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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (
paresis
)
5,831
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Goldberger discovered human pellagra was a non-infectious disease, affecting mostly the small and the timid in overcrowded institutions. Symptoms were diarrhoea, dermatitis and dementia. The staff and older children escaped the disease. They ate the meat and left the small and timid with the gravy. The 'Goldberger syndrome' is observed during competitive feeding of livestock, in ketotic animals and in the zinc depleted which are lethargic and pick all day at their feed. The pellagra preventative factor was later found to be nicotinic acid, derived from the amino acid tryptophan. Deficiencies of copper, magnesium, vitamin B6 (activated by a zinc kinase) inhibit the conversion of tryptophan to nicotinic acid. Stresses, including liver diseases, malabsorption, iron overload, porphyria, marasmus, cold stress, pregnancy, lactation, antibiotics and sulfa drugs, all increase dietary needs of nicotinic acid. Elevated free fatty acids and ketone bodies in the blood are associated with ketosis, zinc depletion and the pre-diabetic state. There is a diminished uptake of glucose by the tissues, a condition also found in parturient
paresis
of dairy cows when elevated hydrocortisone promotes insulin resistance and hyperglycaemia. This defect in insulin response leads to a diabetic-like state. The major predisposing factor in parturient
paresis
of dairy cows is hypocalcaemia. Gut absorption of dietary
calcium
may not meet the primary demands of lactation initiation until bone
calcium
mobilisation is established.
...
PMID:Metabolic disorders of cattle. 839
Sixty-four cows with parturient
paresis
were given a standard treatment of 500 ml
calcium
gluconate (10.7 g Ca++) infusion solution. Twelve of these cows (experimental group = EG 1) additionally received 420 micrograms 1-alpha-hydroxycholecalciferol (1-alpha-OHD3) with 4 mg 25-hydroxycholecalciferol (25-OHD3) by the intramuscular route. A further 9 and 10 cows were given 210 micrograms 1-alpha-OHD3 and 2 mg 25-OHD3 (EG 3) with the
calcium
infusion, while 10 cows received either 420 micrograms 1-alpha-OHD3 (EG 4) or 210 micrograms 1-alpha-OHD3 (EG 5). Twenty-three cows (EG 2 and 4) which were given a
calcium
infusion alone acted as controls. The incidence of recurrence could not be reduced by the administration of Vitamin D3 metabolites concurrently with a
calcium
infusion, although
calcium
and phosphorus levels were higher between 24 and 48 hours after
calcium
infusion alone. The combination of 1-alpha-OHD3/25-OHD3 at the higher dosage resulted in the highest
calcium
levels.
...
PMID:[The suitability of 1-alpha-hydroxycholecalciferol for the prevention of recurrent parturient paresis in dairy cows]. 847 Jan
The study of ephemeral fever in cattle has defined a range of haematological and biochemical changes in blood which are characteristic of an inflammatory response. One of the clinical signs of ephemeral fever, a temporary paralysis reversible by treatment with
calcium
borogluconate, is similar to that in milk fever (parturient
paresis
), a disease of multiparous dairy cows. Three separate groups of cows were studied. Four multiparous cows were observed and sampled repeatedly during calving, three similar cows and one cow calving for the first time in a dairy herd were sampled daily before and after calving; and, in other dairy herds, seven cows with milk fever were sampled during illness. One of the cows under repeated observation during calving developed milk fever. The results showed that all the inflammatory indicators in blood were present in the multiparous cows at calving and that these were essentially similar to those established in ephemeral fever. The similarities in the four cows sampled repeatedly during the periparturient period were: a rectal temperature rise of 1 to 1.2 degrees C; rise in circulating neutrophils to peaks between 5700 and 11200 l-6; disappearance of eosinophils for 1 day; hypocalcaemia (plasma Ca < 2.0 mM l-1); fall of plasma zinc to low levels immediately after calving (plasma Zn < 500 micrograms l-1); fall of inorganic phosphate (plasma P < 0.9 mM l-1); rises in copper (plasma Cu > 1000 micrograms l-1) and plasma fibrin to > 8.75 g l-1. Plasma glucose peaked at calving between 5.7 and 8.9 mM l-1 then fell to levels ranging between 3.4 and 3.8 mM l-1. Plasma iron rose in one cow to 1220 micrograms l-1, was unchanged in one cow and fell in the other two to 440 and 860 micrograms l-1 respectively. The three multiparous cows which were sampled daily and calved normally showed similar haematological, macro and micromineral changes and fibrin response as did the seven milk fever cases. In the periparturient period, milk fever cows differed from multiparous cows calving normally, in degree but not in kind, of inflammatory response. It is postulated that an inflammatory event occurs in the periparturient period of multiparous cows which partially accounts for the falls in plasma
calcium
. This can precipitate a paralysis and other hypocalcaemic signs similar to that seen in acute ephemeral fever.
...
PMID:Studies on the pathogenesis of bovine ephemeral fever. IV: A comparison with the inflammatory events in milk fever of cattle. 854 50
Disorders of
calcium
, phosphorus and magnesium homeostasis in ruminants provide natural models for the study of the physiology and pathophysiology of these minerals. The knowledge that can be acquired with a better understanding of the pathogenesis of these diseases could give useful clues in the puzzle of human osteoporosis. In the present study, the case of parturient
paresis
of dairy cows is reexamined with a newly developed technique for the measurements of serum ionized magnesium concentrations (Mg2+). The concentrations of total magnesium (Mgtot), ionized
calcium
(
Ca2+
), total
calcium
(Catot), and inorganic phosphate (Pi) were also determined in the sera of seventeen 3- to 16-year-old Brown Swiss and crossed Simmental/Red Holstein cows during the periparturient period. In each animal, a transient increase of Mg2+ and Mgtot serum concentrations was observed in association with the transient decrease after parturition of
Ca2+
, Catot and Pi serum concentrations. On average, throughout the study, serum Mg2+ concentrations were 68.5% of those of Mgtot whereas serum
Ca2+
concentrations were 52% of those of Catot. The possible mechanisms involved in the transient increase of Mg2+ and Mgtot serum concentrations are discussed and the relevance of this data for osteoporosis is outlined.
...
PMID:Postparturient hypocalcemia of dairy cows: a model for the study of the interdependence of Ca, Pi, and Mg homeostasis. 857 48
A severely hypocalcaemic, hypomagnesaemic lactating bitch exhibited clinical signs of pulmonary oedema,
paresis
, dementia, gastrointestinal ileus and urinary bladder atony. The total
calcium
, ionised
calcium
and magnesium levels were extremely low. The clinical picture was very different from the one typically encountered in canine lactation tetany, and instead resembled bovine postparturient
paresis
. Muscle tremors, rigidity and seizures were not part of the acute clinical picture, but rather atony, weakness and
paresis
. General muscle dysfunction probably resulted from the extremely low ionised
calcium
levels in combination with very low levels of magnesium and possibly potassium. Heart failure and atony of the urinary bladder and intestines were probably a result of the severe hypocalcaemia. The alteration in
calcium
to magnesium ratio may have depressed neuromuscular transmission, leading to
paresis
and atony. The unusual electrocardiogram possibly also resulted from abnormal magnesium and
calcium
cation levels.
...
PMID:Paresis and unusual electrocardiographic signs in a severely hypomagnesaemic, hypocalcaemic lactating bitch. 967 8
The efficacy of
calcium
propionate for the prevention of parturient
paresis
(milk fever) was compared with that of
calcium
chloride using 194 cows that had experienced milk fever during the previous calving. The cows were mainly of the Swedish Red and White and Swedish Friesian breeds and were divided randomly into an experimental group (n = 99) and a control group (n = 95). The cows in the experimental group received up to six boluses of 20 g of
calcium
as
calcium
propionate between 36 h before and 24 h after calving; the cows in the control group received up to four doses of 54 g of
calcium
as a commercially available oily solution of
calcium
chloride during the same period. Incidence of milk fever was recorded as the percentage of cows that were treated by a veterinarian because they showed clinical signs of the disease and had a blood
calcium
concentration less than 8.0 mg/dl. Twenty-five (25.3%) cows in the experimental group and 22 cows (23.2%) in the control group developed milk fever. The incidence of milk fever for cows in both groups was significantly lower than the 36.0% found in 713 cows that had experienced milk fever during their previous calving but received no prophylactic treatment. Therefore,
calcium
propionate was considered to have had a significant preventive effect, comparable with that of
calcium
chloride.
...
PMID:A comparative study of the effectiveness of calcium propionate and calcium chloride for the prevention of parturient paresis in dairy cows. 971 Jul 71
A 10-week-old male Great Dane Puppy was presented for sudden onset tetraataxia and severe
paresis
of the front legs. Mineral deposits were detected radiographically, at gross postmortem examination, and light microscopically between the vertebral arches of multiple cervical and lumbar vertebrae. These deposits were associated with the interarchial ligaments (ligamentia interarcualia), along the interfaces of the synovium and articular cartilage of multiple cervical, thoracic, and lumbar facets, on the dorsal aspect of several thoracic intervertebral discs, and at the insertion of muscles at the lateral aspect of several cervical and thoracic vertebral bodies. The mineral deposits were associated with a granulomatous inflammation and synovial fibrocartilaginous metaplasia and proliferation, which was focally exuberant. X-ray diffraction analyses of the mineral deposits revealed
calcium
hydroxylapatite as the major component. The clinical signs in this puppy were due to focal compression of the spinal cord by marked extraarticular ligament-associated fibrocartilaginous proliferation.
...
PMID:Calcium hydroxylapatite deposition disease in a Great Dane Puppy. 1089 98
The collagen metabolites hydroxyproline (HYP), deoxypyridinoline (DPD), and the carboxyterminal telopeptide of type I collagen (ICTP) are suitable markers for bone resorption in humans and several animal species. The purpose of this study was to describe the course of bone resorption markers during short-term hypocalcemia induced with disodium ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (Na2EDTA) and to investigate whether bone resorption is increased in dairy cows under these conditions. EDTA infusions have been used as a model for periparturient
paresis
in dairy cows and to estimate the
calcium
mobilization rate from body reserves in ruminants. In this study, hypocalcemia was induced by means of a 5% Na2EDTA infusion (0.55 mg/kg/min Na2EDTA for 5 h = total dose of 100.6 g). Two experiments were conducted: (1) Six 4-11 years-old Brown Swiss cows were infused intravenously with EDTA for 5 h. Blood and urine samples were taken repeatedly from 1 day before until 10 days after infusion. (2) Towards the end of the lactation, the experiment was repeated with the same animals after a 14-day-period of feeding a low
calcium
diet (26 g/animal per day). The EDTA-infusion induced hypocalcemia and hypophosphatemia. The HYP-, DPD- and ICTP-concentration remained mainly unaffected during both infusions. Only DPD showed an increase during infusion and HYP an increase 2 days after the infusion. In conclusion, the EDTA infusion had little effect on the concentrations of the measured bone markers, which may be due to the fact that the serum
calcium
pool was refilled by increased absorption of Ca via the gastrointestinal tract. From these results, it can be concluded that bone resorption was not influenced by EDTA infusion.
...
PMID:The course of selected bone resorption marker concentrations in response to short-term hypocalcemia experimentally induced with disodium EDTA infusions in dairy cows. 1107 39
Channelopathy is a term used to describe clinical problems caused by disorders of membrane ion channels. Included in this disease category are certain types of periodic paralyses, ataxia, myotonia, migraine headache, epilepsy, nephrolithiasis, and long QT syndrome. This article briefly summarizes membrane ion channel structure and function and details several relatively common channelopathies. In hyperkalemic periodic paralysis, mutant skeletal muscle sodium channels fail to close completely after an action potential. This evokes two apparently opposite symptoms: myotonia (caused by a small depolarization and repetitive excitation) or paralysis (caused by larger depolarization and inexcitability). In hypokalemic periodic paralysis, mutation affects the closing of skeletal muscle
calcium
channels, causing transient
paresis
or paralysis. The task of the advanced practice nurse is to recognize these disorders, institute appropriate prophylactic measures and treatments, monitor symptom progression, and avoid complications. Understanding of channelopathies is advancing rapidly. On the horizon are therapies tailored to counter specific membrane ion channel defects.
...
PMID:Channelopathies: potassium-related periodic paralyses and similar disorders. 1123 35
Certain blood parameters and clinical symptoms have been connected with milk fever and a hypocalcemic condition in the cow. The present study intended to establish a mutual connection between relevant blood parameters and potentially valuable background information about the cow and its observed clinical symptoms at calving. Two veterinarians were summoned within 12 h of parturition of 201 cows, distributed among 41 Danish commercial herds. Cows were at different parity levels (2 to 10) and breeds and management differed broadly among herds. A blood sample was taken from the vena jugularis or the tail vein and was subsequently analyzed in the laboratory. Furthermore, 13 different clinical symptoms were recorded as categorical data. We investigated associations among the data obtained. We assessed an interpretative model for actual blood
calcium
level with blood parameters and background knowledge of the animals. We established a path analysis using background knowledge, blood parameters, and results of clinical examinations to uncover causal connections among the variables. Twenty-six percent of the animals were diagnosed as having milk fever and subsequent blood analyses revealed a high frequency of hypocalcemia within the general range from 0.69 to 2.73 mmol of Ca per liter. Rectal temperature, inorganic blood phosphate, and potassium were all directly correlated with blood
calcium
, while glucose, lactate, and magnesium were inversely associated with
calcium
. Blood osteocalcin was significantly lower in hypocalcemic animals, indicating that de novo synthesis of bone was arrested during hypocalcemia. A mixed effect linear interpretative model explained 75% of the variation in blood
calcium
. Clinical symptoms like mood, appetite, muscle shivering, rumen motility, and
paresis
were individually correlated with blood
calcium
and were thereby predictive of hypocalcemia. The path analysis showed the central role of
calcium
in affecting the clinical symptoms. However, several other factors contributed to hypocalcemia.
...
PMID:Evaluation of clinical and clinical chemical parameters in periparturient cows. 1146 25
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