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)

To elucidate the sensitivity to pain stimuli in patients with cortical reflex myoclonus, pain-related somatosensory evoked potentials (pain SEPs) following CO2 laser stimulation and conventional electrically-stimulated SEPs (electric SEPs) were compared in four patients with cortical reflex myoclonus. The P25 peak of electric SEPs was considerably enhanced but the P320 potential of pain SEPs was of normal amplitude in all patients. After medication, myoclonus was reduced and the amplitude of P25 was decreased, but P320 showed no change. In our previous study of the scalp distribution in normal subjects, a subcortical site, probably the thalamus, was considered to be the generator source of P320. Because most pain stimuli do not reach the cortex, patients with cortical reflex myoclonus are not sensitive to pain stimuli and P320 in pain SEPs is not enhanced.
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PMID:Pain-related somatosensory evoked potentials in cortical reflex myoclonus. 210 12

A 64-year-old male with a history of tuberculous pleuritis at age 29 had received home oxygen therapy since age 58 because of chronic respiratory failure. He was admitted with symptoms of dyspnea at rest and myoclonus at age 62. Because CO2 narcosis occurred twice, we performed intermittent negative pressure ventilation (INPV) after short-term positive pressure ventilation with transnasal intubation. He has received INPV for 7 hours every day at his home for 20 months without acute exacerbation of respiratory failure, and his activity of daily life subsequently improved. In conclusion, INPV seems to be useful for patients with chronic hypercapnic respiratory failure due to lung disease.
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PMID:[Home intermittent negative pressure ventilation in a case of chronic respiratory failure due to old tuberculous pleuritis]. 834 10

In decerebrate cats paralysed with gallamine, over a period of several days there develops a remarkable synchronization of discharge in widely different motor nerves throughout the body, including intercostal nerves and limb nerves. These discharges are also in synchrony with slow waves approximately 100 ms in duration in the inferior olive. The slow waves and discharges are at first irregular and only weakly synchronized, but become increasingly strongly synchronized and by about the fourth day exhibit a strong 6-8 Hz rhythm. The degree of synchronization is greater the lower the end-tidal CO2 concentration. Transection of the spinal cord at a high cervical level breaks the synchrony and may abolish the discharge in the nerves, but the slow waves in the inferior olive continue rhythmically. It was shown, however, that gallamine injected subdurally at cervical vertebra 7 or lumbar vertebra 7 has a direct excitatory action on the spinal cord. Slow waves in the inferior olive are elicited by gallamine in the decerebrate, spinalized and decerebellectomized cat, and therefore must originate in the brainstem. Gallamine is known to act directly on olivary neurons and the slow waves may originate in the inferior olive, but further experiments are needed to determine what other structures it affects. The condition of the cat a few days after decerebration and paralysis resembles the clinical condition of reticular reflex myoclonus and it is suggested that the genesis of the myoclonus may be similar in the two conditions.
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PMID:Spontaneous synchronized neural activity in decerebrate gallamine-paralysed cats. 857 86

Almost half of patients respond acutely to resuscitation but most die within the first several days after arrest. The incidence of survival to discharge from the hospital after cardiopulmonary arrest is about 15%; one third of those surviving have evidence of neurologic deficits. Although some prognostic variables are useful in determining which patients are most likely to die prior to discharge from the hospital, each patient needs to be evaluated on an individual basis and the various risk factors weighed carefully. As additional data accumulate, we may well be more effective at deciding which patients are more likely to benefit from CPR so that we can more judiciously apply this therapeutic modality. A number of studies have identified factors that contribute to poor outcome. Patients over 70 years of age usually fare poorly after CPR, but this is more a reflection of the number of coexisting diagnoses rather than years. Although initial survival may not be different from younger patients, fewer elderly patients live to discharge and more are likely to have neurologic sequelae. Concurrent diagnoses such as sepsis, AIDS, gastrointestinal bleeding, renal failure, cancer, and central nervous system disease have a universally poor response to CPR. If defibrillation occurs more than 6 minutes after arrest or on the general ward or if the resuscitative attempt lasts longer than 15 minutes, mortality is greater than 95%. If CPR continues for more than 30 minutes, there are no survivors. A low exhaled CO2 concentration (< 2%) during cardiac massage, asystole or EMD as the first identified rhythm, and recurrent arrest also carry a poor prognosis. On the other hand, at the time of arrest or during the immediate postarrest period, poor neurologic status is a less helpful predictor. The absence of spontaneous respiration is the only variable at the time of admission after out-of-hospital arrest that is particularly ominous. There is no evidence to suggest that the absence of spontaneous respiration implies any better prognosis for patients arresting in the hospital. Coma, hypoxic myoclonus, and absent reflexes, while not useful immediately following arrest, are of greater prognostic significance 48 hours later. Only 5% of patients who are unconscious 48 hours after arrest will have a full neurologic recovery. The Glasgow Coma Scale has also been used for prognostication.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Resuscitation: when is enough, enough? 1014 87

Hypoxia causes dysfunction of excitatory and inhibitory neurotransmission, often resulting in encephalopathy, seizures or myoclonus. We evaluated the effects of hypoxia on GABAA receptor (GABAAR) function and expression in an in vitro model of neuronal hypoxia. NT2-N cells, derived from the human NT2 teratocarcinoma cell line, were exposed to < or =1% O2 for 8 h and then used immediately for experiments or allowed to recover under normoxic conditions (95% air/5% CO2) for 24, 48 or 96 h. Hypoxic treatment did not cause obvious morphological changes or cell death. In whole-cell patch-clamp recordings, the GABA current EC50 was unchanged, however, maximal GABA-evoked currents changed in a biphasic manner. Maximal GABA currents were significantly increased immediately after hypoxia, but were significantly reduced after 48 h normoxic recovery, and then returned to baseline after 96 h recovery. Maximal potentiation of 10 microM GABA currents by diazepam was increased 48 h after hypoxia, but potentiation by zolpidem was decreased. Barbiturate enhancement and zinc inhibition of GABA currents were unchanged. Semiquantitative reverse transcriptase (RT)-PCR showed decreased alpha1, alpha5, beta2 and gamma2 subunit mRNA after hypoxia. Hypoxic exposure altered GABAAR physiology and subunit mRNA expression, which may correlate with symptoms observed after hypoxia in vivo.
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PMID:Hypoxia alters GABAA receptor function and subunit expression in NT2-N neurons. 1497 87