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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (
depression
)
172,036
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Ethylene glycol (EG) is a toxic chemical found in antifreeze and heat exchangers. Standard therapy for EG intoxication in administration of ethanol (ETOH) to inhibit its metabolism by alcohol dehydrogenase (ADH). Studies indicate 1,3-butylene glycol (BG) binds to ADH more efficiently than EG and is orally less toxic than EG or ETOH. Male rats were divided into 5 groups of 6 animals. Groups received by oral intubation a single dose of EG (32 mmole/kg), BG (39 mmole/kg) initially and every 6 h up to 72 h, ETOH (39 mmole/kg) initially and every 6 h up to 72 h, or EG initially and then either BG or ETOH every 6 h up to 72 h. Administration of ETOH produced hepatotoxicity and pulmonary pathology as indicated by changes in clinical chemistry, urinalysis, and histopathology, while BG did not. Neither ETOH nor BG produced any apparent nephrotoxicity. ETOH produced
ataxia
, lethargy and central nervous system
depression
while BG did not. BG produced a higher concentration of urinary EG indicating a better inhibition of ADH metabolism of EG. Ethanol produced a higher EG blood concentration than BG. Ethanol's higher EG blood concentration may be partially attributed to dehydration and a decreased urine output as well as inhibition of ADH metabolism. Ethanol produced mortality in all animals prior to 72 h. The EG/ETOH combination produced mortality more quickly due to additive toxicity of the combination. Lack of any significant toxicity produced by BG and the production of significant toxicities by ETOH indicates that BG is potentially a better antidote than ETOH.
...
PMID:The toxicokinetics of 1,3-butylene glycol versus ethanol in the treatment of ethylene glycol poisoning. 162 60
Monensin, lasalocid, salinomycin, narasin and maduramicin are carboxylic ionophores intended for use as anticoccidial drugs for poultry and as growth promotants for ruminants. Generally, ionophores have been found safe and effective in the target animals receiving recommended dosage levels. However, toxic syndromes can result from overdosage and misuse situations. More information and reports of adverse reactions are available for monensin than the other ionophores because of monensin's longstanding and widespread use in the poultry and livestock industries. Care must be exercised in the diagnosis of ionophore toxicoses since clinical signs and lesions are not pathognomic. However, a feed-related problem characterized clinically by anorexia, diarrhea, dyspnea,
ataxia
,
depression
, recumbency and death, and pathologically by focal degenerative cardiomyopathy, skeletal muscle necrosis, and congestive heart failure may warrant a presumptive diagnosis of ionophore toxicity. Confirmatory diagnosis will require considerations of differential diagnoses and laboratory assays to determine the specific ionophore involved. Presently, there is no antidote or treatment for toxicoses induced by the ionophores. Judicious use, avoidance of overdosing, and adherence to species recommendation will help prevent the occurrence of adverse effects associated with this class of compounds.
...
PMID:The veterinary importance of the toxic syndrome induced by ionophores. 162 67
Ten random source male domestic shorthair cats, 2 to 6 years old and 3.0-4.4 kg body weight, were each given a single oral dose (1.5 mg/kg) of bromethalin (cat Nos. 1-5) or bait vehicle carrier (cat Nos. 6-10). Bromethalin-dosed cats developed a toxic syndrome characterized by
ataxia
, focal motor seizures, vocalization, decerebrate posture, decreased conscious proprioception, recumbency,
depression
, and semicoma. Bromethalin-dosed cats were euthanatized if seizure activity or hindlimb paralysis developed. Survival times were 48 hours (cat No. 1), 89 hours (cat No. 2), 90 hours (cat No. 3), and 97 hours (cat No. 4). Control cats (cat Nos. 6-10) and one bromethalin-dosed cat (cat No. 5) were euthanatized on day 20 after dosing. Spongy change (edema--characterized by the formation of vacuoles in extracellular spaces and myelin lamellae), hypertrophied fibrous astrocytes, and hypertrophied oligodendrocytes were observed in the white matter of the cerebrum, cerebellum, brain stem, spinal cord, and optic nerve of all bromethalin-dosed cats. Spongy change occasionally extended into contiguous cerebellar Purkinje cell layer and cerebral cortical gray matter. The severity of lesions varied among cats but was most pronounced in cat No. 5 (480 hours after dosing). A leukocytic inflammatory response, gitter cell (macrophage) response, or axonal degeneration was not observed in the vacuolated areas. Ultrastructural findings included separation of myelin lamellae at the interperiod lines with the formation of intramyelinic vacuoles (intramyelinic edema), rupture and coalescence of intramyelinic vacuoles into larger extracellular spaces (spongy change), and pronounced cytosolic edema of astrocytes and oligodendroglial cells.
...
PMID:Neuropathologic findings of bromethalin toxicosis in the cat. 163 57
An immunohistochemical and histopathological study using the ABC technique was carried out to examine time-sequential virus spread in the central nervous system (CNS) of mice after inoculation with the CVS strain of fixed rabies virus by different routes; intracerebral (ic), intraocular (io), intranasal (in), intramuscular (im) and subcutaneous (sc). Only the ic and io inoculations caused fatal infections, so that detailed analysis was conducted on mice inoculated by these two routes. In ic-inoculated mice, viral antigens were detected mainly in neurons in the cerebral cortex and in the pyramidal cells and granular cells of the hippocampus. After io inoculation, viral antigen was first detected in the trigeminal nerve ganglia, following which it spreads to the cerebral cortex and cerebellum. In the hippocampus only a few cells were viral antigen-positive at the early stage after io inoculation. There were no inflammatory lesions or Negri bodies in the CNS of mice infected by either route. This suggests that clinical signs such as
ataxia
or
depression
leading to death may be due to the direct effect of the virus on the functions of neural cells, but not to inflammatory reactions. The ABC method will be useful for the early diagnosis of suspected patients or animals to have the disease when conventional histopathological and immunofluorescent antibody techniques can not detect lesions or viral antigens.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical and histopathological study of experimental rabies infection in mice. 164 65
The neurobehavioral responsivity to peripherally injected muscimol, a gamma-aminobutyric acid-A (GABA-A) agonist, was assessed in infant (14-day-old), weanling (20-day-old) and young adult (53-day-old) outbred male mice. In the first experiment, relatively high doses of muscimol (ranging from 0.05 to 0.40 mg/kg in developing and from 0.50 to 3 mg/kg in adult animals) were found to dose-dependently induced solid catalepsy and
ataxia
, evaluated 5 times at 20-min intervals. In the second experiment, the GABA agonist was injected in dose ranges which include relatively small concentrations in order to assess its excitatory properties, observable in adults, on rearing and locomotion in developing mice. It appeared that levels of rearing and especially locomotion were enhanced at the low doses (0.025 and 0.050 mg/kg in developing, and 1.3 and 1.9 mg/kg in adult mice) and inhibited at the higher ones (0.150 mg/kg in developing and 1.9 and 2.5 mg/kg in adult mice). This adult-like biphasic action of muscimol in developing mice--excitation at low and
depression
/sedation at high doses--strongly suggests a full maturation of the GABA-A-related behavioral functions at a period of ontogeny where adult-like locomotion emerges. Given that previous studies have shown that muscimol can biphasically affect behavioral activity in newborn murines as well, it is suggested that GABA-related behavioral functions mature near-monotonically during ontogeny, unlike those related to other major neurotransmitter systems.
...
PMID:Adult-like biphasic neurobehavioral changes induced by a GABA-A agonist in infant and weanling mice. 166 Dec 11
A 29-year-old male with visuomotor
ataxia
was reported. Visuomotor
ataxia
of bilateral upper extremities was noted in whole visual field including central visual field (optische Ataxie). Neither contraction nor
depression
of visual field was detected by the test using kinetic or static perimeter, respectively. Magnetic resonance imaging and computed tomography of the brain revealed bilateral parietooccipital lesions in the white matter, and pathological examination of brain biopsy specimen demonstrated demyelination. We considered that bilateral parietooccipital lesions in the white matter were responsible for visuomotor
ataxia
in this case.
...
PMID:[A case of whole visual field visuomotor ataxia of bilateral hands associated with bilateral parietooccipital lesions in the white matter]. 178 63
Paraherquamide, an oxindole alkaloid metabolite of Penicillium paraherquei and Penicillium charlesii, was tested against the common gastrointestinal nematodes of dogs at a single oral dosage of 0.5, 1.0, or 2.0 mg kg-1. Efficacy was poor (less than 85%) against Ancylostoma caninum, Uncinaria stenocephala, Toxascaris leonina, Trichuris vulpis, and Strongyloides stercoralis at the low- and mid-dosage levels. At the high dosage level, good efficacy (91%) was observed only against S. stercoralis. Adverse reactions were observed in all dogs at every dosage level and included
depression
,
ataxia
, and protrusion of the nictitating membrane.
...
PMID:Anthelmintic activity of paraherquamide in dogs. 178 41
Naturally-occurring neosporosis with multiple organ involvement was identified in a 10-year-old neutered male Basset hound dog. Clinical signs were first noticed 3 weeks prior to referral and consisted of crouched stance and mild pelvic limb
ataxia
. Dexamethasone administration had provided transient improvement. On presentation to the teaching hospital, clinical signs included
depression
, pelvic limb
ataxia
, inability to stand without assistance, and pain on deep palpation of the cervical and lumbar vertebral column. Lesions were found in the myocardium, liver, spleen, adrenal glands, brain, and spinal cord. Tachyzoites of Neospora caninum were found in the myocardium and adrenal glands. Organisms stained with anti-Neospora caninum, but not to anti-Toxoplasma gondii serum in an immunohistochemical test.
...
PMID:Disseminated infection with Neospora caninum in a ten-year-old dog. 187 45
Fifteen Collies, previously having mild reactions to ivermectin challenge (120 micrograms/kg of body weight; 20 times the recommended dosage level), were studied to evaluate the effects of milbemycin oxime administration at 5 and 10 mg/kg (10 and 20 times the manufacturer's recommended dosage). Five replicates, comprising 3 dogs each, were formed on the basis of body weight. Within replicates, each dog was randomly allocated to treatment with 5 or 10 mg of milbemycin/kg or served as a untreated control. Dogs were examined repeatedly for signs of toxicosis for 4 days after treatment and daily thereafter. Two of 5 dogs treated at 5 mg/kg (10x) developed signs of mild
depression
on the day of treatment, but were normal 24 hours after treatment. All 5 dogs treated at 10 mg/kg (20x) developed signs of mild
depression
and
ataxia
by 6 hours. Signs persisted for 24 hours in 3 dogs. Two of these dogs also had mydriasis, whereas 3 salivated excessively. All dogs recovered completely by day 2 after treatment. The results of this study demonstrated that Collies sensitive to the effects of 120 micrograms of ivermectin (20x)/kg show similar sensitivity to the effects of milbemycin oxine administered at 10 mg/kg (20x). We conclude that ivermectin and milbemycin commercial formulations have similar margins of safety and that milbemycin toxicosis appears to be dose-dependent in Collies with a demonstrated sensitivity to ivermectin.
...
PMID:Assessment of toxicosis induced by high-dose administration of milbemycin oxime in collies. 189 75
During 1984-1989, 19 Bedouin children, 4-8 years old, were hospitalized because of henbane plant (Hyoscyamus reticulatus) poisoning. There were 14 cases in the autumn, 3 in the spring and 2 in the summer. The most prominent signs were altered state of consciousness (including deep coma in 3) and flushed dry, warm skin in all. Pupils were dilated in 18 of the 19 and restlessness and hallucinations were present in 17. Less common were vomiting, increased tendon reflexes, convulsions, involuntary movements,
ataxia
, hypertension, hyperpyrexia and tachycardia. Therapy included intravenous physostigmine in 7 and sedatives (diazepam and triclofos) in 6. All were free of symptoms within 24 hours of admission. Henbane may grow as an annual or biennial. Renewed growth of leaf rosettes occurs before the first rains and they attract attention in the fields. The parts of the plant eaten by most of the children were the roots, which are easily mistaken for the edible roots of other plants. The main alkaloids in henbane are atropine (hyoscyamine) and scopolamine (hyoscine) which explains the clinical picture of mixed stimulation and
depression
of the brain. Educational measures should be undertaken to prevent poisoning of Bedouin children by eating such plants.
...
PMID:[Henbane (Hyoscyamus reticulatus) poisoning in children in the Negev]. 195 6
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