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Query: UMLS:C0026837 (
muscle rigidity
)
1,077
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The purpose of the present study was to investigate physical dependence upon diazepam systematically in two inbred strains of rats, Lewis (LEW) and Fischer 344 (F344). Rats were chronically fed food containing diazepam on an escalating drug dosage schedule, from 1 and 2 to 12 mg/g of food, over a period of 30 days. During treatment, the growth curve in LEW and F344 rats was suppressed compared with the respective controls. Motor incoordination was evaluated by a rotarod performance test. The ranking of the motor incoordination during the final concentration of diazepam was as follows: F344 greater than LEW. After substitution of normal food for the diazepam-admixed food, various signs of diazepam withdrawal occurred 16-120 h later. These signs included vocalization, irritability,
muscle rigidity
, ear-twitching, Straub's tail, piloerection, fascicular twitch, tremor, convulsion, and death. The incidences of vocalization, ear-twitching, piloerection, and tremor in F344 were significantly higher than those in LEW rats. Furthermore, two of six F344 rats showed spontaneous convulsions and one rat died of convulsions. Overall withdrawal scores were significantly greater in F344 (16.0) than in LEW (6.3) rats. These results suggest that diazepam withdrawal severity is strongly influenced by genetic factors, and F344 rats are highly susceptible to dependence upon benzodiazepines.
...
PMID:Genetic differences in the development of physical dependence upon diazepam in Lewis and Fischer 344 inbred rat strains. 143 78
Rapid freezing followed by freeze-substitution has been used to study the ultrastructure of the myosin filaments of live and demembranated frog sartorius muscle in the states of relaxation and rigor. Electron microscopy of longitudinal sections of relaxed specimens showed greatly improved preservation of thick filament ultrastructure compared with conventional fixation. This was revealed by the appearance of a clear helical arrangement of myosin crossbridges along the filament surface and by a series of layer line reflections in computed Fourier transforms of sections, corresponding to the layer lines indexing on a 43 nm repeat in X-ray diffraction patterns of whole, living muscles. Filtered images of single myosin filaments were similar to those of negatively stained, isolated vertebrate filaments and consistent with a three-start helix. M-line and other non-myosin proteins were also very well preserved.
Rigor
specimens showed, in the region of overlapping myosin and actin filaments, periodicities corresponding to the 36, 24, 14.4 and 5.9 nm repeats detected in X-ray patterns of whole muscle in rigor; in the H-zone they showed a disordered array of crossbridges. Transverse sections, whose Fourier transforms extend to the (3, 0) reflection, supported the view, based on X-ray diffraction and conventional electron microscopy, that in the overlap zone of relaxed muscle most of the crossbridges are detached from the thin filaments while in rigor they are attached. We conclude that the rapid freezing technique preserves the molecular structure of the myofilaments closer to the in vivo state (as monitored by X-ray diffraction) than does normal fixation.
...
PMID:Structure of the myosin filaments of relaxed and rigor vertebrate striated muscle studied by rapid freezing electron microscopy. 145 58
A 51-year-old woman with no history of any familial neurological diseases initially presented with numbness in her extremities, slowing of movements, comprehension deficit, memory disturbance, dyscalculia,
muscle rigidity
, hyperreflexia, Parkinsonian gait, increasing disorientation, left-right disturbance, finger agnosia, alexia, acalculia, apraxia, aspontaneity, euphoria, gait disturbance, aphasia, echolalia, and in the terminal stage, mutism, contracture of lower extremities and cachexia. She died of bronchopneumonia at the age of 55. The brain showed widespread cerebral lesions, consisting of nerve cell loss and neurofibrillary tangles in the frontal, parietal and occipital cortex, demyelination and gliosis in the frontal, parietal and occipital subcortical white matter in addition to the typical pathological findings of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP): severe neuronal loss with gliosis and neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) in the subthalamic nucleus, globus pallidus and substantia nigra. In conclusion, we present a case of PSP with unusual clinical features (extrapyramidal signs, frontal and parietal lobe syndromes without ophthalmoplegia) and neuropathologically widespread cerebral lesions in addition to the typical pathological findings of PSP. The differential diagnosis of PSP and Alzheimer's disease and other degenerative disorders is discussed.
...
PMID:Progressive supranuclear palsy with widespread cerebral lesions. 147 14
Malignant hyperthermia (MH) is a rare clinical syndrome characterized by hypermetabolism and triggered by specific anesthetic agents. The mechanism of this abnormal reaction is due to uncontrolled calcium flux in the skeletal muscles resulting in a variable clinical syndrome of
muscle rigidity
, respiratory and metabolic acidosis, and elevation of temperature. The specific genetic defect underlying this condition has not been identified in humans, though in susceptible swine a mutation of the gene for the ryanodine receptor, a large protein which comprises the calcium channel in the sarcoplasmic reticulum, has been identified recently. Inheritance in humans appears to be autosomal dominant with variable penetrance. Patients with MH rarely have physical or laboratory signs of muscle disease. However, scattered case reports and investigations of individuals with known myopathies and other muscle related problems, such as acute rhabdomyolysis or idiopathic persistently elevated creatine kinase, suggest a possible association of MH with a variety of neuromuscular diseases and stress syndromes. This association is very strong in the case of central core disease (CCD) where it is supported by clinical and laboratory evidence, including the proximity of the CCD gene to the ryanodine receptor gene on chromosome 19. A variety of other diseases have been implicated and can be classified as possibly associated (King-Denborough syndrome, Duchenne muscular dystrophy) or unlikely to be associated (myotonia congenita, sudden infant death syndrome, limb girdle dystrophy, neuroleptic malignant syndrome, etc.).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Malignant hyperthermia and neuromuscular disease. 148 40
Neuroleptic malignant syndrome is a potentially lethal side effect of neuroleptic drugs, characterized by fever,
muscle rigidity
, autonomic dysfunction, and altered consciousness. A 50-year-old female hospitalized three times in the past for psychiatric treatment was admitted to Umayabashi Hospital for treatment of a relapse of a schizophrenic psychosis. She had received 50 mg of chlorpromazine and one tablet of Vegetamin-A (chlorpromazine 25 mg, promethazine 12.5 mg, phenobarbital 40 mg). Approximately 24-36 hours later, the patient became febrile and lost consciousness, and eight days later, acute renal failure occurred with
muscle rigidity
. She was transported to Maebashi Red Cross Hospital to receive hemodialysis. On admission, the laboratory studies showed high levels of serum creatine phosphokinase, glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase, glutamic pyruvic transaminase, creatinine and blood urea nitrogen. She underwent hemodialysis for treatment of acute renal failure and recovered from it after 16 sessions of hemodialysis.
...
PMID:[A case of neuroleptic malignant syndrome with acute renal failure]. 148 75
In the last two decades, opioid analgesics have assumed an important place in general anesthetic practice in the United States. Part of the reason for this has been the introduction of the potent new agonists fentanyl, sufentanil, and alfentanil. Because of problems with morphine-oxygen anesthesia (incomplete amnesia, occasional histamine-related reaction, marked increases in intra- and postoperative respiratory depression), a suitable alternative was sought but not found among existing opioids. A breakthrough came in 1960, when fentanyl was synthesized, laying the foundation for a better understanding of the structure-activity relationships of narcotic analgesics and stimulating interest in developing compounds with even greater potency and safety margins. Investigators interested in opioid anesthesia began to study fentanyl in animals and then in humans. Fentanyl (50-100 micrograms/kg) with oxygen (100%) was evaluated as an anesthetic in patients undergoing mitral valve and coronary artery surgery. Changes in cardiovascular dynamics with induction doses ranging from 8 to 30 micrograms/kg consisted of small decreases in heart rate and arterial blood pressure. All other cardiovascular variables studied, including cardiac output, remained unchanged, even with additional doses up to 100 micrograms/kg. It was determined that fentanyl had use as a narcotic anesthetic, despite its potential for cardiovascular depression and stimulation, respiratory depression,
muscle rigidity
, and, occasionally, incomplete anesthesia. Since the introduction of fentanyl, two other potent synthetic opioids have been introduced into clinical practice--sufentanil and alfentanil.
...
PMID:The history and development of the fentanyl series. 151 29
We report two patients with slowly progressive motor disorders, whose principal manifestations were asymmetric limb-kinetic apraxia and
muscle rigidity
. In both patients MRI revealed no responsible lesion, whereas single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) showed a decrease in cerebral blood flow (CBF) in the unilateral hemisphere. One patient with mainly right-sided apraxia had a decreased CBF in the left central region between the frontal and parietal cortices, and the other patient with left-sided apraxia in the right parietal cortex. In agreement with asymmetric clinical symptoms, the regional CBF decrease in the unilateral cortical areas including the frontal and parietal cortices may suggest a degenerative disease, presumably diagnosed as having cortico-basal degeneration.
...
PMID:Slowly progressive limb-kinetic apraxia with a decrease in unilateral cerebral blood flow. 151 79
Malignant hyperthermia (MH) is a rare genetic myopathy that was first described as a fatal complication of general anesthesia in 1960. It is estimated to affect approximately 1 in 15,000 pediatric patients and 1 in 40,000 adult middle-aged patients. The mode of transmission is genetic: the severest form is autosomal dominant, and the less severe, autosomal recessive. Thus, both men and women can have MH, although there is a slightly higher incidence in the male pediatric population. Malignant hyperthermia is usually triggered by halogenated anesthetic agents with or without depolarizing muscle relaxants. The classic diagnostic triad consists of skeletal
muscle rigidity
, metabolic acidosis, and elevated body temperature. The definitive diagnosis is suspected susceptible individuals is revealed by exposing an intact muscle fiber to caffeine and halothane in varying concentrations. An abnormal contracture response is hypothesized to be the result of an increase in the release of calcium ion from the sarcoplasmic reticulum in response to neuronal stimulation leading to a hypermetabolic state. The mainstay of treatment is dantrolene, given either prophylactically in susceptible patients or immediately whenever a malignant hyperthermic episode is suspected.
...
PMID:Malignant hyperthermia: a review. 156 Feb 93
The main features of the Neuroleptic Malignant Syndrome (NMS), a complication of neuroleptic therapy, are fever,
muscle rigidity
, autonomic dysfunction, and an alteration in consciousness level. We describe five cases of NMS comprising 0.6% of acute neuroleptically-treated admissions to a psychiatric hospital over a one-year period. All patients, four females aged 26 to 63 years, and one male, aged 65 years, were of African origin and received multiple neuroleptic drugs, at least one of which was a depot preparation. Four were being treated for functional psychiatric disorders while one had dementia. All patients had fever and depressed consciousness level while four had rigidity and autonomic dysfunction. Serum creatine phosphokinase was elevated in 4 cases, and there was indirect evidence of myoglobinuria in 3 cases suggested by a positive urine dipstick test for blood despite the absence of red cells on microscopy. Rhabdomyolysis was associated with renal failure in one case. Both bromocriptine mesylate and dantrolene sodium were given in two cases. Three patients died in hospital, one with persistent rigidity and progressive decubitus ulceration, one from peritonitis following peritoneal dialysis, and another suddenly. Early recognition of NMS is important; it should be considered in any patient on neuroleptic therapy who develops fever, rigidity or alteration in consciousness level.
...
PMID:Neuroleptic malignant syndrome among acute psychiatric admissions in Barbados. 156 88
Symptoms of Parkinsonism, most likely induced by an oral contraceptive, were greatly reduced by combined therapy of nicergoline and bromocriptine. A 38-year-old housewife had taken an oral contraceptive, which contained .05 mg of ethinyl estradiol and .5mg of norgestrel per tablet, for 7 years, when she presented took the following symptoms: she stumbled easily, took short, quick dancing/skating steps without arm movement, and found it increasingly difficult to keep slippers on while walking. In the afternoons she experienced extreme fatigue and rigidity in her lower limbs. After a while, languor spread to other parts of her body as well, and she was examined on April 5, 1991. The patient's face was mask-like, and her body was bent forward with her forearms flexed. She showed frozen gait and lowered initiation in her movement.
Muscle rigidity
was found in both upper and lower extremities, and especially on the right side. A brain MRI showed lacunar infraction with small patches of high signal intensities in the white matter of the bilateral frontal lobes and high signal intensities in the left periventricular white matter. Urine was normal; blood cholesterol and iron were slightly raised. Hormonal examinations showed lowered LH, FSH, progesterone and 24-hr 17-KGS. CT was normal. She was ordered to stop taking pills and to take nicergoline and bromocriptine, which greatly reduced these symptoms except during the first menstruation following the treatment. When mask-like facial expressions, demarche a petit pas, and languor in her lower extremities did not recur during the next menstruation, bromocriptine treatment was discontinued. Four months later nicergoline therapy was also discontinued.
...
PMID:[A case of parkinsonism induced by an oral contraceptive]. 156 36
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