Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0027066 (myoclonus)
4,275 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

From the results obtained with the experimental series CORASIN (fast compression with He-N2-O2), a method of compression has been developed for the baboon (Papio papio) to dive deeper than 600 m. This method utilizes an exponential compression profile with stages of 40 min every 100 m and with the introduction of N2 before each stage from 200 m onward to maintain a concentration of 5.5%. Between 0 and 800 m, this procedure did not produce myoclonus or epileptic seizures; tremor appeared beyond 400 m (578 +/- 109 m) but remained slight. If N2 was not introduced, the tremor appeared earlier (266 +/- 52 m) and became severe; between 600 and 800 m, muscular hypertonus, myoclonus, and muscular cramps occurred. The modifications of the electroencephalogram were slight; the increase in slow activity did not exceed 300% with or without N2. Beyond 800 m, the compression procedure with N2 injections revealed new phenomena. There was a general depression of EEG activity starting at 800 m; from 1,000 m and deeper, there were periods of motor disturbances (hypertonus, spasms, and shaking), palpebral clonus, and eye movements associated with peak EEG activities localized in the posterior region of the skull that sometimes evolved toward an epileptic seizure localized in this region. These symptoms differed from the classical description of high-pressure nervous syndrome, which comprises an increase in tremor followed by convulsions. These differences may perhaps be linked to our compression procedure using N2 injection, to the effect of the pressure itself, or to a combination of the two.
...
PMID:HPNS of baboons during helium-nitrogen-oxygen slow exponential compressions. 646 4

The development of tolerance to the protective effects of diazepam (4 mg/kg) against seizures induced by pentylenetetrazole (PTZ) were studied in 3 strains of mice. Significant tolerance developed to protection against myoclonic jerks induced by PTZ (90-100 mg/kg) by day 5 in Tuck No. 1 and by day 10 in C3H/HE and CD-1 mice. Tolerance developed to protection against tonic-clonic convulsions by day 10 in Tuck No. 1 mice and by day 30 in the other strains. Diazepam remained protective against tonic-clonic convulsions (but not against myoclonus) induced by threshold doses of PTZ for 30 days in all 3 strains.
...
PMID:Strain differences in mice in the development of tolerance to the anti-pentylenetetrazole effects of diazepam. 665 52

A chronic progressive neurologic disease was observed and monitored for 18 months in a young, tamed Bengal tiger. Clinical, serologic, and neuropathologic evidence of canine distemper virus infection was seen. Clinical signs included convulsions, myoclonus, and slowly progressive ataxia. Marked increases in neutralizing antibodies against canine distemper virus were seen in the serum and cerebrospinal fluid. Neuropathologic findings were nonsuppurative meningoencephalomyelitis, with perivascular cuffing, demyelination, and inclusion bodies typical of canine distemper virus. It was concluded that, in light of this case and an earlier report of canine distemper in lion cubs, vaccination of this subgroup of carnivores with a killed vaccine may be beneficial if exposure to other animals susceptible to canine distemper is anticipated.
...
PMID:Chronic encephalomyelitis caused by canine distemper virus in a Bengal tiger. 668 17

Anticonvulsant and convulsant effects of various piperidine dicarboxylic acids have been evaluated following their intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) or intraperitoneal (i.p.) injection in DBA/2 mice, a strain of mice genetically susceptible to sound-induced seizures. Protection against sound-induced seizures occurred after intraventricular administration of (+/-)cis-2,3-piperidine dicarboxylic acid (0.017-0.045 mumol), (+/-)trans-2,3-piperidine dicarboxylic acid (0.018-0.33 mumol) and (+/-)cis-2,4-piperidine dicarboxylic acid (0.57-1.68 mumol). Protection against sound-induced seizures occurred after intraperitoneal injection of (+/-)cis-2,3-piperidine dicarboxylic acid (0.52-1.8 mmol/kg). Myoclonus or convulsions occurred at various times after the intraventricular injection of cis-2,3-piperidine dicarboxylic acid, trans-2,3-, cis-2,4-, cis-2,5- and cis-2,6-, piperidine dicarboxylic acids, and after the intraperitoneal injection of trans-2,3-piperidine dicarboxylic acid. The latter effect was blocked by pretreatment with 2-amino-7-phosphonoheptanoic acid (0.33 mmol/kg, i.p.) a potent and specific antagonist of excitation induced by N-methyl-D-aspartate. The anticonvulsant action of cis-2,3-piperidine dicarboxylic acid and the convulsant action of trans-2,3-piperidine dicarboxylic acid were associated with predominant antagonist and agonist actions respectively, at receptors preferring N-methyl-D-aspartate.
...
PMID:Anticonvulsant and proconvulsant properties of a series of structural isomers of piperidine dicarboxylic acid. 672 32

A report is given of an association of dyssynergia cerebellaris myoclonica associated with Friedreich's ataxia and mitochondrial myopathy in 2 patients. They had suffered from gradually increasing bursts of myoclonus since the wage of 14 and childhood, respectively. The other striking clinical features included generalized convulsions, mental deterioration, intention tremor, ataxia, muscular atrophy and deformity of feet. Muscle biopsies revealed ragged-red fibres in both cases. On electron microscopy these fibres contained subsarcolemnal aggregations of abundant abnormal mitochondria with proliferation of inner membranes or paracrystalline inclusions. One of these patients showed elevated blood lactate and pyruvate with an increased lactate/pyruvate ration, apparently of primary origin. These 2 cases resemble those reported briefly by Tsairis et al. (1974). An association of dyssynergia cerebellaris myoclonica associated with Friedreich's ataxia and mitochondrial myopathy in these 2 patients is unlikely to be coincidental but may represent one nosological entity. This myoclonus epilepsy syndrome associated with ragged-red fibres is compared with other possibly related mitochondrial encephalomyopathies.
...
PMID:Myoclonus epilepsy associated with ragged-red fibres (mitochondrial abnormalities ): disease entity or a syndrome? Light-and electron-microscopic studies of two cases and review of literature. 677 61

In patients suffering from tick-borne encephalitis development of epileptic seizures, Kozhevnikov's epilepsy, Jackson's epilepsy, myoclonus-epilepsy, chorea-epilepsy Hunt's myoclonic dyssynergy and various hyperkineses without general convulsions was observed. It was found that a particular place in the structure of the convulsive syndrome was occupied by Kozhevnikov's epilepsy which was not so frequently encountered in other diseases. This is, probably, due to a particular vulnerability of the motor structures, mainly, at the spinal level, at which the final motor response is formed.
...
PMID:[Tick-borne encephalitis and epilepsy]. 679 56

The convulsion and electroencephalographic patterns were examined on 2,625 subjects aged 60 and over. Of these, 2000 were consecutive autopsy cases. convulsion was noted in 4% of the 2,625 cases and the incidence of epilepsy was 0.076%. In 26.4% of 72 cases with cerebrovascular disorders who died during the past two years, convulsion was found, and the value indicated a remarkable increase compared with the previous report. Convulsion was noted most frequently in the acute state of cerebral apoplexy and myoclonus was most common. The prognosis of such cases was poor. The incidence of convulsion in 30 consecutive patients with brain tumor was 13.3%. On 20,000 electroencephalograms, the incidence of the typical spike and wave complex was less than 0.005%. No 6 and 14c/sec positive spike was recognized.
...
PMID:Convulsion in the aged. 679 71

Twenty three patients are described with a Kojewnikow syndrome in order to identify possible etiological factors. According to their history, clinical and E.E.G. features, patients could be classified into two groups; 1) Eleven patients corresponded to the classical description of the Kojewnikow syndrome: variable age at onset of the disease, rare somatomotor seizures, delay of onset of myoclonic jerks often of long duration, myoclonus limited to a small region, normal neurological examination, stable hemiplegia, normal results of psychometric tests, localised E.E.G. alterations. In most of these patients the etiology of the disorder was known, and the symptoms could be related to a localised lesion of the central cortex; 2) the second group (11 patients) presented with completely different characteristics: early onset of fits (age: 2 to 10 years), presence of other seizure types, short delay of onset of myoclonic jerks, high frequency of seizures, localization of myoclonus over large parts of the body, progressive evolution of a motor syndrome, associated neurological signs and disorders of sleep and behavior, progressive mental deterioration, characteristic E.E.G. pattern with long subclinical paroxysms of slow spikes (sharp waves) with variable localization, diffuse cerebral lesions of unknown etiology were found. Only one patient could not be allocated to either group. Several circumstantial data suggest that patients of the second group may suffer from a slow virus infection. Should this hypothesis be confirmed, a reconsideration of the Kojewnikow syndrome from the etiological standpoint would be of great theoretical and practical interest.
...
PMID:[Continuous partial epilepsy: syndrome and disease]. 682 Jan 77

Two patients with epilepsy and large hemispheric lesions underwent section of the frontal fibres of the corpus callosum for the treatment of seizures refractory to medical treatment. A severely retarded girl of 18 had encephalotrigeminal angiomatosis (Sturge-Weber syndrome) with multiple daily absences, tonic-clonic, myoclonic, atonic and adversive seizures since infancy. All types of fits--with the exception of adversive seizures and rare tonic-clonic fits--disappeared after anterior callosotomy. Another moderately retarded girl of 18 had an old cystic lesion over the entire territory of the left middle cerebral artery. She had had right hemiplegia since infancy and frequent brief absences and massive myoclonus triggered by unexpected sensory stimuli since the age of six years. Following anterior callosotomy there was an almost complete disappearance of the absences and a marked reduction of her startle myoclonus. Frontal callosotomy is a useful procedure in epileptics with large hemispheric lesions and carries less risk than hemispherectomy or total commissurotomy.
...
PMID:Anterior callosotomy as a substitute for hemispherectomy. 693 7

The diagnostic value of the EEG in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is based not only on the presence of a typical pattern of periodic discharges but also on the appearance of cyclic changes in the EEG. The pattern of the cyclic EEG changes was analysed in 9 patients with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. The changes appear when the level of wakefulness is reduced. The alternating pattern rate increases as the disease progresses and accounts for as much as 100 per cent of the tracing when the patient is in coma. During the cyclic changes the cardiorespiratory rate is always higher in phase A than in phase B. Hypertonic fits and most myoclonic jerks are present only in the A-phase, whereas partial myoclonus and fasciculations are present in both phases. The cyclic change pattern in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease reveals a progressive. The cyclic change pattern in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease reveals a progressive, serious involvement of the waking system.
...
PMID:The significance of cyclic EEG changes in Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease: prognostic value of their course in 9 patients. 704 44


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