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Query: UMLS:C0014070 (encephalomyelitis)
13,017 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A previously unrecorded nervous disease in pigeons was investigated. The disease, characterized by paresis, paralysis of the extremities, head-shaking, and torticollis, is contagious and spreads slowly. The mortality rate of affected pigeons was very high. The disease appeared to spread among pigeon flocks in spring and summer. The predominant gross change in most cases examined was congestion of the visceral organs. Some cases had grayish spots on the pancreas and kidneys. The histologic changes are characterized by neuronal and myelin degeneration with mononuclear cell infiltration and perivascular cuffing. Degeneration of the parenchyma and marked congestion are prominent in the visceral organs. The causal agent, found to be a virus, produced pock lesions on chorioallantoic membranes of developing chick embryos and failed to aagglutinate chicken RBCs. Antisera against Newcastle disease virus and avian encephalomyelitis virus did not neutralize the isolated virus. The virus produced typical signs in experimentally inoculated pigeons.
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PMID:Viral encephalomyelitis of pigeons: pathology and virus isolation. 54 2

This paper reports the effects of supplementation of the diet with linoleic acid on the severity of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE) in guinea pigs. Clinical signs of disease (e.g. paresis, paraplegia, urinary incontinence), weight loss, frequency of perivascular lesions in the central nervous system and ability of isolated lymph node cells to respond to myelin basic protein in vitro were all reduced by linoleic acid supplementation. Linoleic acid was effective when fed at a dose of 0.5 ml/day from 7 to 21 days after sensitization of the animals with basic protein, i.e., before and during the time in which clinical signs normally appeared. The same daily dose fed from 7 days before to 7 days after sensitization, i.e., ceasing about 7 days before the normal time of appearance of clinical signs, produced no significant effect. Feeding linoleic acid to normal guinea pigs significantly altered the fatty acid composition of their serum and lymph nodes, but not of their brain. Of several possible explantations for the protective effect of lineolic acid in EAE, we considered action by this essential fatty acid on the immune system most likely.
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PMID:Reduction by linoleic acid of the severity of experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in the guinea pig. 63 36

The actions of the specific inhibitor of leukotriene synthesis, 3-[1-(4-chlorobenzyl)-3-t-butyl-thio-5-isopropylindol-2-yl]-2,2- dimethylpropanoic acid (L-663, 536, CAS 118414-82-7) were investigated in groups of guinea pigs that had been given both low and high doses of the encephalitogenic stimulant to induce experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis (EAE). After daily intraperitoneal application over a period of 2 to 3 weeks the substance L-663, 536 (5 mg/kg) largely suppressed the clinical symptoms of EAE in some of the animals. The difference in the clinical symptoms between those animals that had been treated with L-663, 536 and those that had not was observed primarily in the experiment with a high encephalitogenic dose. The onset of progressive paralysis of the hind limbs that was observed in approximately 80% of the control animals only occurred in 40% of the guinea pigs that were treated with L-663, 536. No paresis at all was observed in about 25% of the treated animals. In both laboratory animals studies the CNS inflammatory infiltrates were significantly less extensive in the treated animals than in the respective control groups. The release of leukotrienes B4 and C4 by circulating neutrophil granulocytes in guinea pigs under treatment with L-663, 536 was also significantly reduced--in contrast to the untreated control animals. On the basis of the present results, it may be assumed that the L-663, 536-induced suppression of EAE in guinea pigs is attributable to the inhibition of leukotriene biosynthesis.
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PMID:Suppression of experimental autoimmune encephalomyelitis by a new specific inhibitor of leukotriene biosynthesis. 133 26

This prospective study reports the clinical and epidemiological features of 187 consecutive patients with neuroborreliosis recognized in Denmark over the 6-yr period, 1985-1990. Only patients with intrathecal Borrelia burgdorferi specific antibody synthesis were included. In 1990 regional incidences varied between 5.7 and 24.1 per million. Ninety-four percent of the patients had early (second stage) neuroborreliosis. The most common manifestation was a painful lymphocytic meningoradiculitis (Bannwarth's syndrome) either with paresis (61%) or as a radicular pain syndrome only (25%). Central nervous system (CNS) involvement in early neuroborreliosis was rare; 4% had signs of myelitis and only one patient had acute encephalitis. Children showed a different course of the disease. Six percent of the patients suffered a chronic course with a disease duration between 6 mths and 6 yrs either as chronic lymphocytic meningitis (1.6%) or as third stage chronic encephalomyelitis (4.3%). Meningeal signs were rare despite pronounced inflammatory cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) changes (median cell count 160/microliters; median protein concentration 1.13 g/l). High dose i.v. penicillin G was administered to 91% of the patients. Based on the clinical outcome and normalization of CSF no treatment failures were recognized. The final morbidity after a median follow-up of 33 mths was low; disabling sequelae were reported in nine patients, mainly those with previous CNS involvement. We conclude that neuroborreliosis is a common and characteristic neurological disorder. The diagnosis should be based on the demonstration of inflammatory CSF changes and B. burgdorferi specific intrathecal antibody production.
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PMID:The clinical and epidemiological profile of Lyme neuroborreliosis in Denmark 1985-1990. A prospective study of 187 patients with Borrelia burgdorferi specific intrathecal antibody production. 160 75

Nine puppies suffered from progressive paresis with muscle wasting, hyporeflexia and extensor rigidity. CK-activity in serum was elevated and electrodiagnostic findings were indicative of lower motor neuron disease. Although lesions were also found in the CNS, additional neurological signs were rare, but CSF examination revealed the presence of inflammatory lesions. On pathologic examination, all animals had a disseminated necrotizing myositis. In addition, a disseminated encephalomyelitis was found as well as, in 2 cases, a neuritis. In the lesions of 6 animals protozoal organisms were found which were immunocytochemically identified as Neospora caninum. Our results show that the protozoal myositis-encephalitis syndrome in puppies can be diagnosed in the clinic with high probability. A clinical differentiation between toxoplasmosis and Neospora caninum infection is presently difficult.
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PMID:[The clinical diagnosis of protozoal myositis syndrome (Neospora caninum) of puppies]. 188 44

Prophylactic administration of Piroxicam (Feldene), a reversible inhibitor of prostaglandin biosynthesis, significantly reduced the occurrence of paralytic signs and the amount of antibodies against myelin basic protein in the model of mild acute experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in the Lewis rat. Mononuclear infiltration of the central nervous system remained unaffected. A therapeutic intervention with piroxicam, however, increased paresis and CNS pathology. Immunohistochemical studies revealed an increased proportion of ED1-positive macrophages and monocytes in the infiltrates of the spinal cord in animals treated with piroxicam. Possible reasons for the different effects of the prophylactic and therapeutic treatment are discussed in the study.
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PMID:Experimental allergic encephalomyelitis-prophylactic and therapeutic treatment with the cyclooxygenase inhibitor piroxicam (Feldene). 193 15

A brief review of experimental infection of Icelandic sheep following intracerebral inoculation of neurotropic strains of visna virus is presented. In vivo replication of the virus is restricted, so that some cells carry the deoxyribonucleic acid provirus as an unexpressed genome. This cellular restriction plays a major role in the slow progression of the infection, abetted by neutralizing antibody in serum and spinal fluid. The latent provirus maintains the viral genome in the presence of an active immune response, since immune surveillance cannot recognize cells that are not synthesizing viral antigens. Infected Icelandic sheep experience two types of diseases of the central nervous system: a subclinical subacute encephalitis begins within weeks of infection in most sheep; and at irregular intervals from 0.5-8 years after infection, clinical paresis develops in the majority of Icelandic sheep and is accompanied by discrete focal demyelinating lesions in the spinal cord. The subacute encephalomyelitis is probably mediated by an antiviral cellular immune response, whereas the pathogenesis of the focal demyelinating lesions is still obscure. During persistent infection there is some selection for neutralization-resistant antigenic variants of the infecting serotype, and these are isolated at a frequency of approximately 15%. However, variants do not replace the infecting serotype, and antigenic drift does not appear essential for persistence of visna virus or for the occurrence of demyelinating lesions.
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PMID:Experimental visna in Icelandic sheep: the prototype lentiviral infection. 258 Mar 43

Recovery from rabies was studied in an experimental model. Young adult mice were inoculated in a hindlimb footpad with street rabies virus (fox salivary gland isolate). In a group of 62 mice, 97% developed clinical rabies with paresis of the extremities and spasticity, and 37% recovered with neurological sequelae. There was an acute inflammatory reaction in the brainstem and grey matter of the spinal cord, and degeneration of myelinated axons in the white matter of the cord and in the dorsal roots. Rabies virus antigen was found in the central nervous system of all mice examined between day 5 and 13, and also in trigeminal and dorsal root ganglia. Surviving mice had neutralizing antibodies in serum and brain tissue, and 90% survived an intracerebral challenge with the CVS strain of fixed rabies virus. Spontaneous recovery from rabies encephalomyelitis was demonstrated with evidence of viral replication and pathological changes in the central nervous system.
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PMID:Spontaneous recovery from the encephalomyelitis in mice caused by street rabies virus. 258 21

A 63-year-old man developed bilateral paresis of horizontal and upward eye movements. He was found to have a small oat cell carcinoma of the lung. Four months later he experienced acute visual blurring on the right side. Examination of the right eye at that time revealed a visual acuity of 3/200 and a central scotoma. There was swelling of the right optic disc. Three weeks after the onset of the visual loss, the acuity of the right eye spontaneously improved to 20/60, the field deficit lessened, and there was a decrease in the swelling of the optic disc. Subsequently, his neuro-ophthalmologic condition remained unchanged but his general health deteriorated, and he died nine months after the onset of the disease. Neuropathologic examination showed mild perivascular lymphocytic infiltration and fibrosis of the meninges throughout the central nervous system, loss of neurons and gliosis in the third and fourth cranial nerve nuclei, perivascular inflammation and gliosis of the optic nerves, and chiasm and central demyelination of the right optic nerve. No tumor cells were seen. These findings were consistent with a diagnosis of paraneoplastic optic neuritis and paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis. The present case confirms the existence of paraneoplastic optic neuritis and illustrates the clinical course of the disease.
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PMID:Paraneoplastic optic neuritis and encephalomyelitis. Report of a case. 334 61

A 2-year-old Boston Terrier was referred because of depression and hindlimb and tail paresis. Clinical examination and serum biochemical analysis resulted in a diagnosis of encephalomyelitis and myositis. Results of testing for Dirofilaria immitis were positive. Gross and histologic examination revealed an aberrant adult heartworm infection resulting in thrombosis of the femoral artery and multiple muscular branches, with subsequent muscle necrosis and inflammation in one hindlimb. Additionally, an unusual larval-tissue interaction to microfilariae yielded a multifocal encephalomyelitis in the brain and spinal cord.
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PMID:Heartworm disease manifested by encephalomyelitis and myositis in a dog. 355 82


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