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Query: UMLS:C0027066 (
myoclonus
)
4,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The effects of intracerebroventricular (i.c.v.) or systemic injections of Met- or Leu-enkephalin, beta-endorphin, FK 33.824 (D-Ala2, MePhe4, Met(O5)-ol-enkephalin) and of morphine and naloxone have been studied in baboons, Papio papio, which spontaneously show photically induced epileptic responses. Animals were chronically implanted with epidural or deep recording electrodes and a cannula in one lateral ventricle, and tested whilst seated in a primate chair. In some animals the natural syndrome was enhanced by the prior administration of DL-allylglycine, 100--200 mg/kg, i.v. Met- or Leu-enkephalin, 1--10 mg, i.c.v., did not lead to any manifest focal or
generalized seizure
discharges. Nor did it lead to any consistent enhancement or reduction of photically induced myoclonic responses (as tested 5--10 min after injection). beta-Endorphin, 0.1--0.5 mg, i.c.v., did not enhance or impair photically induced myoclonic responses. FK 33.824, 0.1--0.5 mg, i.c.v., depressed respiration and slowed EEG background rhythms for 9--15 h. This was associated with a loss of myoclonic responses to photic stimulation. These effects were reversed for 20--40 min following the injection of naloxone, 1 mg/kg i.m. A depression of respiration and a slowing of EEG rhythms was seen beginning 5--20 min after FK 33.824, 2 or 4 mg/kg, i.v. The higher dose also abolished photically induced myoclonic responses. Naloxone, 1 mg/kg, definitively reversed these effects. Morphine, 5--10 mg i.c.v., tended to increase the latency to onset of generalized
myoclonus
during photic stimulation. Myoclonic responses were delayed or diminished after morphine, 5 mg/kg, i.m. Naloxone, 1--2 mg/kg i.m., reversed this effect. Naloxone, 0.2--5.0 mg/kg i.m., alone, did not significantly modify photically induced
myoclonus
, either in animals of low or high initial responsiveness, or in those pretreated with allylglycine.
...
PMID:Effects of opiate-like peptides, morphine, and naloxone in the photosensitive baboon, Papio papio. 22 24
Frontal kindling in rabbits, prolongation of the duration of afterdischarge concomitant and clinical manifestations and the epileptic foci (primary and independent secondary foci) were revealed. Auditory and visual evoked responses were recorded after completion of the kindling phenomenon. 1. Electrical stimulations, 300 microA, 60 Hz. 1 msec in duration, 2 sec train, were applied once a day. Clinical manifestations were divided into five stages: 1) the arrest of behavior or no response, 2) the adversive movement with a tonic and/or clonic convulsion of left paw, 3) the adversive movement following mastication, facial spasms and postictal stupor, 4) falling down abruptly and generalized convulsive seizure, and 5)
generalized seizure
followed by rotatory movement, vocalization and
myoclonus
. The appearance of five generalized convulsions was defined as a completion of the kindling phenomenon. 2. The duration of afterdischarge increased stepwisely from 2--3 sec to more than 400 sec. However, there was no constant duration of AD even though the animal showed generalized convulsion after completion of the kindling phenomenon. 3. Visual and auditory evoked responses were recorded after completion of kindling. There was a change in the auditory evoked response but not in the visual. A shortening of the latency of P2 component (73.3 msec in peak latency), N2 component (146.7 msec in peak latency) and amplification of the amplitude of N2 component were noticed. Thus, the intermittent weak electrical stimulation on the frontal cortex in rabbits induced generalized convulsion and produced primary and independent secondary epileptic focus on EEG, and the change of auditory evoked response was recognized in kindled animals.
...
PMID:Frontal kindling in rabbits and its influence on visual and auditory evoked response. 53 39
A family is reported in which 11 members in 4 generations had a benign form of essential
myoclonus
of early onset. The myoclonic jerks were mostly asynchronous and dysrhythmic. They occurred spontaneously when relaxed, induced by movement, increased in tonus and emotional stress.
Generalized seizures
was found in 3 members who also had essential
myoclonus
. The relationship between essential
myoclonus
and idiopathic epilepsy was stressed. Beneficial effect was obtained with alcohol and clonazepam.
...
PMID:Hereditary essential myoclonus. 179 98
A case of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with a partial cytochrome c oxidase deficiency was reported with special reference to electrophysiological studies. A 56-year-old man was readmitted to Himeji Central Hospital due to mental deterioration and character change. At the age of 44 when he was attacked by his first epileptic seizure, he was admitted to Himeji Central Hospital, where EEG abnormalities and cerebral atrophy were found. Anticonvulsants helped to relieve his generalized convulsions but the EEG abnormalities persisted. At age 46, he had the second
generalized seizure
, so he quit his job as a crane operator. His family began to notice deterioration of his intellectual function and hyperaggressive behavior. His daily activities, intellectual performance and mental condition gradually deteriorated (WAIS FIQ less than 60). Other clinical and laboratory findings are as follows: bilateral impaired hearing, no optic nerve atrophy, no disturbance of extra ocular muscle movements, mild wasting and weakness of his extremities, normal coordination and sensation, no
myoclonus
or other involuntary movements, normal laboratory data of serum creatinine kinase, lactate dehydrogenase and aldolase, and increased amount of lactate and pyruvate in serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), no abnormal amino acids in urine. A biopsy specimen of right biceps brachii muscle revealed numerous ragged-red fibers in frozen sections stained by the Gomori trichrome method. These fibers did not react to a cytochrome c oxidase staining. An ATPase staining demonstrated an atrophy of type-2 fibers. An electron micrograph showed many mitochondria in the sarcoplasm but few paracrystalline inclusions. A biochemical analysis of the muscle biopsy also revealed a significant decrease in the cytochrome c oxidase activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A mitochondrial encephalomyopathy due to partial cytochrome c oxidase deficiency with giant evoked potentials--a case report]. 217 89
To determine the role of Alzheimer's disease as a causative factor for late-onset epilepsy, 44 subjects with mild senile dementia of the Alzheimer type and 58 healthy control subjects were examined over a 90-month period for the development of focal or
generalized seizure
activity (excluding
myoclonus
). At entry, all subjects were free of prior seizures and other neurologic, medical, and psychiatric disorders with the potential to impair cognition. Although no control subject developed seizures during the study period, 7 subjects with senile dementia of the Alzheimer type had at least one documented seizure. All 7 subjects had progressed to the severe stage of dementia by the time of the first seizure. Seizures were generalized tonic-clonic in type and were unassociated with clinical or (in 3 subjects) neuropathologic evidence for epileptogenic factors other than Alzheimer's disease. We conclude that advanced Alzheimer's disease alone may be an important risk factor for new-onset seizures in older adults.
...
PMID:Advanced Alzheimer's disease is a risk factor for late-onset seizures. 237 89
Out of a group of 12 M. nemestrina (originating from Malaysia), 9 adults had shown clinical signs induced by ILS at 25 c/sec. Six of them (3 males, 3 females) were very photosensitive; however, only 2 presented eyelid and/or head jerks after the end of ILS (level 4), but never a
generalized seizure
. Tactile periorbital stimuli favoured
myoclonus
. In all but the two of level 4, the intensity of clinical signs varied from one day to the next. In all implanted adult macaques, spontaneous paroxysmal EEG activities were seen during slow sleep in mostly anterior areas, but also during waking and REM sleep in some of them; however, their occurrence depended upon the individual and were not in all cases related to their level of photosensitivity. During ILS, paroxysmal discharges (spikes and waves and/or polyspikes and waves), isolated or in bursts at 3-4/sec were bilateral and symmetrical. They started in fronto-rolandic regions, then became generalized. This observation constitutes a new fact since the discovery, in 1966, of the photomyoclonic syndrome of Papio papio, Macaca nemestrina being another species of subhuman primates with a marked predisposition to photosensitive epilepsy.
...
PMID:[Observation of a photosensitive syndrome in Macaca nemestrina (author's transl)]. 732 74
Mutant epileptic E1 mice are thought to have focal epilepsy of hippocampal origin because glucose utilization is increased in the hippocampus (HPC) during seizures in these mice. However, direct electrographic evidence is still lacking for the notion. We recorded electroencephalograms (EEGs) using depth electrodes in E1 and non-epileptic ddY mice. All the mice were subjected to a conventional seizure-provoking maneuver during EEG recording; each mouse was placed on a mesh floor and observed for 3 min, and then tossed up in the air. When the E1 mice showed signs of abortive seizures or prodromal symptoms including squeaking, running and
myoclonus
, sporadic spikes or sharp waves were generated exclusively in the HPC. When generalized convulsions followed these prodromes, the sporadic discharges evolved into a burst of generalized spikes which again predominated in the HPC. We also observed the cerebral cortex, amygdaloid, caudate, centro-median thalamic and ventral postero-lateral thalamic nuclei, all of which were found to be only secondarily involved. These findings provide the first electrical evidence that E1 mice have a secondarily
generalized seizure
that has its initiating focus in the HPC.
...
PMID:Depth EEG in mutant epileptic E1 mice: demonstration of secondary generalization of the seizure from the hippocampus. 768 Sep 97
A case of 43-year-old woman with Hashimoto's encephalopathy who experienced three relapses closely associated with the menstrual cycle is reported. In April 1992, she began to experience occasional tremors in her arms. Three months later, she experienced a
generalized seizure
and was transferred to our hospital. Hashimoto's thyroiditis was diagnosed on the basis of high thyroid microsomal titer and mild hypothyroidism. Neurological findings in admission included action tremor in both hands,
myoclonus
in all extremities, cerebellar ataxia, confusion, and hyperreflexia. Cerebrospinal fluid showed elevated protein level without pleocytosis. Electroencephalogram showed diffuse slowing and magnetic resonance imaging of brain was normal. Hashimoto's encephalopathy was diagnosed from these findings. These episodes of remission and exacerbation were observed during the admission. Her symptoms started at ovulation, worsened during the luteal phase, and improved when menstruation started. After the third relapse, she was treated with oral thyroxine for hypothyroidism and with an estrogen and progesterone combination to regulate the menstrual cycle. Her thyroid function gradually became euthyroid and she did not experience any subsequent relapses. The relation between the relapsing course and menstrual cycle suggests that the periodic alteration of gonadotrophic and/or gonadal hormones or the menstrual regulating center itself in the brain may be an important factor of pathogenetic mechanism of the disorder.
...
PMID:[A case of Hashimoto's encephalopathy with a relapsing course related to menstrual cycle]. 829 82
Three families with a common clinical feature of adult onset myoclonus epilepsy were studied. Onset of the
myoclonus
, continuously presented and intensified by movement and emotional stress, was between the 3rd and 5th decades.
Generalized seizures
, following worsening of the
myoclonus
, occurred only a few times in life. This condition was considered to be an autosomal dominant trait with a high rate of penetrance. Although the symptoms gradually worsened with age in some cases, they were not associated with dementia or cerebellar disorder, distinguishing this condition from progressive
myoclonus
epilepsies (PMEs). Electrophysiologically, polyspikes on the electroencephalogram (EEG), giant wave in somatosensory evoked potentials, enhanced long-loop C reflexes and a preceding wave on jerk-locked back averaging of EEG were demonstrated, suggesting that the
myoclonus
originated in the cerebral cortices. This is a distinct hereditary disease different from PMEs, juvenile myoclonic epilepsy or other myoclonic disorders seen in adults.
...
PMID:Familial benign myoclonus epilepsy of adult onset: a previously unrecognized myoclonic disorder. 907 39
We report a case of frontal lobe epilepsy with bursts of 3 Hz spike-wave, often dominant in the left frontal lobe, that sometimes developed into a secondary bilateral generalization. This patient was a 69-year-old male with a history of epileptic seizures that began 3 months following a head injury at the age of 17. His seizures occurred two or three times a day, but after medication the frequency was halved. The seizures began with a feeling of heaviness of the head, accompanied by
myoclonus
at both angles of the mouth. Consciousness was clear for most of the seizures, which ranged from several seconds to many minutes. When seizures lasted for longer than 10 minutes, a temporary generalization accompanied by a loss of consciousness was sometimes observed. Neurological tests and cranial MRI yielded no abnormal local findings. The secondary
generalized seizure
seen in this case is the so called "secondary bilateral synchrony (SBS)." We succeeded in making an EEG recording of the bilateral generalization of a seizure discharge originating in the left frontal lobe, which until now has not been done. This case is direct proof that a primary frontal focus can give rise to SBS.
...
PMID:Frontal lobe epilepsy with secondarily generalized 3 Hz spike-waves: a case report. 924 71
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