Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0028738 (nystagmus)
7,431 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Twenty-eight patients were anesthetized with etoxadrol as primary agent. The anesthesia produced was characterized by profound analgesia and amnesia, while pharyngeal and laryngeal reflexes, as well as swallowing and lid reflexes, remained active. Systolic, diastolic, and pulse pressure were slightly increased, with associated tachycardia and tachypnea. A dose of 0.75 mg/kg produced anesthesia for an average of 26 (14 to 53) minutes. Alternating nystagmus was present for several hours and associated with dreams and/or visions that were pleasing to most patients. Six patients, however, had unpleasant dreams for up to 24 hours. One patient given an excessive dose (4.65 mg/kg) was cataleptic, amnesic, and analgesic for 6 days. The occurrence of unpleasant dreams and aberrations in over 20% of the patients suggests that the drug probably has little usefulness in anesthesia. However, the extreme safety of the drug (an LD50 equal to some 20 to 40 times the ED50) and the prolonged analgesia justified clinical testing. There was no evidence of metabolic or systemic organ system change from any of the clinical laboratory studies.
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PMID:Clinical investigation of a new intravenous anesthetic--etoxadrol hydrochloride (CL-1848; U-37862A). 0 21

In a study of vestibular responses to caloric stimulation that controlled opportunity for fixation and state of alertness, we evaluated previous findings of diminished nystagmus in schizophrenia. We failed to replicate earlier reports in these respects: (1) None of the psychotic patient groups, when compared with normal controls, showed lower response intensity, latency, or culmination time of the nystagmic response. (2) The schizophrenic groups did not manifest a prevalence of clinically significant asymmetry. We did, however, observe that chronic deteriorated schizophrenics and recent schizophrenics have significantly greater dysrhythmic responses. This diminished orderliness of nystagmus may explain previous reports of absent or diminished nystagmus in the schizophrenics. The results are not compatible with peripheral vestibular disease in schizophrenia, but they may reflect state-related phenomena consistent with disturbances in alertness, which are not necessarily voluntary or motivational in origin.
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PMID:Vestibular responses in schizophrenia. 2 3

4 cases of accidental fenfluramine poisoning in children are reported. Excitation, coma, convulsions, tachycardia, mydriasis, nystagmus, and rubeosis of the face were the most important signs. They appeared 30--60 min after ingestion, and some of them lasted for several days. 2 children had severe trismus and therefore had to be given muscle relaxants before intubation and gastric lavage became possible. These observations agree well with informations collected in our poisoning control center and with previously published data. Less than 5 mg/kg of body weight are toxic, 5--10 mg/kg may produce coma and convulsions, and the smallest lethal doses were 28,7 and 33,3 mg/kg. Early gastric lavage, good monitoring of the vital functions and, if necessary, administration of anticonvulsive drugs, beta-blocking agents, lidocaine, chlorpromazine, and artificial ventilation and cardiac defibrillation are the most important therapeutical measures.
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PMID:[Fenfluramin (ponderax) intoxications in children (author's transl)]. 3 42

On two female patients it was shown that intoxication by sedatives containing part bromecarbamide may result in various ocular diseases. The two patients complained of a sudden inexplicable deterioration of vision; semi-dilated slow-responding pupils were diagnosed. Only in one case could a sudden vertical nystagmus be observed. Many possible symptoms were shown. In most cases a discontinuation of drug together with therapy lead to a complete withdrawal of symptoms.
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PMID:[A sudden inexplicable deterioration of vision caused by bromcarbamide drugs (author's transl)]. 3 50

In order to examine otolithic contribution to eye movements ten subjects were asked to track either a moving acoustic target or a stationary target during subject linear motion on a cart. The relative displacement between the subject and the target was the same in the two situations. Recordings of eye movements during subject lateral acceleration in the dark without any task, or with the task of tracking an imagined stationary target were made as a control. The frequencies ranged between 0.15 and 0.3 Hz and peak acceleration between 0.55 and 1.2 m/s2. No lateral eye movements (L-nystagmus) were recorded in the dark. Only saccadic eye movements were recorded during the tracking of a moving acoustic target. Slow eye movements interspersed by saccades were observed when the moving subject tracked an imagined or an acoustic stationary target. Contribution of the slow phase to tracking was more important in the presence of an acoustic target than in the presence of imagined target. The results are interpreted in terms of an otolithic contribution to the central reconstruction of the acoustic target velocity, or in terms of an adaptive control of the otolithic-ocular reflex gain. A conceptual model accounting for these interpretations is proposed.
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PMID:Otolithic-acoustic interaction in the control of eye movement. 3 82

After macular ablation in squirrel monkeys, a significant improvement of the slow-phase eye speed of vertical optokinetic nystagmus (VOKN) was found. This findings is in contrast to the result of our previous study in which horizontal optokinetic nystagmus (HOKN) was not improved following macular ablation. The different influence of macular ablation on HOKN and VOKN could be due to the directional characteristics of vestibular and visual interaction relative to the direction of gravity and to the difference in horizontal and vertical vestibulo-oculomotor neural pathways, including vestibular end-organs. The vertical directional dominance which was observed preoperatively was similarly observed in the postablative status; the upward slow-phase nystagmus was easier to provoke than the downward nystagmus by application of an identical stimulus.
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PMID:Effect of macular ablation on vertical optokinetic nystagmus in the squirrel monkey. 4 Dec 2

Two brothers showed severe and persistent hyperchloraemic metabolic acidosis (capillary blood pH 7.07--7.15) due to a low renal bicarbonate threshold at 11 mmol/l. The maximal tubular capacity for bicarbonate reabsorption was reduced to about half the normal. A high dose of acetazolamide (25 mg/kg) lowered the tubular bicarbonate reabsorption substantially, indicating the presence of carbonic anhydrase. Both the glomerular filtration rate, the renal blood flow and the renal concentrating capacity were slightly reduced. The clinical characteristics were: growth retardation, mental retardation, nystagmus, corneal opacities, cataract, glaucoma and enamel defects of the permanent teeth. Serum thyroxine was pathological low without clinical signs of hypothyreosis. The erythrocytes showed an increased osmotic resistance. Autopsy of the younger brother, who died 4 1/2 years old, revealed thyroid and thymus weights of 25% of the normal. The kidney tubular cells were swollen with vacuoles. The glomeruli had a normal appearance.
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PMID:Congenital persistent proximal type renal tubular acidosis in two brothers. 4 68

Thirty patients with simple or ophthalmic migraine had an otoneurological examination. 13% complained of vertigo during attacks of migraine, 17% of giddiness and 6.7% of tinnitus. The usual tests for equilibrium were normal. On electronystagmographical examination 17% of the patients showed only pathological spontaneous nystagmus, 33% only disturbances of caloric response and 7% a combination of both. Audiological testing was normal. The incidence of vestibular disturbances, particularly sensitivity differences of the labyrinths, was significantly greater in the group of patients with migraine than in a control group of 30 healthy persons (P less than or equal to 0.025). On the average, the sensitivity differences, in terms of duration of reactive nystagmus, were greater for these than for the healthy persons (P less than or equal to 0.01). Patients with vestibular disturbances did not show a greater frequency of pathological EEG readings than patients with normal vestibular function. Some hypotheses concerning the pathogenesis of vestibular symptoms as found in migrainous patients are mentioned.
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PMID:[Migraine and the vestibular apparatus (author's transl)]. 5 95

Beside the automatic, obligatory and tonic coinnervation of the involuntary m. retroauricularis in conjugate lateral gaze (oculoauricular phenomenon, nystagmus) several other physiological ways of accidental coinnervation are described. In talking, chewing, swallowing and during involuntary inspiration irregular bursts of innervation may be registered. In sleep regular rhythmic inspiratory innervation is demonstrated as well as myoclonic jerks. With reservation, an allusion is made to rem-sleep. In "nervous subjects" irregular involuntary innervation of the m. retroauricularis might serve as a measurement instrument for the involuntary somatomotor nervous system, i.e. the degree of neurotic tensity. An early myasthenic reaction is gained from the M. retroauricularis in patients with ocular forms of the disease. A common motor nucleus of abducens and facial nerve is discussed. Complementary studies are announced on the various forms of facial paralysis, strabismus and nystagmus. A further diagnostic use is presumed.
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PMID:Function and innervation of the involuntary m. retroauricularis. 6 32

Three consecutive cases of Whipple's disease observed by us in recent years have involved neurologic symptoms, i.e. psychoorganic syndromes, gaze palsy, nystagmus, masseteric and pharyngeal myoclonus or papilledema. In one case mononuclear cells in the cerebrospinal fluid, most probably of ependymal origin, were loaded with periodic-acid-Schiff (PAS) positive granules. On treatment with antibiotics the neurologic signs cleared considerably or completely. The findings suggest (a) that neurologic involvement Whipple's disease may not be so uncommon as appears from the literature, (b) that examination of the spinal fluid with PAS staining may be helpful in the diagnosis of such cases, and (c) that neurologic involvement in Whipple's disease may also be amenable to treatment with antibiotics.
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PMID:[Neurological manifestations of Whipple's disease]. 6 10


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