Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0020672 (hypothermia)
17,327 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Clinical, histological and electrophysiological studies were performed on rabbits with acute experimental allergic encephalomyelitis (EAE). The clinical features were similar to those previously described, with the notable exception of the new findings of areflexia, respiratory slowing and hypothermia. The histological findings were also similar to those previously reported, with inflammatory demyelinating lesions both in the central and peripheral nervous system, especially the dorsal root ganglia. Electrophysiological studies performed one to nine days after the onset of neurological signs demonstrated conduction block in a high proportion of the large diameter afferents in the lumbosacral and thoracic dorsal root ganglia. Single fibre studies with spike-triggered averaging confirmed the conduction block in the dorsal root ganglia. That the conduction block was due to demyelination was indicated by slowing of conduction in large diameter fibres, normal conduction in unmyelinated fibres and the specific effects of temperature and of the potassium channel blocking agent, 4-aminopyridine. These conduction abnormalities in the peripheral nervous system, focused on the dorsal root ganglia, account for the postural disturbance, hypotonia, ataxia and areflexia in rabbits with EAE. Such conduction block is likely to mask the expression of any lesions of the central nervous system that alone could produce similar signs. The implications of these findings for the human demyelinating diseases are discussed.
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PMID:The pathophysiology of acute experimental allergic encephalomyelitis in the rabbit. 608 51

Pipecolic acid (PA) is an intermediate of lysine metabolism in the mammalian brain. Recent findings suggest a functional connection of PA as neuromodulator in GABAergic transmission. Since many drugs are postulated to produce their effects by interaction with the central GABA system, the influence of PA on the anticonvulsant activity of phenobarbital was examined. Pretreatment of mice with 50 mg . kg-1 of PA potentiated the suppressing effects of the barbiturate on electrically and chemically induced convulsions. However, there was no potentiation of the behavioral effects and hypothermia induced by phenobarbital. PA itself had no or only little effect on the convulsions, motor function and rectal temperature when given in i.p. doses up to 500 mg . kg-1. Intraventricular administration of 500 microgram of PA also did not suppress either type of convulsion, although it produced ptosis, hypotonia, sedation and hypothermia. The results are discussed in relation to GABA system.
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PMID:Potentiation of phenobarbital-induced anticonvulsant activity by pipecolic acid. 628 9

The recognition of Menkes' kinky hair syndrome, trichopoliodystrophy, may present problems in the early neonatal period. The serum copper, and ceruloplasmin levels are within the range of normal infants in the first week of life; they are higher than normal in the cord blood of affected infants and fall gradually. Pili torti may only develop later, as the primary fetal hair is normal. The baby may appear bald, or both normal and abnormal hair may be found in different areas of the skull. The roentgenographic signs of wormian bones in the skull, metaphyseal spurring of the long bones, and diverticuli of the bladder develop progressively and may not be seen until after 6 weeks of age. However, diagnosis is possible in the neonatal period, if male infants with unexplained hypothermia, hypotonia, septicemia, or seizures are investigated by serum copper and ceruloplasmin levels after 1 month of age.
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PMID:Difficulties in the neonatal diagnosis of Menkes' kinky hair syndrome--trichopoliodystrophy. 646 87

Clostridium botulinum can colonize and produce botulinal toxin in the human infant intestine, which the toxin then permeates to cause generalized flaccid paralysis, and occasionally, sudden death. This study was undertaken to test the hypothesis that toxins produced by other intestinal clostridia, e.g., C. difficile, might also cause systemic illness and sometimes death in infants (J Pediatr 100:568, 1982). Because this hypothesis could not be evaluated clinically until the systemic manifestations of C. difficile toxins in primates were known, infant rhesus monkeys were given 6 to 11 micrograms/kg of the recently purified C. difficile toxins A or B, either intravenously or intraperitoneally. The animals showed no abnormalities for several hours, but then developed lethargy, hypotonia, hypothermia, and, shortly before death, sudden elevation of serum concentrations of potassium, magnesium, and phosphorus and of enzymes that derived mainly from skeletal muscle, heart and brain. Five of six animals died quietly 3.5 to 8.0 hours after onset of symptoms. Death appeared to result from cessation of breathing, after which the sinus tachycardia then deteriorated to a flat ECG. Necropsy findings were insufficient to explain the cause of death. It appears that in infant monkeys microgram amounts of C. difficile toxins A and B can produce a rapid quiet death, the cause of which is undetectable at necropsy, a situation pathologically reminiscent of crib death in human infants, although the possible clinical identity of these two conditions has yet to be established.
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PMID:Rapid death of infant rhesus monkeys injected with Clostridium difficile toxins A and B: physiologic and pathologic basis. 669 Jun 74

We studied 2 of 4 affected boys with a new disease associated with abnormalities of copper metabolism. The four cases occurred in two generations of a family. This syndrome was similar to Menkes disease in some respects: X-linked recessive inheritance, marked psychomotor retardation with seizures, low serum copper and ceruloplasmin levels, and a block in gut copper absorption. There were also striking differences from Menkes disease. Patients had normal birthweight at term, no hypothermia, and survived beyond the usual Menkes age group with static neurologic disease including hypotonia and choreoathetosis. In addition, general examination of both children was unremarkable apart from undescended testes and growth retardation. The hair, facies, and skin were normal and there was no radiologic evidence of bony changes. Detailed studies of copper absorption were performed.
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PMID:An X-linked disease of the nervous system with disordered copper metabolism and features differing from Menkes disease. 719 7

Vegetative disturbances were observed in 88 out of 102 patients, 86%, after a primary brain lesion during onset of brain death. Tachycardia was most common in 64%, hypotonia below 80 mm Hg and hypertonia above 170 mm Hg were present in about half of all cases. Hyperthermia above 40 degrees C was noted in 25%, hypothermia below 36 degrees C was observed in 31%. The kind of underlying brain lesion had no regular influence on the vegetative disturbances. In 5 out of 6 younger patients these disturbances were less pronounced.
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PMID:[Autonomic dysfunction and the development of secondary brain death syndrome]. 763 45

We describe a 6 year old girl with chorea following cardiac surgery, the first such report in Japan. The radical operation for total anomalous pulmonary venous return was carried out at the age of 11 months under hypothermia. Seven days after the operation, a sudden onset of irritability, dysphagia, chorea, generalized, hypotonia, and complete external ophthalmoplegia were seen. These symptoms diminished gradually, but chorea remained. We speculated that the cause of chorea arose from the cardiac surgery under hypothermia. It is necessary to consider 'cardiac surgery' as one of the triggers of certain movement disorders including chorea. We tried treatment with haloperidol, pimozide, and several other drugs; only pimozide was effective in decreasing chorea without any side-effects.
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PMID:Persistent chorea following cardiac surgery for congenital heart disease. 764 1

We presented a case of severe postoperative choreoathetosis which occurred in a 3-year-old boy with tetralogy of Fallot early postoperatively but almost completely recovered within two years after the operation. Because of the large coronary arterial branch on the right ventricular outflow, a small outflow incision and deep hypothermia (lowest rectal temperature was 13 degrees C) and short duration of circulatory arrest (8 minutes) were adopted. Postoperative course was uneventful till the onset of choreoathetosis on the fifth postoperative day. His symptoms and signs of choreoathetosis, oral-facial dyskinesias, hypotonia, affective changes and also pseudobulbar signs were becoming serious during the first week from the onset, but afterwards his condition started getting better gradually every week, and every month. Now, 20 months after the operation, he is almost completely recovered except for small and slow involuntary movements. Though investiations including CT, MRI and EEG were all almost normal, regional nonspecific low area of the frontal lobe and cerebellum was detected by SPECT (single photon emission computed tomography) on the 32nd and 94th postoperative days, respectively.
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PMID:[Postoperative choreoathetosis in a case of tetralogy of Fallot]. 788 49

In a prospective study, we analyzed the intraoperative electroencephalographic (EEG) changes during open heart surgery with deep hypothermia in 66 infants aged 6 months or younger, 70% of whom were neonates. Suppression of amplitude and continuity at the nadir of temperature reduction and following rewarming, and the appearance of periodic paroxysmal activity, was compared with neurologic abnormalities before and following operation, patient characteristics, and operation variables. EEG changes disclosed no relationship to abnormal neurologic findings, age at operation, type of anesthetic, duration of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), duration of low-flow CPB or cooling, temperature at circulatory arrest (HCA) or low flow, or nasopharyngeal-venous return temperature differences. EEG suppression following rewarming was associated with the use of thiopentone and duration of HCA. Use of thiopentone was also related to decreased levels of alertness at the end of the first postoperative week. We could not demonstrate any association between operation variables, including duration of HCA, and postoperative neurologic findings which include abnormalities of tone, alertness, seizures, generalized pyramidal signs, choreoathetosis, and hemiparesis. Severe hypotonia before operation was associated with continuing severe hypotonia during the postoperative period. EEG changes during cooling for open heart surgery on infants appear to be physiologic, and these plus EEG suppression following HCA or low-flow CPB are not useful predictors of early neurologic morbidity.
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PMID:EEG changes during open heart surgery on infants aged 6 months or less: relationship to early neurologic morbidity. 802 60

Based on a case report, the combined occurrence of a hypopituitary crisis and acute renal failure (ARF) is discussed. Aetiologically, the patient's disease dates back to an operation on the pituitary gland 40 years previously followed by a panhypopituitarism. The course of the disease presented initial symptoms which did not suggest a hypopituitary crisis to the first physician. The patient was hospitalized primarily on the tentative diagnosis of encephalitis. Subsequently, both laboratory findings and sonography of the abdomen pointed to chronic renal failure. The severity of the clinical course led to the transfer of the patient to our hospital for haemodialysis. Examination of the soporous patient revealed in addition to symptoms of ARF based on ambilateral pyelonephritic nephrocirrhosis typical cardinal symptoms of an endocrine insufficiency. Sopor, serious exsiccosis, pale, cool, pigmentless skin, deficiency of axillary and pubic hair, gonadal atrophy, hypotonia, hypothermia, bradypnoea and bradycardia as well as anamnesis of the patient substantiated the tentative diagnosis of a hypophysical coma based on hypopituitarism, clinically dominated by hypothyroidism. Following an immediately launched hormone substitution in combination with haemodialysis the state of the patient improved. However, during the fifth haemodialysis cardiac arrest occurred, the cause of which was put down to a dysequilibrium syndrome. The cause, however, must be seen in a continuing stress situation, inadequate hormone substitution and in sedation with diazepam. After reanimation the patient was transferred to the ICU.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Pituitary crisis and acute renal failure--a case report]. 814 59


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