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

Somatosensory and motor functions of both hands were examined in 10 patients with unilateral parietal cortex lesions as revealed by computerized tomography. Tests of elementary somatosensory functions comprised surface sensibility, vibration, and position sense. For evaluation of complex somatosensory functions, the recognition of surface textures and object forms was tested. Motor performance was examined by measuring force and position control as well as manipulative and explorative motor behaviour. All patients showed varying degrees of sensory disturbance. Although the patients had no or minor paresis, they all had motor deficits concerning force control, fine movements, and manipulation with the hand contralateral to the lesion. Patients with more posteriorly located parietal lesions revealed predominantly severe disturbances of complex sensibility, precision grip, manipulation, and explorative finger movements. The characteristic and consistent feature of the disturbed motor behaviour was the loss of the purposive nature of the motor acts which were no longer adequate for the tasks (tactile apraxia). Paresis or ataxia could not account for this deficits.
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PMID:Role of the parietal cortex for sensorimotor transformation. Evidence from clinical observations. 275 92

Analysis of the neurologic symptomatology in 22 patients with Niemann-Pick disease type C revealed 3 phenotypes: (1) an early-onset, rapidly progressive form associated with severe hepatic dysfunction and psychomotor delay during infancy and later with supranuclear vertical gaze paresis, ataxia, marked spasticity, and dementia; (2) a delayed-onset, slowly progressive form heralded by the appearance, usually in early childhood, of mild intellectual impairment, supranuclear vertical gaze paresis, and ataxia, and later associated with dementia and, variably, seizures and extrapyramidal deficits; (3) a late-onset slowly progressive form distinguished from the 2nd pattern by later age of onset (adolescence or adulthood) and a much slower rate of progression. The existence of the 1st and 2nd phenotypes within the same sibship suggests that they are variant expressions of the same clinicopathologic disorder. Niemann-Pick disease type C should be considered not only in infants and children who present with organomegaly and a progressive neurodegenerative course, but also in adolescents and adults who have insidiously progressive neurologic dysfunction and only slight organomegaly. Associated with the disease is a marked deficiency in the ability of cultured fibroblasts to esterify exogenously supplied cholesterol. Assay of this deficiency is particularly useful for confirming the diagnosis in patients with atypical presentation.
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PMID:Clinical spectrum of Niemann-Pick disease type C. 276 97

Neurologic abnormalities were the predominant historic and physical findings in 5 dogs and 2 cats with primary nasal cavity tumors that had invaded the cranial vault. Seizures, behavior changes, and obtundation were the most common signs. Other neurologic signs included paresis, ataxia, circling, visual deficit, and proprioceptive deficit. Although 1 dog and 2 cats had historic findings of mild respiratory disease, no physical abnormalities related to the respiratory tract were found in any of the 7 animals. Nasal cavity neoplasia was suggested by radiographic and computed tomographic studies and was confirmed histopathologically in each case. The nasal tumor types in the 5 dogs were epidermoid carcinoma (n = 1), adenocarcinoma (n = 2), solid carcinoma (n = 1), and anaplastic chondrosarcoma (n = 1). An esthesioneuroblastoma was found in each cat. Radiation therapy was effective for 3 months in palliating the clinical signs in the 2 dogs in which it was used. Neoplasia of the nasal cavity should be considered in the differential diagnosis for animals with neurologic signs suggestive of cerebral disorders.
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PMID:Neurologic abnormalities as the predominant signs of neoplasia of the nasal cavity in dogs and cats: seven cases (1973-1986). 276 45

Two patients had paresis of the trochlear nerve contralateral to the site of lesions in the brainstem. Both patients had ipsilateral blepharoptosis and miosis suggesting oculosympathetic paresis from involvement of the descending sympathetic tract, adjacent to the fourth cranial nerve nucleus and its fascicles, in the caudal mesencephalon. Cerebral antiography documented an arteriovenous malformation of the brainstem in Case 1. Magnetic resonance imaging disclosed a lesion of high signal intensity on T2-weighted images involving the dorsal mesencephalon in Case 2. Involvement of the superior cerebellar peduncle produced ipsilateral dysmetria and ataxia. Lesions involving the fourth cranial nerve nucleus or its fascicles, before decussation in the superior medullary velum, and adjacent sympathetic fibers may produce an ipsilateral Horner's syndrome and contralateral superior oblique muscle paresis.
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PMID:Contralateral trochlear nerve paresis and ipsilateral Horner's syndrome. 291 20

The development of organophosphorus-induced delayed neurotoxicity (OPIDN) was studied in the European ferret (Mustela putorius furo). A single oral or dermal dose of 250, 500, or 1000 mg tri-o-tolyl phosphate (TOTP)/kg body weight was administered to adult male ferrets. Corn oil served as the vehicle in the oral test and 95% ethanol was the vehicle in the dermal test. At 48 h posttreatment, half the animals in each group were killed by cervical dislocation for assessment of whole-brain neuropathy target esterase (NTE) activity. The remaining 5 animals per group were observed and examined neurologically on a daily basis for a subsequent 54 d. All ferrets dosed dermally with 1000 mg TOTP/kg body weight developed clinical signs characteristic of OPIDN ranging from ataxia to partial paresis. Ferrets administered 250 and 500 mg TOTP/kg body weight via the dermal route displayed variable degrees of hind limb weakness and ataxia. Of the animals dosed orally, only those in the 1000 mg TOTP/kg body weight group showed clinical signs indicative of OPIDN. These signs did not progress beyond mild ataxia. Small amounts of axonal degeneration were noted in the dorsolateral part of the lateral funiculus and in the fasciculus gracilis of spinal cords in ferrets receiving dermal doses of 1000 mg TOTP/kg body weight. Whole-brain neuropathy target esterase activity was also maximally inhibited (46%) in animals receiving 1000 mg TOTP/kg dermally. These results suggest that the ferret is a species that is susceptible to OPIDN.
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PMID:Delayed neurotoxic effects of tri-o-tolyl phosphate in the European ferret. 291 34

The intention of the present study was to characterize patients with central post-stroke pain (CPSP) with regard to type and location of the cerebrovascular lesion (CVL), the characteristics of the pain and the neurological symptoms and signs in addition to the pain. Twenty men and 7 women with a mean age of 67 years and a mean pain duration of 44 months were examined 9-188 (mean 53) months after their stroke. The clinical symptoms and signs and the CT scans indicated that the CVL were located in the lower brain-stem in 8 patients, involved the thalamus in 9 patients and were located lateral and superior to the thalamus in 6 patients. In the remaining 4 patients the location of the CVL could not be determined with certainty. The 3 identified hematomata were all located in the thalamus. The onset of the pain was immediate in 4 patients, within the first post-stroke months in 10 patients and delayed by 1-34 months in the rest. The pain was on the left side in 18 patients. Twenty patients had hemipain. Most patients experienced more than one type of pain. The most common qualities were burning, aching, pricking and lacerating, with some differences in the frequencies according to the location of the CVL. Burning pain was most common, except among the patients with thalamic CVL, in whom lacerating pain was more common. Aching and pricking pain were also frequent. All patients considered the pain to be a great burden and most rated the pain intensity as high on a visual analogue scale. The intensity was increased by external stimuli, the most common being joint movements, cold and light touch. Five patients reported aggravation by emotional stimuli. Besides pain, the only neurological symptom common to all patients was decreased temperature sensibility, as shown by quantitative methods. It is possible that pain sensibility was also abnormal in all. Hypersensitivities to cutaneous stimuli, including evoked dysesthesias were found in 88% of the patients, while the detection thresholds for touch and vibration were abnormal in only 52% and 41%, respectively. Similarly, low figures were found for paresis and ataxia, which were present in 48% and 62%, respectively. It is concluded that only a minority of patients with central pain after stroke have thalamic lesions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Central post-stroke pain--neurological symptoms and pain characteristics. 291 91

Daily doses of 6-aminonicotinamide (3-5 mg/kg) given by ip injection produced ataxia of the hind limbs progressing to an ascending paresis/paralysis, anorexia, diarrhoea and death in male and female New Zealand White and Dutch Belted rabbits. At autopsy, caecal and gastric distention were seen and the apex of the gall bladder had necrotic foci. Light microscopic lesions included atrophy and necrosis of the white lobe of Harder's gland and atrophy of seminiferous tubules with cellular necrosis, vacuolation and the presence of multinucleated giant cells. Cytoplasmic vacuolation was observed in epithelial cells from many tissues, usually in the basal portion of the cells. Vacuolation of the epithelium of the sacculus rotundus and vermiform appendix was found within the same time frame as histiocytic hyperplasia in these organs. Spongiosis and gliosis were seen in certain parts of the central nervous system. Ultrastructural alterations in the gall bladder epithelium consisted of distention of intercellular space, mild distention of perinuclear space and coalescing, intracytoplasmic, membrane-bound vacuoles, a few of which contained membranous debris. Some alterations of 6-aminonicotinamide toxicosis were prevented by simultaneous administration of nicotinamide with 6-aminonicotinamide.
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PMID:Pathology of 6-aminonicotinamide toxicosis in the rabbit. 293 36

A survey of the literature of neurological manifestations associated with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) shows a broad disease spectrum affecting approximately one third of the patients in large hospital series. The complications include focal cerebral lesions caused by abscesses, lymphomas, leucoencephalopathy or infarcts as well as encephalitis, meningitis and myelitis. Most opportunistic infections of the central nervous system presumably are caused by toxoplasma gondii, cytomegalovirus and cryptococcus neoformans. One tenth of all patients have neurological disease as their initial symptom of AIDS. The diagnosis should always be considered in patients at risk and in males with an unusual neurological history or with a peculiar CT scan of the brain. Besides the opportunistic complications of AIDS, LAV/HTLV-III itself probably attacks the nervous system and gives rise to concomitant lesions of the long tracts of the spinal cord with ataxia, paresis and spasticity and to subacute encephalopathy and peripheral nerve abnormalities as well.
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PMID:Neurological complications and concomitants of AIDS. 303 38

Each of two horses was dosed by stomach tube with culture material on maize of Fusarium moniliforme MRC 826. One horse developed severe hepatosis and mild oedema of the brain after 6 doses of 2.5 g of culture material/kg body mass/day in 7 days. The second horse, in a similar experiment but at a dosage rate of 1.25 g/kg/day, developed mild hepatosis and moderate oedema of the brain. In both animals the brain oedema was particularly noticeable in the medulla oblongata. The mycotoxin fumonisin B1 was extracted and purified from the culture material of F. moniliforme MRC, 826 which contained approximately 1 g/kg of this compound. A horse was injected intravenously 7 times from Day 0-Day 9 with 0.125 mg of fumonisin B1/kg body mass/day. Clinical signs of neurotoxicosis, which appeared on Day 8, included nervousness followed by apathy, a wide-based stance, trembling, ataxia, reluctance to move, paresis of the lower lip and tongue, and an inability to eat or drink. Euthanasia was performed on the horse on Day 10 while the animal was in a tetanic convulsion. The principal lesions were severe oedema of the brain and early, bilaterally symmetrical, focal necrosis in the medulla oblongata. This report provides experimental evidence that fumonisin B1, produced by F. moniliforme, causes equine leukoencephalomalacia.
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PMID:Leukoencephalomalacia in a horse induced by fumonisin B1 isolated from Fusarium moniliforme. 321 91

This study, initiated in June 1987, describes the epidemiology of bovine spongiform encephalopathy (BSE), a recently described novel neurological disease of domestic cattle first identified in Great Britain in November 1986. Records suggested that the earliest suspected cases occurred in April 1985. There was variability in the presenting signs and the disease course, but the majority of cases developed behavioural disorders, gait ataxia, paresis and loss of bodyweight; pruritus was not a predominant sign. The form of the epidemic was typical of an extended common source in which all affected animals were index cases. The use of therapeutic or agricultural chemicals on affected farms presented no common factors. Specific genetic analyses eliminated BSE from being exclusively determined by simple mendelian inheritance. Neither was there any evidence that it was introduced into Great Britain by imported cattle or semen. The study supports previous evidence of aetiological similarities between BSE and scrapie of sheep. The findings were consistent with exposure of cattle to a scrapie-like agent, via cattle feedstuffs containing ruminant-derived protein. It is suggested that exposure began in 1981/82 and that the majority of affected animals became infected in calfhood.
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PMID:Bovine spongiform encephalopathy: epidemiological studies. 321 47


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