Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0014070 (encephalomyelitis)
13,017 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

1. A severe demyelinating condition characterized by ataxia and paralysis, in some instances leading to death, was produced in thirty-five of a total of fifty-five dogs following immunization with homologous brain tissue combined with Freund's adjuvants. In more than 30 per cent of instances paralysis did not occur until immunization was continued for 6 or more months. Only eight dogs became paralyzed after a single injection of antigen. The condition appeared between 6 and 15 days after the last injection in all animals, irrespective of the total number of injections or the duration of immunization. 2. An antibody which reacted in complement fixation tests with aqueous and alcoholic extracts of homologous brain tissue was demonstrable in the majority of immunized dogs, whether or not the animals became paralyzed. It appeared during or after the 3rd week of immunization, and its occurrence or titer could not be correlated with the incidence of the encephalomyelitis. In general, there were fewer dogs with demonstrable antibody in the paralyzed group than in the non-paralyzed group. 3. A flocculation reaction with alcohol extracts of homologous brain was demonstrated in the serum of immunized dogs. The antigen and antibody involved were apparently identical with those responsible for the complement fixation reactions. 4. The brain tissue component which reacted as antigen in the complement fixation test was present in adult brain from several mammalian species, and peripheral nerve. It was not present in the brain of newborn dogs nor in other unrelated organs. It was demonstrable in brain tissue which had been allowed to autolyze, or treated with 10 per cent formalin. It was not impaired by boiling, or by acid hydrolysis, and was contained in the unsaponifiable fraction of brain lipids. It was separable from cholesterol by digitonin precipitation of the latter. 5. Immunization of dogs with the unsaponifiable fraction of homologous brain, in adjuvants, caused the appearance of antibrain antibody similar to that in animals injected with whole brain. Encephalomyelitis was not observed during a 2 month period of immunization with this fraction. 6. In guinea pigs, an injection of the unsaponifiable fraction of brain, in adjuvants, was followed by fatal meningoencephalitis, but the identity of the state with that caused by whole brain antigens was not established.
...
PMID:Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis following immunization with homologous brain extracts; studies on the role of a circulating antibody in the production of the condition in dogs. 1542 83

Six children with Acute Disseminated Encephalomyelitis (ADEM) were seen at the Penang Hospital over a two year period (July 1999-June 2001). Diagnosis was based upon typical clinical features and characteristic findings on neuroimaging. Cerebrospinal fluid examination and other investigations were done, where appropriate, to rule out other causes of central nervous system disease. Three children had a prodromal illness. The most common presenting symptoms were fever, seizures, ataxia, focal neurological deficits and labile mood. Two children presented with status epilepticus. All children had an abnormal neurological examination. Brain magnetic resonance imaging revealed hyperintense signals on T2-weighted and FLAIR sequences in the subcortical and deep white matter regions of the frontal, parietal, and temporal lobes, as well as in the thalami, cerebellum and brainstem. One child had multiphasic disseminated encephalomyelitis (three episodes). The child with multiphasic disease had only one treated episode, and has suffered mild disability. Three children were treated with either methylprednisolone or immunoglobulins, and remain well. One child received both treatments but expired as a result of severe gastrointestinal bleeding from the use of methylprednisolone. The child who was not treated has severe disability.
...
PMID:Acute disseminated encephalomyelitis: a report of six cases. 1572 80

Central nervous system (CNS) tissues from 192 cats with neurological signs were examined histologically, and tissues from 173 of them were later examined immunohistochemically as part of a survey to determine the prevalence of feline spongiform encephalopathy (FSE). One of the cats was from Norway and the others were from Great Britain. The most commonly recorded clinical signs were ataxia, behavioural changes and epilepsy, but none of the cats had histopathological evidence of FSE. The most common organic CNS lesions were non-suppurative encephalomyelitis in 28 per cent, neoplasia in 15 per cent and a heterogeneous group of degenerative encephalopathies in 9 per cent of the cats. A range of minor histological lesions of uncertain significance was also observed. No histological lesions were observed in the tissues of 63 (33 per cent) of the cats. Disease-specific prion protein (PrP(Sc)) was observed in only one of the 173 cats examined by immunohistochemistry.
...
PMID:Neuropathological findings in cats with clinically suspect but histologically unconfirmed feline spongiform encephalopathy. 1582 43

In a retrospective study of 15 cases of encephalomyelitis in dogs, three cases of Neospora caninum and two cases of Toxoplasma gondii infection were identified using immunohistochemical staining of central nervous system sections. All cases of neosporosis showed ataxia and progressive hind limb paralysis due to multifocal non-suppurative meningoencephalomyelitis which was most severe in the spinal cord and base of the brain stem. Neospora tissue cysts could not be distinguished morphologically from those of T. gondii using light microscopy, but electron microscopy confirmed their characteristic features. Although Neospora abortion in cattle has only recently been recognised in New Zealand, this study has shown that neosporosis has been present in dogs since at least 1972.
...
PMID:Protozoal encephalomyelitis of dogs involving Neospora caninum and Toxoplasma gondii in New Zealand. 1603 95

The mechanism(s) responsible for generating the different forms of multiple sclerosis, primary progressive (PP) and secondary progressive (SP) versus relapsing-remitting (RR), is not well understood. Using myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG)(92-106), we have established animal models that mimic the different types of multiple sclerosis. A.SW mice develop PP or SP-experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE) with large areas of demyelination and high titers of MOG antibody whereas SJL/J mice develop RR-EAE with perivascular T cells and mild demyelination. In A.SW progressive EAE, we found atrophy of the thymus, spleen, and lymph nodes with depletion of T and B cells and massive apoptosis, as demonstrated by immunohistochemistry, terminal dUTP nick-end labeling, and DNA agarose gel electrophoresis. To test whether lymphoid apoptosis itself contributes to disease progression, we injected SJL/J mice with apoptotic thymocytes. Injection of apoptotic cells resulted in greater than 20% of mice developing SP-EAE with ataxia. SJL/J mice with SP-EAE had large areas of demyelination, high MOG antibody titers and atrophic lymphoid organs. Spleen cells from mice with progressive EAE produced less interferon-gamma than those from RR-EAE when stimulated with mitogen. We suggest that induction of lymphoid apoptosis alters the balance of Th1 versus Th2 immune responses and increases MOG antibody production, leading to exacerbation of demyelination and subsequent disease progression.
...
PMID:Massive apoptosis in lymphoid organs in animal models for primary and secondary progressive multiple sclerosis. 1631 76

A 1.5-year-old boy presented with progressive ataxia and meningeal irritation after a period of general malaise and fever. He was eventually admitted to a paediatric intensive care unit for respiratory insufficiency. A diagnosis of acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) with pontine involvement was made. The patient was mechanically ventilated and treated with immunoglobulins and corticosteroids, after which he recovered almost completely. ADEM is characterised by rapidly progressive demyelination of the central nervous system. The exact incidence and aetiology are unknown. The disorder is considered to be an autoimmune reaction, and current treatment is aimed at the suppression of this reaction. Despite the dramatic clinical and radiological presentation of ADEM, the prognosis is favourable in most cases.
...
PMID:[Respiratory insufficiency caused by acute disseminated encephalomyelitis in a child]. 1675 27

Recent studies have examined the changes in the activity of cannabinoid signaling system in multiple sclerosis (MS), as a way to explain the efficacy of cannabinoid compounds to alleviate spasticity, pain, tremor and other signs of this autoimmune disease. In the present study, we have further explored this issue by examining density, mRNA expression and activation of GTP-binding proteins for the cannabinoid CB1 receptor subtype in several brain structures of mice with chronic relapsing experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (CREAE), a chronic model of MS that reproduces many of the pathological hallmarks of the human disease. CREAE animals were used at different phases in the progression of the disease (acute, remission and chronic) and compared to control mice. We observed several changes in the status of CB1 receptors that were region-specific and mainly circumscribed to motor-related regions, which is compatible with the symptomatology described for these animals that is preferentially of motor nature. We found a moderate decrease in the density of CB1 receptors in the caudate-putamen during the acute phase of CREAE. These reductions disappeared during the remission phase, but they were again observed, to a more marked extent, in the chronic phase. The same pattern for CB1 receptor density was observed in the cerebellum which, in this case, was accompanied by a progressive decrease in the capability of these receptors to activate GTP-binding proteins that was maximal in the chronic phase. The decrease in the density of CB1 receptors in the acute phase was also found in the globus pallidus but, in this case, the reduction was maintained during the further phases. No changes were observed in CB1 receptor-mRNA levels in any of the different regions examined. Finally, by contrast with the observations in motor structures, the status of CB1 receptors remained unaltered in cognition-related regions, such as the cerebral cortex and the hippocampus, during the different phases of CREAE. In summary, CB1 receptors were affected by the development of CREAE in mice exhibiting always down-regulatory responses that were circumscribed to motor-related regions and that were generally more marked during the acute and chronic phases. These observations may explain the efficacy of cannabinoid agonists to improve motor symptoms (spasticity, tremor, ataxia) typical of MS in both humans and animal models.
...
PMID:Changes in CB1 receptors in motor-related brain structures of chronic relapsing experimental allergic encephalomyelitis mice. 1682 88

Equine West Nile virus (WNV) encephalomyelitis cases - based on clinical signs and ELISA serology test results - reported to Texas disease control authorities during 2002 were analyzed to provide insights into the epidemiology of the disease within a previously disease-free population. The epidemic occurred between June 27 and December 17 (peaking in early October) and 1,698 cases were reported. Three distinct epidemic phases were identified, occurring mostly in southeast, northwest and then central Texas. Significant (P<0.05) disease clusters were identified in northwest and northern Texas. Most (91.1%) cases had no recent travel history, and most (68.9%) cases had not been vaccinated within the previous 12 months. One-third of cases did not survive, 71.2% of which were euthanatized. The most commonly reported presenting signs included ataxia (69%), abnormal gait (52%), muscle fasciculations (49%), depression (32%) and recumbency (28%). Vaccination status, ataxia, falling down, recumbency and lip droop best explained the risk of not surviving WNV disease. Results suggest that the peak risk period for encephalomyelitis caused by WNV may vary substantially among regions within Texas. Recumbent horses have a poor prognosis for survival. Vaccines, even if not administered sufficiently in advance of WNV infection within a district, may reduce the risk of death by at least 44%.
...
PMID:Characteristics of an outbreak of West Nile virus encephalomyelitis in a previously uninfected population of horses. 1697 Oct 67

Although acute viral encephalitis (AVE) and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM) are etiologically and pathologically distinct, a differential diagnosis between these two disorders is often difficult, especially if the patient exhibits a disturbance in consciousness. To identify useful clinical differences enabling a differential diagnosis to be made at an early stage, we retrospectively analyzed patients who had been admitted to our hospital within the past seven years because of acute-onset encephalitis with a disturbance in consciousness. Eleven adult patients were classified as having AVE, and 8 adult patients were classified as having ADEM within this period. The clinical characteristics of the two groups were then compared. Patients with AVE exhibited a disturbance in consciousness as their first neurological sign, whereas patients with ADEM initially showed focal signs like spastic paralysis, urinary disturbance and ataxia, which were followed by a disturbance in consciousness. ADEM is usually preceded by infection or vaccination, but obtaining a medical history from patients with disturbed consciousness is often difficult Based on the present analysis, the initial manifestation of focal neurological signs may be very useful for distinguishing ADEM from AVE.
...
PMID:[Clinical features, neuroimaging and prognosis of adult patients with clinically diagnosed acute-onset encephalitis treated at a teaching neurology center in the Toyama area of Japan]. 1715 31

Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE) is a chronic encephalitis of childhood and young adolescence due to persistent measles virus infection of the central nervous system. In majority of cases onset occurs from 5-15 years of age. In a nonimmunized population the average onset is 8 years. Children with SSPE had experienced natural infection with the rubeola virus at an early age, half before age 2 years. SSPE generally occurs 5-10 years after measles infection. In the early stages of the disease behavioral and personality changes is followed by myoclonic jerks and convulsions. In late stages dementia, stupor and coma develops. Diagnosis is achieved by typical clinical findings, measles antibody titer increase in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum, high amplitude, slow, sharp waves in EEG. Prognosis is poor and death ensues in about 3 yr after the diagnosis. Here it is presented a 7-years-old boy with involuntary movements in both hands, drop attacks while walking, ataxia and stupor. Due to suggestive radiological and clinical findings and a history of recent mumps infection he was thought to have acute disseminated encephalomyelitis initially and given treatment. But due to clinical deterioration and detection of anti measles IgG in serum and CSF, SSPE diagnosis was confirmed. With this SSPE case presenting initially as ADEM, the authors tried to emphasize that presentation of SSPE may clinically and radiologically be diverse and a thorough differential diagnosis is mandatory for a definite diagnosis.
...
PMID:Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis presenting as acute disseminated encephalomyelitis. 1720 44


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>