Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0030552 (paresis)
5,831 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In the course of multiple episodes of thiamine deficiency in the rhesus monkey, the triad of anorexia, apathy, and hind limb weakness is the earliest clinical manifestation. In later episodes, nystagmus, abducens paresis, midline ataxia, dysmetria, and congestive heart failure are also seen. With the exception of dysmetria, the neurologic signs promptly respond to thiamine administration. Pair-fed controls showed no clinical signs. Neither peripheral neuropathy nor edema was observed. Thiamine-deficiency in the experimental animals was confirmed by blood transketolase assays.
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PMID:Clinical manifestations of chronic thiamine deficiency in rhesus monkey. 40 80

Electrophysiological aspects of thiamine depletion in the rat induced by dietary deficiency are described. Behavioral changes as well as qualitative and quantitative alterations in the sensitivity of cerebellar Purkinje cells to iontophoretically-applied 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) were observed. Thiamine-deficient rats were characterized essentially by ataxia, piloerection, paresis, apparent weakness, and hypothermia after 4-6 weeks on a thiamine-free diet. Basal Purkinje cell firing frequency was unaffected by thiamine deficiency. The response of Purkinje cells to iontophoretically-applied 5-HT was solely inhibitory in deficient rats. In control rats, however, responses to 5-HT were excitatory, biphasic, or inhibitory. Neurons in the thiamine-deficient animals were more sensitive to the inhibitory effects of 5-HT, as demonstrated by a significant parallel shift to the left of the dose-response curve. Durations of 5-HT effects were similar in both groups. Dose-response relationships for GABA-induced inhibition of Purkinje cell firing from thiamine deficient and control rats did not differ from one another. These data demonstrate a relatively selective effect of thiamine depletion on cerebellar serotonergic neurotransmission assessed electrophysiologically. We believe there is up-regulation of 5-HT receptors on Purkinje cells caused by thiamine deficiency-induced impairment of indoleamine input to the cerebellum from raphe and related nuclei.
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PMID:Enhanced sensitivity of cerebellar Purkinje cells to iontophoretically-applied serotonin in thiamine deficiency. 398 3

Behavioral, polygraphic, biochemical and histological aspects of thiamine deficiency in rats induced by thiamine-deficient food and pyrithiamine treatment (40 mg/kg daily for 4 days) are described. Behavioral alterations were essentially characterized by ataxia, pilo-erection and paresis. Polygraphic data indicated an increase in slow-wave sleep (SWS) of 33% and decreases in paradoxical sleep (PS) and wakefulness (W), respectively, of 69% and 27%. These effects were reversed by complete food and thiamine administration, the reversal including an overshoot in PS. Biochemical assays, performed when the polygraphic data indicated a large effect, demonstrated a significant increase in serotonin (5-HT) and 5-hydroxyindolacetic-acid (5-HIAA). These effects were particularly evident in the raphe system and the locus coeruleus. Histological data from the raphe dorsalis displayed a notable increase in yellow fluorescence in pyrithiamine-treated animals over controls. We conclude from these experiments that a deficiency in thiamine affects the serotonergic system and that the subsequent effects on sleep are a consequence of this serotonergic change.
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PMID:Sleep and indolamine alterations induced by thiamine deficiency. 618 42

Two patients, women of 85 and 76 years, presented with horizontal ocular paresis. The first patient had a palliative ileocecal resection for adenocarcinoma with metastases and developed the ocular paresis only after intravenous glucose infusion. The second had chronic haemolytic anaemia and weight loss due to malnutrition. The two women were also confused. In both patients acute Wernicke's encephalopathy was diagnosed, caused by thiamine deficiency. The disorder could easily have been missed because of confounding clinical problems. Early treatment of Wernicke's encephalopathy (thiamine 100 mg/day intramuscularly for 3 days) is of major importance in preventing permanent neurological damage or even death.
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PMID:[Eye paralysis and confusion]. 955 50

A 6-year-old dog, a 4-year-old dog and three 7-week-old puppies were diagnosed with thiamine deficiency caused by feeding sulphite treated meat. The 6-year-old dog presented with a history of inappetence, weight loss and vomiting that rapidly progressed to signs of multifocal intracranial disease including mental dullness, paresis, seizures, spontaneous nystagmus and strabismus. Thiamine pyrophosphate effect was elevated at 58% and magnetic resonance imaging revealed bilaterally symmetrical hyperintensity of the caudate nucleus and rostral colliculi. The dog recovered with thiamine supplementation. The 4-year-old dog and three 7-week-old puppies also presented with rapidly progressive multifocal central nervous system signs including ataxia, paresis, increased muscle tone, seizures, nystagmus and exophthalmos. The 4-year-old dog made a rapid recovery with thiamine supplementation. Euthanasia and necropsy of a puppy revealed malacia of multiple brainstem nuclei and oedema of the cerebral cortex. These findings were consistent with thiamine deficiency.
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PMID:Thiamine deficiency in dogs due to the feeding of sulphite preserved meat. 1603 79

Wernicke encephalopathy (WE) is a neurological emergency that develops in the setting of thiamine deficiency, and is characterised by symptoms of confusion, ophthalmoplegia and gait ataxia. Less recognised signs and symptoms include vestibular dysfunction, hearing impairment, peripheral neuropathy, and in severe cases, coma. This case study describes a non-alcoholic patient, who presents with significant auditory and vestibular changes in addition to the classic symptoms of WE. This case report describes a non-alcoholic patient who developed deafness, severe horizontal canal paresis and symptoms of palinacousis in the setting of WE as a complication of a recent gastric sleeve operation.
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PMID:Wernicke encephalopathy hearing loss and palinacousis. 3118 20

Thiamine (vitamin B1) is a water-soluble vitamin that is not endogenously synthesized in humans. It is absorbed by the small intestine, where it is activated. Its active form acts as a coenzyme in many energy pathways. We report a rare case of thiamine deficiency in a 3.5-year old boy with short bowel syndrome secondary to extensive bowel resection due to necrotizing enterocolitis during his neonatal age. The patient was parenteral nutrition-dependent since birth and had suffered from recurrent central catheter-related bloodstream infections. He developed confusion with disorientation and unsteady gait as well as profound strabismus due to bilateral paresis of the abductor muscle. Based on these and a very low thiamine level he was diagnosed and treated for Wernicke encephalopathy due to incomplete thiamine acquisition despite adequate administration. He fully recovered after thiamine administration. After 1999 eight more cases have been reported in the PubMed mostly of iatrogenic origin.
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PMID:Thiamine Deficiency in a Child with Short Bowel Syndrome and Review. 3155 75