Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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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 a serotonin (5-HT) receptor agonist, 5-methoxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine (5-MeODMT), on epileptic photosensitivity were studied in the lateral geniculate-kindled cat. 5-MeODMT at 4 mg/kg significantly suppressed photically induced myoclonus, but not paroxysmal EEG activity, at 0.5-1 h after injection. This antiepileptic effect was seen in association with the appearance of behavioral signs similar to those seen in the 5-HT syndrome. The present data provide further evidence that 5-HT plays an important role in photosensitive epilepsy, and suggest that the inhibitory effect of 5-MeODMT on photosensitivity results from its agonist action at 5-HT1 receptors.
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PMID:Behavioral and electroencephalographic effects of a serotonin receptor agonist (5-methoxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine) in a feline model of photosensitive epilepsy. 140 49

Benign myoclonic epilepsy in infancy (BME) is characterized by the occurrence of brief myoclonic attacks in normal infants aged 4 months to 3 years. There is no prior personal history, although in some patients 1 or 2 isolated febrile convulsions may occur prior to the onset of myoclonias. A family history of epilepsy or febrile convulsions is present in 30% of cases. Myoclonic attacks are short and mild, they involve mainly the head and upper limbs. The psychomotor development continues normally after the onset of seizures. The EEG shows a normal background activity and generalized spike-wave or polyspike-wave discharges associated with the myoclonias. These abnormalities are activated by drowsiness and during the first stages of sleep. A clinical and EEG photosensitivity is present in one-third of the patients. Myoclonias can be easily controlled by valproate monotherapy. Rare grand mal seizures can occur during adolescence, after withdrawal of drug treatment. The psychomotor evolution is good if treatment is started early. When myoclonias begin during the first year of life, the diagnoses of cryptogenic infantile spasms and of non-epileptic benign infantile myoclonus must be eliminated. In cases with a later onset, the following diagnoses can usually be easily discarded: cryptogenic Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, myoclonic-astatic epilepsy and unclassified epilepsies with the association of myoclonias and other types of seizures.
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PMID:Benign myoclonic epilepsy of infancy: electroclinical symptomatology and differential diagnosis from the other types of generalized epilepsy of infancy. 141 73

Photosensitivity has proved to be a useful model to study the acute effects of experimental antiepileptic drugs (AEDs). The photosensitivity range is usually diminished or even abolished after administration of a known or experimental AED. An increase in photosensitivity, an unexpected reaction, was found in four photosensitive epileptic patients after oral ingestion of 500, 100, or 50 mg of Org 6370. Moreover, the three patients receiving doses of 100 and 500 mg reported nausea, dizziness, restlessness, and an increase in spontaneous epileptic seizures (myoclonus and in one patient a generalized tonic-clonic convulsion). The side effects coincided with peak Org 6370 serum levels. Our findings indicate that in the photosensitivity model experimental drugs with proven anticonvulsant properties in animals may increase rather than decrease the degree of patient photosensitivity. Photosensitive patients may represent a special subgroup of epileptic patients and therefore need to be classified as such.
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PMID:Preliminary assessment of the efficacy of Org 6370 in photosensitive epileptic patients: paradoxical enhancement of photosensitivity and provocation of myoclonic seizures. 173 47

A 32-year-old woman presented with increasing motor difficulties and memory disturbances. Neurological examination only showed mild cerebellar and extrapyramidal symptoms, whereas neuropsychological evaluation disclosed severe cognitive changes consistent with dementia. Her motor and mental status progressively deteriorated until death, which occurred 5 years after the first admission. One year before death, while she was almost bedridden, symptoms of myoclonic epilepsy first appeared, with frequent generalized seizures and generalized myoclonus, occurring especially upon sensory stimulation or passive joint movements. Pathological examination showed neuronal inclusions typical of Kufs' disease. This case, with primary progressive dementia and late-onset myoclonic epilepsy, differs from previously reported cases. Three special electrophysiological features were abnormal, "giant", evoked potentials; unusually marked photosensitivity; and seizure induction by any sensory stimulation.
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PMID:Kufs' disease presenting as progressive dementia with late-onset generalized seizures: a clinicopathological and electrophysiological study. 173 61

We studied the effect of apomorphine, a dopamine receptor agonist, on epileptic photosensitivity in 7 patients with progressive myoclonus epilepsy (PME). Specific diagnoses included Baltic PME (Unverricht-Lundborg disease), Lafora disease, Kufs' disease, juvenile neuroaxonal dystrophy, and action myoclonus-renal failure syndrome; 2 patients had PME of uncertain etiology. Apomorphine blocked the epileptic photosensitivity in all patients and also reduced intention myoclonus in a patient with Baltic PME. There is a common deficit of dopaminergic inhibitory neurotransmission at the level of the striate cortex in patients with PME, regardless of the nature of the specific underlying neuropathologic process.
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PMID:Common dopaminergic mechanism for epileptic photosensitivity in progressive myoclonus epilepsies. 190 98

Among progressive myoclonus epilepsies (PME), the nosography of the Ramsay Hunt syndrome (RHS) has been much debated. The authors report on a homogeneous group of 43 patients originating from around the western Mediterranean, with a large number of northern African subjects, who were followed up for a mean period of 11.6 years. Onset is between 6 and 17 years (mean: 11.2) and the transmission appears to be recessive. The clinical features include: action myoclonus, generalized epileptic seizures, mild cerebellar signs and lack of dementia. EEG features include normal background activity, spontaneous fast generalized spike-wave discharges, photosensitivity, lack of activation during nREM sleep and vertex/rolandic spikes during REM sleep. The prognosis is variable, even within families, but the progression seems to be slow in a majority of patients. This condition can be distinguished from mitochondrial encephalomyopathy and is less severe than Baltic myoclonus. The authors propose that this form of PME, formerly reported as RHS, be more properly described as Mediterranean myoclonus.
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PMID:The Ramsay Hunt syndrome revisited: Mediterranean myoclonus versus mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with ragged-red fibers and Baltic myoclonus. 210 22

Thirteen patients with dyssynergia cerebellaris myoclonica (Ramsay Hunt syndrome) had full clinical and neurophysiological study as well as muscle biopsy. The patients had action myoclonus, generalised epileptic seizures, and mild cerebellar syndrome. The disease was inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern in five patients, and occurred as isolated cases in the remaining eight patients. The age at onset of symptoms ranged from 6 to 15 years (mean, 10.4 years). The EEG and polygraphic findings included normal background activity in most patients, spontaneous fast generalised spike-and-wave discharges, photosensitivity, no activation during slow sleep, and vertex and rolandic spikes in REM sleep. Results of muscle biopsy, performed an average of 14 years after onset of the disease, were normal and showed no mitochondrial abnormalities. These findings suggest that Ramsay Hunt syndrome is a condition with distinctive clinical and neurophysiological features and unrelated to mitochondrial encephalomyopathies.
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PMID:Dyssynergia cerebellaris myoclonica (Ramsay Hunt syndrome): a condition unrelated to mitochondrial encephalomyopathies. 210 13

Photosensitivity was acquired as a result of kindling in the lateral geniculate body (GL), and the GL-kindled cat pretreated with DL-allylglycine showed a stable level of photosensitivity. To test the usefulness as a model for the evaluation of anticonvulsant drugs, the effects of phenobarbital (PB) and phenytoin (PHT) on photosensitivity were studied in the GL-kindled cat under DL-allylglycine. PB (5 and 10 mg/kg intravenously, i.v.) completely suppressed photically induced seizures in most subjects at plasma concentrations of 7-16 micrograms/ml, and this anticonvulsant action persisted for at least 4 h after the injection. PHT (15 mg/kg, i.v.) at plasma concentrations of 9-15 micrograms/ml produced toxic signs, e.g., pupil dilatation, hypersalivation, and tachypnea. At this dose, PHT was inactive against photically induced myoclonus but prevented the elicitation of a generalized tonic-clonic convulsion. From these results showing that the effects of anticonvulsant drugs on photically induced seizures can be assessed in relation to plasma concentration and acute neurologic toxicity, we suggest that the GL-kindled cat is a potentially useful animal model of epilepsy for testing the efficacy of anticonvulsant drugs.
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PMID:A new experimental model for drug studies: effects of phenobarbital and phenytoin on photosensitivity in the lateral geniculate-kindled cat. 369 16

The effects of DL-allylglycine, an inhibitor of GABA synthesis, on the responses to photic stimulation were studied in the cat kindled in the lateral geniculate body (GL). For 3 to 8 h after the injection of DL-allylglycine at a subconvulsant dose (30 or 40 mg/kg, i.v.), the kindled cat showed a stable level of photosensitivity without any toxic effects and responded with various degrees of myoclonus or a generalized tonic-clonic convulsion when photic stimulation was repeated at hourly intervals. The incidence of photically induced myoclonus reached its plateau during this period. Our results suggest that photosensitivity of the lateral geniculate-kindled cat is related to the modification of GABAergic mechanisms, and that when the GL-kindled cat is pretreated with DL-allylglycine it is a reliable model of photosensitive epilepsy.
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PMID:Effects of allylglycine on photosensitivity in the lateral geniculate-kindled cat. 375 82

The kindling response of the lateral geniculate body (GL) was compared with that of the amygdala, using cats. Daily electrical stimulation in the GL group led to the generalized tonic-clonic convulsion in most subjects and the resulting state of seizure susceptibility was long-lasting, as in the amygdala group. The kindling response of the GL differed from that of the amygdala in some respects, i.e., rapid kindling, short latency for seizure generalization, a different pattern of behavioral seizure development, and seizure regression during the course of kindling. The effects of photic stimulation with pentylenetetrazol administration were also examined before and after kindling in both groups. This study revealed that the photically induced myoclonus, at times proceeding to the generalized tonic-clonic convulsion, was provoked repeatedly as a result of GL kindling, whereas none of the amygdala-kindled cats showed such marked photosensitivity. These photically induced seizures were invariably observed for at least 4 weeks after GL kindling. Our results suggest that a neural mechanism participating in GL kindling is different from that in amygdala kindling, and that there might be cross-sensitization between seizure susceptibility resulting from GL kindling and photosensitivity.
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PMID:Lateral geniculate kindling and long-lasting photosensitivity in cats. 394 78


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