Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0012833 (dizziness)
9,689 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The clinical features in 268 patients with diffuse cerebral atrophy of initially unknown origin have been analysed. Pneumoencephalography showed supratentorial ventricular atrophy in 87 per cent (cortical in 71 per cent), and brain stem and/or cerebellar atrophy in 17 per cent of the patients. Epileptic seizures, dizziness and clumsiness were the most frequent initial symptoms. Vibration in work, psychic impairment, gait difficulties, co-ordinative dysfunction, excessive use of alcohol, and arterial hypertension dominated the clinical picture. Serum cholesterol and triglycerides, and beta-globulins in the cerebrospinal fluid protein electrophoresis were normal. Diffuse cerebral atrophy without defined cause appears to affect all parts of the brain, with particular predilection for the frontotemporal area and the left side, and to have diffuse and unspecific clinical characteristics.
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PMID:Pneumoencephalographic and clinical characteristics of diffuse cerebral atrophy. 121 60

Objective and subjective effects on performance of single oral doses of indomethacin (IM) 50 mg and 100 mg and diazepam (DZ) 10-15 mg, alone and in combination, were investigated in two double-blind studies conducted with parallel groups of healthy drug-naive student volunteers. Objective and subjective effects were measured at baseline as well as 0.5 and 1.5 hours after treatment. DZ significantly impaired performance in digit symbol substitution, letter cancellation, tracking and flicker fusion tests. It also induced exophoria and caused subjective (visual analogue scales) drowsiness, mental slowness, clumsiness and impaired overall performance. IM proved rather inactive when slightly impairing flicker fusion and digit substitution, and subjectively rendering the subjects clumsier. The combined effects of IM and DZ did not differ from those obtained with DZ alone. Both IM and DZ induced dizziness and their effects in this respect were additive when the drugs were used in combination. It is concluded that single therapeutic doses of indomethacin do not produce major psychomotor effects and do not in this respect increase the effects of diazepam. However, the feeling of dizziness, a side-effect common to both these drugs, may be additive when the drugs are used in combination.
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PMID:Actions and interactions of indomethacin and diazepam on performance in healthy volunteers. 304 92

Forty-seven climbers participated in a double-blind, randomized trial comparing acetazolamide 250 mg, dexamethasone 4 mg, and placebo every eight hours as prophylaxis for acute mountain sickness during rapid, active ascent of Mount Rainier (elevation 4,392 m). Forty-two subjects (89.4 percent) achieved the summit in an average of 34.5 hours after leaving sea level. At the summit or high point attained above base camp, the group taking dexamethasone reported less headache, tiredness, dizziness, nausea, clumsiness, and a greater sense of feeling refreshed (p less than or equal to 0.05). In addition, they reported fewer problems of runny nose and feeling cold, symptoms unrelated to acute mountain sickness. The acetazolamide group differed significantly (p less than or equal to 0.05) from other groups at low elevations (1,300 to 1,600 m), in that they experienced more feelings of nausea and tiredness, and they were less refreshed. These drug side effects probably obscured the previously established prophylactic effects of acetazolamide for acute mountain sickness. Separate analysis of an acetazolamide subgroup that did not experience side effects at low elevations revealed a prophylactic effect of acetazolamide similar in magnitude to the dexamethasone effect but lacking the euphoric effects of dexamethasone. This study demonstrates that prophylaxis with dexamethasone can reduce the symptoms associated with acute mountain sickness during active ascent and that acetazolamide can cause side effects that may limit its effectiveness as prophylaxis against the disease.
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PMID:A randomized trial of dexamethasone and acetazolamide for acute mountain sickness prophylaxis. 333 64

Family history of alcoholism influences the acute effects of ethanol in young men. We expanded these findings by concomitantly measuring plasma ethanol levels (BALs), subjective intoxication effects, and task performance in young women. Healthy subjects with no familial alcoholism provided informed consent and received 0.75 ml/kg ethanol or isocaloric placebo (n = 10 per group) under randomized double-blind conditions. Assessments were made at 90, 60 and 30 min before, and 15, 30, 45, 60, 90, 120, 150 and 180 min after beverage administration. BALs reached 80 mg/dl 45-60 min following ethanol. Dizziness and clumsiness ratings correlated strongly with BAL, but clumsiness and confusion were the strongest effects associated with placebo. Impaired visual selectivity and hand-eye coordination covaried with BAL (p less than 0.05) on written tests. Deficits in abstract instruction and symbol comprehension almost attained statistical significance (p less than 0.06). Compared with previous findings for males, data from the present report suggest that ethanol may have gender-related effects.
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PMID:Blood ethanol levels, self-rated ethanol effects and cognitive-perceptual tasks. 336 44

Oral amantadine 100 mg and bromocriptine 2.5 + 2.5 mg, alone and in combination with ethanol (1 g/kg), were investigated in two placebo-controlled, double-blind and cross-over trials. In the first trial the psychomotor effects of amantadine and bromocriptine were compared to those of placebo, and in the second trial ethanol was added to the treatment. Bromocriptine lowered serum prolactin levels, thus confirming its absorption. Amantadine and bromocriptine alone had no psychomotor effects but unpleasant sensations, nausea and dizziness were reported after bromocriptine. Ethanol impaired performance in terms of impaired coordinative and reactive skills, lowered tapping speed, prolonged critical flicker interval and reduced gaze nystagmus angle (P less than 0.05 to 0.001; two-way ANOVA). Subjectively, ethanol induced mental slowness, clumsiness and impairment of performance (P less than 0.05 to 0.001). Amantadine and bromocriptine failed to counteract any of these ethanol-induced changes. It is concluded that in man, an acute dopaminergic activation by amantadine or bromocriptine does not significantly modify the psychomotor effects of ethanol.
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PMID:Failure of amantadine and bromocriptine to counteract alcoholic inebriation in man. 650 9

Computerized tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) allow accurate anatomical localization of large thromboembolic cerebellar infarcts in the territories of the cerebellar arteries and their branches. In addition, MRI and CT show very small cerebellar infarcts as discrete foci of signal change that are not easily localizable within well-defined arterial territories. They could be border zone infarcts. Their anatomy, mechanism and clinical features have not been studied. By reviewing our CT and MRI files over a 2-year period, we found 47 patients with very small cerebellar infarcts; 23 patients had angiography. Infarcts were cortical (32 patients), deep (10 patients) and both (five patients). Most lesions corresponded to border zone cerebellar infarcts. The mechanisms of infarction were (i) global hypoperfusion due to cardiac arrest (two patients); (ii) small or end (pial) artery disease due to intracranial atheroma or hypercoagulable states (nine patients); (iii) focal cerebellar hypoperfusion due to large artery (vertebral or basilar) occlusive disease (16 patients) or brain embolism (11 patients) resulting in infarcts in the watershed areas (27 patients total); (iv) unknown mechanism (nine patients, 19%). Large artery occlusive disease was more frequently observed in deep than in cortical infarcts (9 out of 15 versus 11 out of 37; P < 0.0001). The most frequent symptoms were dizziness, lightheadedness, unsteadiness with axial lateropulsion, dysarthria and limb clumsiness. These symptoms were either transient or recurrent, at times related to positional changes of the head or trunk. Position-related symptoms often persisted for weeks or months after the ischaemic event, and occurred mainly in patients with combined carotid and vertebrobasilar occlusive disease. Physical findings were either absent or included wide-based gait, lateropulsion, mild ipsilateral dysmetria, dysarthria or dysdiadochokinesia. We conclude that very small cerebellar infarcts are often found on CT and MRI. Their border zone distribution and frequent posturally related symptoms most often result from large or pial artery disease rather than from systemic hypotension.
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PMID:Very small (border zone) cerebellar infarcts. Distribution, causes, mechanisms and clinical features. 845 55

Some complications of otitis media with effusion (OME) are not obvious and not always associated with otitis media by physicians and patients; the authors propose to call them 'unusual complications', although they may be quite frequent. Complications such as dizziness, clumsiness and behavioural disorders are classified in this group. Other complications are rare and uncommon such as sensorineural hearing loss and cholesteatoma. Some of these sequelae are structural, others more functional. The impact of OME on complex functions such as language, learning or behaviour is still controversial but seems to have been underestimated until now. Not only withholding treatment in children with OME may cause complications but also the treatment of OME may lead to sequelae, although serious side effects caused by the treatment of OME are rare. In this literature review, the epidemiology, importance and diagnosis of the uncommon and unusual complications of OME will be discussed.
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PMID:Uncommon and unusual complications of otitis media with effusion. 1057 89

A 17-year-old Caucasian male presented with sudden dizziness, ataxia, vertigo, and clumsiness lasting for a couple of hours. He had a subtle trauma during a wrestling match 2 days prior to the presentation. A CT Angiogram (CTA) and MRI showed left vertebral artery dissection (VAD). The patient was treated with anticoagulation with heparin drip in the ICU. The patient was discharged home on the third day on Lovenox-warfarin bridging. This case underscores the importance of considering VAD as a differential diagnosis in patients with sports-related symptoms especially in activities entailing hyperextension or hyperrotation of neck. Due to a varied latent period, often minor underlying trauma, and subtle presentation, a low index of suspicion is warranted in timely diagnosis and treatment of VAD. Considering recent evidence in treatment modality, either antiplatelet therapy or anticoagulation may be used for treatment of VAD.
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PMID:Minor trauma causing stroke in a young athlete. 2588 15