Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0011570 (depression)
172,036 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Eighty-four epileptic patients, with seizures originating in either the left or the right hemisphere, were evaluated to determine the relations between lateralization of epileptogenic foci, gender, and depression. Our data suggest that male subjects, but not female subjects, with left-sided foci may be particularly vulnerable to depression.
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PMID:Depression in male and female subjects with complex partial seizures. 155 21

It has been suggested that the kindling of seizures may depend on the induction of genes encoding enzymes involved in neurotransmission. Experimental seizures are followed by an especially rapid and massive induction of brain ornithine decarboxylase (ODC), an enzyme which catalyses the rate-limiting step in the synthesis of polyamines. The latter compounds have been shown to act as positive allosteric modulators of the NMDA receptor, and also to play an important role in cell growth and differentiation. The induction of ODC by seizures has accordingly been suggested to play a pivotal role in the changes in synaptic structure and function that underlie kindling. In the present study we examined the progress of kindling during treatment with alpha-difluoromethylornithine (DFMO), an irreversible inhibitor of ODC. We found that progressive increase in the duration and severity of kindled seizures and in the duration of local afterdischarges was unaffected by daily injections of DFMO in doses previously shown to cause substantial depression of brain ODC activity. Treatment with DFMO also failed to produce significant anticonvulsant or proconvulsant effects. Progressive increase in seizure activity during kindling is therefore unlikely to depend to any appreciable extent on enhanced synthesis of polyamines by ODC.
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PMID:Ornithine decarboxylase induction and polyamine synthesis in the kindling of seizures: the effect of alpha-difluoromethylornithine. 156 37

We endeavored to determine whether three behavioral effects of melatonin in rodents, i.e., depression of locomotor activity in hamsters, analgesia in mice, and impairment of 3-mercaptopropionic acid (3-MP) convulsions, exhibited the time dependency known to occur for several neuroendocrine effects of the hormone. Activity was monitored and registered by means of an optical actometer, and analgesia was assessed by the hot-plate procedure. Locomotor activity, analgesia, and seizure susceptibility were maximal at the beginning of the scotophase and minimal at noon. The effects of melatonin on the three parameters peaked at early night. The administration of the benzodiazepine antagonist flumazenil, although unable by itself to modify locomotor activity, pain, or seizure threshold, blunted the activity of melatonin. These results suggest that the time-dependent effects of melatonin on specific rodent behaviors may be mediated by central synapses employing gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) as an inhibitory transmitter.
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PMID:Chronopharmacology of melatonin: inhibition by benzodiazepine antagonism. 156 63

Four cases of baclofen intoxication are reported, with a review of 33 cases from the literature. Analysis of these 37 cases suggests that there are two types of baclofen intoxication syndrome. Patients with acute intoxication present with four major clinical manifestations: encephalopathy (disturbance of consciousness and/or seizure), respiratory depression, muscular hypotonia, and generalized hyporeflexia. Patients with chronic intoxication present with hallucinosis, impaired memory, catatonia, or acute mania. The acute intoxication syndrome has a faster onset, shorter duration, more severe clinical manifestations, and higher incidence of seizures than the chronic intoxication syndrome. Baclofen intoxication, although it may cause grave encephalopathic manifestations and electroencephalographic findings, has a benign outcome if actively managed.
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PMID:Baclofen intoxication: report of four cases and review of the literature. 157 99

Enflurane offers few advantages over halothane, and it is more expensive than halothane. It causes greater cardiopulmonary depression and induces seizure activity. When economy and systemic effects are considered, enflurane offers no real benefits for veterinary anesthesia.
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PMID:Precautions when using enflurane. 158 67

Changes in the strength of recurrent inhibition in the feline cortex in cobalt (CoCl2)-induced epilepsy were observed. The strength of inhibition was analyzed in terms of paired-pulse depression of the amplitude of somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) elicited by stimulation of the ventral posterolateral (VPL) thalamic nucleus. An enhancement in recurrent inhibition was observed shortly after CoCl2 application. The size of the amplitude of cortical evoked potentials (EPs) elicited by VPL stimulation increased simultaneously. The reduction of inhibition that appeared later was associated with afterdischarges (ADs) evoked by VPL stimulation. These ADs frequently extended to epileptic discharges. These results suggest that the reduction in recurrent inhibition induced by CoCl2 application plays an important role in the spread of seizure activity.
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PMID:Changes in the strength of recurrent inhibition in cobalt-induced epilepsy. 159 15

Hypovolemic hyponatremia attributable to severe fluid and electrolyte alterations was diagnosed in a foal with diarrhea. Subsequent consumption of water resulted in rapid reduction of serum sodium concentration and serum osmolar depression. Clinical signs of neurologic disease developed including blindness, loss of menace response, and seizures. Treatment of this condition with IV administered fluids included hypertonic saline solution (7.2%; 2 ml/kg of body weight), and frequent monitoring of serum electrolyte concentrations and osmolality resulted in gradual correction of the fluid and electrolyte imbalance and resolution of the neurologic signs. Hyponatremia has been recognized in foals with renal failure, ruptured urinary bladder, and iatrogenic water overload. The key to diagnosis and management of profound hyponatremia is accurate diagnosis of the status of plasma volume and association of the electrolyte imbalance with clinical signs of neurologic disease. This report describes an unusual complication of a commonly encountered problem in equine practice and documents that the severe metabolic and electrolyte abnormalities associated with diarrhea can result in clinical neurologic disease. The differential diagnosis also should include bacterial sepsis, parasitism, thoracic mass, acute renal failure, congenital neurologic deficit, or seizure syndrome. Serum electrolyte disorders should be considered as a potential cause of signs of neurologic disease in foals with diarrhea.
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PMID:Hypovolemic hyponatremia and signs of neurologic disease associated with diarrhea in a foal. 160 18

Palicourea marcgravii (Pm) is the most toxic plant in Brazil to cattle. Previous experiments showed that Pm experimental intoxication in rats is similar to that reported for cattle, and these symptoms include generalized itching, incoordination, depression, tonic-clonic seizures and death. The present study was undertaken to verify if the toxic principle of Pm responsible for seizure and death is the same that produces itching and depression. Rats that received Pm aqueous or chloroform fractions showed itching, while depression, seizures and death were associated with the aqueous fractions. These results suggest that Pm contains at least 2 active compounds, one causing itching and another one promoting depression, seizure and death.
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PMID:Palicourea marcgravii intoxication in rats: effects of different fractions. 160 88

The membrane currents responsible for the sustained potential shifts associated with electrographic seizures and with spreading depression in hippocampus were studied in the anesthetized rat. Probes incorporating 16 sensors in a straight line, spaced at 150-microns distances, were recording the potential changes with DC-coupled amplifiers in CA1 and dentate gyrus (DG) of one hemisphere. Seizures and spreading depression were provoked by repetitive stimulation of different afferent pathways. Seizures always began in DG before CA1, regardless of the pathway stimulated. Tonic seizures were associated with a sustained negative potential shift that was largest in the cell body layers. Current source density was computed from these recordings and confirmed the presence of a current sink limited to the cell body layer throughout the duration of electrographic seizures. Spreading depression was associated with a very large sink located in the layer of apical dendrites, maximal among the proximal segment of dendrites, to which the cell body layer served as a source. We conclude that seizures are associated with an inward current in neuron cell bodies, probably flowing through membrane channels of as yet no know physiological function.
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PMID:Current source density of sustained potential shifts associated with electrographic seizures and with spreading depression in rat hippocampus. 161 32

Penfield's observations in the 1930s provided the first systematic evidence of changes in regional cerebral blood flow (rCBF) associated with focal seizures. Further studies in humans and animals confirmed increases in cerebral blood flow and metabolism during generalised seizures, but the interictal, ictal, and postictal changes in focal epilepsy have begun to be elucidated in the last decade with the advent of in vivo imaging techniques such as positron emission tomography (PET) and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) and, in the case of animal studies, of autoradiography. Most studies have been of temporal lobe epilepsy. Interictally, the characteristic finding has been reduced blood flow and/or metabolism in the affected temporal lobe, or more extensively in the ipsilateral hemisphere. The few studies to date of ictal or postictal changes have been of rCBF using SPECT. They show hyperperfusion of the whole temporal lobe ictally, hyperperfusion of the hippocampus, combined with hypoperfusion of lateral structures in the immediate postictal period. Later in the postictal period, hypoperfusion alone is seen. Studies of focal seizures in animals have shown hyperperfusion and hypermetabolism at the site of the focus often with widespread depression of both parameters in the ipsilateral neocortex. Limited studies of coupling between blood flow and metabolism in humans have suggested that flow during seizures is adequate for metabolic demand, although some animal studies have suggested localised areas of uncoupling. The results of modern in vivo imaging of ictal and postictal changes in blood flow and metabolism have correlated well with Penfield's observations, and these changes are now being used to help localise epileptic foci, allowing wider use of the surgical treatment he pioneered.
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PMID:Epilepsy, cerebral blood flow, and cerebral metabolic rate. 162 38


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