons may become sensitized as a migraine attack progresses. The 'triptan' anti-migraine agents (e.g. sumatriptan, rizatriptan, zolmitriptan naratriptan) are serotonergic agonists that have been shown to act selectively by causing vasoconstriction through 5-HT1B receptors that are expressed in human intracranial arteries and by inhibiting nociceptive transmission through an action at 5-HT1D receptors on peripheral trigeminal sensory nerve terminals in the
meninges
and central terminals in brain stem sensory nuclei. These three complementary sites of action underlie the clinical effectiveness of the 5-HT1B/1D agonists against migraine headache pain and its associated symptoms.
...
PMID:Pathophysiology of migraine--new insights. 1056 28
Interleukin-1beta acts on the CNS to induce fever, neuroendocrine activation and behavioural
depression
. We have previously demonstrated that interleukin-1beta is synthesized in glial cells and macrophages of circumventricular organs and choroid plexus after intraperitoneal administration of bacterial lipopolysaccharide. Whether, and how, interleukin-1beta produced in glial cells affects neuronal functioning is unknown. Diffusion throughout the extracellular space is an important pathway by which factors produced by glial cells act on distant cells, a phenomenon coined "volume transmission". The present study assessed diffusion of recombinant rat interleukin-1beta, recombinant human interleukin-1 receptor antagonist and 10mol. wt dexran in the rat CNS after intracerebroventricular administration to model interleukin-1beta release from choroid plexus. Immunocytochemistry with specific antibodies directed against interleukin-1beta and interleukin-1 receptor antagonist revealed that these molecules rapidly penetrated into periventricular tissue and spread along white matter fibre bundles and blood vessels in the caudoputamen, hypothalamus and amygdala. The transcription factor nuclear factor kappa B and the immediate-early gene product Fos were detected immunocytochemically to reveal interleukin-1beta action. Intracerebroventricular infusion of interleukin-1beta induced nuclear factor kappa B translocation in choroid plexus, ependymal cells, basolateral amygdala, cerebral vasculature and
meninges
. Fos immunoreactivity was found in the supraoptic and paraventricular hypothalamus and central amygdala. We propose that intracerebroventricular injected interleukin-1beta can enter the brain parenchyma and act as a "volume transmission" signal in, for example, the basolateral amygdala where it might activate a neuronal projection to the central amygdala.
...
PMID:Diffusion and action of intracerebroventricularly injected interleukin-1 in the CNS. 1111 45
The time course of propagation of scotoma and blood flow changes during migraine aura parallels the phenomenon of cortical spreading
depression
(CSD). It was proposed that CSD generates a sterile neurogenic inflammation in the
meninges
, which may then lead to the activation or sensitization of nociceptors, thus generating headache. We performed rat experiments in which the effect of CSD on plasma extravasation in the dura mater and on neuronal activity in deep laminae of the trigeminal nucleus was assessed in vivo. CSD did not alter dural plasma extravasation measured by means of bovine serum albumin-coupled flourescein (n = 17 rats) compared to the CSD-free contralateral side. In an in vitro model, the application of KCl to the dura at concentrations extracellularly found during CSD did not alter the release of calcitonin gene-related peptide and prostaglandin E2 from the dura. In 33 rats, neither single CSDs nor a series of CSDs altered ongoing neuronal activity or mechanical and/or thermal sensitivity of the deeply located neurons to stimulation of their receptive fields in the dura mater. These results are at variance with data that showed increased c-Fos labeling in superficial laminae of the trigeminal nucleus following CSD. They do not suggest that CSD initiates migraine headache via neurogenic inflammation.
...
PMID:Is there a correlation between spreading depression, neurogenic inflammation, and nociception that might cause migraine headache? 1119 95
In intracranial structures unmyelinated C- and Adelta-fibers of the trigeminal nerve transmit pain stimuli from
meninges
to the trigeminal nucleus caudalis (Sp5C). Peripheral nerve endings surround meningeal vessels (the so-called trigeminovascular system) and contain vasoactive neuropeptides (calcitonin gene-related peptide, substance P and neurokinin A). Activation of the trigeminovascular system promotes a meningeal sterile inflammatory response through the release of neuropeptides by peripheral endings. Orthodromic conduction along trigeminovascular fibers transmits information centrally with induction of immediate early c-fos gene within post-synaptic Sp5C neurons, as a marker of neuronal activity within central nociceptive pathways. In laboratory animals the system is activated by either electrical stimulation of the TG, chemical stimulation of the
meninges
, electrical or mechanical stimulation of the superior sagittal sinus or by induction of cortical spreading
depression
. All these techniques induce c-fos within Sp5C and are used as a rodent/feline model of vascular headache in humans. Up-to-date there is evidence that at least ten receptors (5-HT(1B), 5-HT(1D), 5-HT(lF), 5-HT(2B), NK-1, GABA(A), NMDA, AMPA, class III metabotropic glutamate receptors, and opioids mu receptors) modulate c-fos expression within Sp5C. These receptors represent potential targets for anti-migraine drugs as shown by triptans (5-HT(1B/1D/1F)) and ergot alkaloids (5-HT(1A1B/1D/1F)). This review discusses the importance of c-fos expression within Sp5C as a marker of cephalic nociception, the different cephalic pain models that induce c-fos within Sp5C, the receptors involved and their potential role as targets for anti-migraine drugs.
...
PMID:Receptor systems mediating c-fos expression within trigeminal nucleus caudalis in animal models of migraine. 1124 84
Although the trigeminal nerve innervates the
meninges
and participates in the genesis of migraine headaches, triggering mechanisms remain controversial and poorly understood. Here we establish a link between migraine aura and headache by demonstrating that cortical spreading
depression
, implicated in migraine visual aura, activates trigeminovascular afferents and evokes a series of cortical meningeal and brainstem events consistent with the development of headache. Cortical spreading
depression
caused long-lasting blood-flow enhancement selectively within the middle meningeal artery dependent upon trigeminal and parasympathetic activation, and plasma protein leakage within the dura mater in part by a neurokinin-1-receptor mechanism. Our findings provide a neural mechanism by which extracerebral cephalic blood flow couples to brain events; this mechanism explains vasodilation during headache and links intense neurometabolic brain activity with the transmission of headache pain by the trigeminal nerve.
...
PMID:Intrinsic brain activity triggers trigeminal meningeal afferents in a migraine model. 1182 89
The host response to peripheral inflammation induces fever and behavioural
depression
that are supposed to be centrally mediated by cytokines. Several proinflammatory cytokines activate 'signal transducer and activator of transcription' 3 (STAT3) via gp130-like receptor signaling. In order to determine which cells in the rat brain and pituitary are activated during bacterial inflammation, we investigated in a spatiotemporal manner the activation of STAT3 in these organs following peripheral lipopolysaccharide (LPS) challenge. Under basal conditions, STAT3 immunoreactivity was observed in neurones and some glial cells throughout the brain. Two hours after the administration of LPS, nuclear localisation of STAT3 (hallmark of activation) was observed in zones at the interface between brain and blood or cerebrospinal fluid such as pituitary, ependymal layer,
meninges
, glia limitans, circumventricular organs and surrounding nervous parenchyma. Four hours after LPS, the nuclear activation of STAT3 propagated to cells located inside the parenchyma (cortex, hypothalamus, corpus callosum and hippocampus among others) and declined 8 h after treatment. Double labelling of STAT3 and glial fibrillary acidic protein identified activated cells in the parenchyma as astrocytes. These data show that STAT3 is activated in the pituitary and in brain astrocytes after a peripheral LPS challenge as demonstrated by immunohistochemistry. Astrocytes may therefore play a key role in the brain response to peripheral inflammation.
...
PMID:Spatiotemporal analysis of signal transducer and activator of transcription 3 activation in rat brain astrocytes and pituitary following peripheral immune challenge. 1207 13
Lemierre's syndrome, oropharyngeal infections induced by anaerobic bacteria, leading to fatal septic thrombophlebitis of the internal jugular vein and pulmonary embolic abscesses in humans, was diagnosed in a 6-month-old, male, New Zealand White rabbit. After acute onset of anorexia, lethargy, and
depression
, the rabbit died suddenly despite emergency clinical care. Necropsy revealed swelling, necrosis, and abscess in the soft tissues around the left caudal mandibular ramus, oral mucosa, and molar teeth, with systemic embolic abscesses and necrosis, especially in the jugular vein, lungs, and brain. Histologic examination revealed necrosis and embolic abscesses with filamentous bacteria in the mandibular soft tissues, salivary gland, jugular veins, alveolar bone and marrow, periodontal tissues and dental pulp, oral and pharyngeal mucosa, lungs, brain, liver, myocardium,
meninges
, and small intestine. Bacterial culture of the mandibular abscess and heart blood yielded Fusobacterium necrophorum.
...
PMID:Oropharyngeal Necrobacillosis with Septic Thrombophlebitis and Pulmonary Embolic Abscesses: Lemierre's Syndrome in a New Zealand White Rabbit. 1208 16
Use of the acne drug Accutane (13-cis retinoic acid, [13-cis RA]) has been associated with severe
depression
. This association has been considered controversial because no causative link has been found between 13-cis RA and this disorder. A recent hypothesis has suggested that atrophy of the hippocampus can result in
depression
. We now show, in a mouse model, that endogenous RA generated by synthetic enzymes in the
meninges
acts on hippocampal granule neurons, and chronic (3-week) exposure to a clinical dose of 13-cis RA may result in hippocampal cell loss. In humans this may be conjectured to be the mechanism by which Accutane contributes to
depression
.
...
PMID:13-cis Retinoic acid (accutane) suppresses hippocampal cell survival in mice. 1525 24
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