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We report a case of chronic progressive inflammatory polyradiculoneuropathy with a subacute exacerbation that included ataxia, tendon areflexia, ptosis, and ophthalmoplegia. Spinal fluid protein was elevated and electrophysiological studies revealed a demyelinating neuropathy. This case suggests a continuum between chronic inflammatory polyradiculoneuropathy and the Miller Fisher variant of acute inflammatory polyneuropathy.
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PMID:Chronic inflammatory polyradiculoneuropathy with ophthalmoplegia. 294 24

The present studies examine some of the pharmacological effects of delta-9 (11)-tetrahydrocannabinol (delta 9-11-THC), an analog of delta-9-tetrahydrocannabinol (delta 9-THC). In tests with mice, delta 9-11-THC was similar to but less potent than delta 9-THC in producing hypothermia, analgesia, lethality and in reducing spontaneous activity. In dogs delta 9-THC but not delta 9-11-THC produced classical cannabimimetic signs including static ataxia, hyperreflexia, prancing and tail-tuck. delta 9-11-THC did produce central nervous system depression in 9 of the 15 dogs tested but the effects were not dose-related and appeared earlier and dissipated faster than the depressive effects induced by delta 9-THC. delta 9-THC but not delta 9-11-THC produced signs of ptosis, sedation and ataxia in rhesus monkeys. delta 9-THC also suppressed operant responding completely in four of four monkeys tested whereas in one monkey delta 9-11-THC did not do so up to doses as high as 5.0 mg/kg and was 8 to 100 times less potent in doing so in the other monkeys. When monkeys were pretreated with delta 9-11-THC the doses of delta 9-THC required to produce ptosis, sedation, ataxia and operant suppression were increased. However, when mice and dogs were pretreated with delta 9-11-THC the effects of delta 9-THC were not attenuated and usually were enhanced. The pharmacological profile of delta 9-11-THC is unusual in that it seems to have cannabimimetic activity in mice, noncannabimimetic-like effects in dogs and is perhaps devoid of cannabimimetic effects in rhesus monkeys. In addition, pretreatment with delta 9-11-THC attenuates the cannabimimetic effects of delta 9-THC in rhesus monkeys but not in mice or dogs.
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PMID:Studies on the agonistic activity of delta 9-11-tetrahydrocannabinol in mice, dogs and rhesus monkeys and its interactions with delta 9-tetrahydrocannabinol. 303 18

The pharmacological actions of N-(2,6-dimethylphenyl)-8-pyrrolizidineacetamide hydrochloride hemihydrate (SUN 1165), a new antiarrhythmic agent, on the central nervous system were studied in various experimental animals as compared with those of disopyramide, mexiletine and lidocaine, and the following results were obtained. 1. Acute toxicity of SUN 1165 in mice was similar to that of mexiletine, and twice as potent as compared with that of disopyramide and lidocaine. Main acute toxic symptoms of SUN 1165 were muscle relaxation, ataxia, clonic convulsions, tremor and a decrease in spontaneous activity in mice, rats and rabbits. In addition to these symptoms, vomiting in dogs was observed. These toxic symptoms were similar to those of lidocaine. In the case of disopyramide, ataxia, tremor and a decrease in spontaneous activity were observed in mice and rats. On the other hand, mexiletine caused central nervous excitatory symptoms, that is, tremor, Straub tail, clonic convulsions, jumping, running and opisthotonus in mice and rats, and vomiting in dogs. 2. SUN 1165 even at large doses (50-100 mg/kg p.o.) exerted no significant effects on the following changes: hexobarbital-induced induced hypnosis, oxotremorine-induced tremor, apomorphine-induced hypothermia, reserpine-induced ptosis and hypothermia, 5-hydroxytryptophan syndrome and fighting behavior in mice, and conditioned avoidance response in rats. 3. An ineffective dose of SUN 1165 (12.5 mg/kg p.o.) on spontaneous locomotor activity was lower than of disopyramide and lidocaine, however, higher than that of mexiletine. 4. SUN 1165 at large doses showed antagonistic action on toxic extensor seizures induced by maximal electroshock, picrotoxin, or strychnine in mice, but anticonvulsive effects of SUN 1165 were less potent than those of mexiletine and lidocaine. SUN 1165 had no effect on clonic convulsions induced by pentetrazol and pictrotoxin in mice, while both mexiletine and lidocaine prolonged the duration of clonic convulsions. 5. The muscle relaxant effect of SUN 1165 (50%-toxic dose, TD50 = 30 mg/kg p.o.) was more marked than that of lidocaine (TD50 = 92 mg/kg p.o.) on traction test in mice. However, effect of SUN 1165 (TD50 = 62 mg/kg p.o.) on motor incoordination was similar to that of disopyramide, mexiletine and lidocaine on the rotarod test in mice. 6. The analgesic effect of SUN 1165 was as weak as that of disopyramide, mexiletine and lidocaine on chemically and mechanically-induced pain response in mice.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:General pharmacological studies on N-(2,6-dimethylphenyl)-8-pyrrolizidineacetamide hydrochloride hemihydrate. 1st communication: effect on the central nervous system. 319 80

A 61-year-old woman is presented with a bilateral total ophthalmoplegia as an initial ocular symptom, caused by a midbrain hematoma. She complained of acute headache, nausea, vomiting and bilateral closure of her eyelids. Examination on admission showed meningeal irritation; mild consciousness disturbance; bilateral total ophthalmoplegia; left hemiparesis; ataxia in all extremities, more marked to the left. Computed tomography demonstrated a small hematoma in the midbrain tegmentum. Angiography demonstrated midbrain arteriovenous malformation, and she was treated conservatively. Abduction of both eyes and adduction of the left eye appeared on the next day of the ictus, and after that, improved gradually. Left ptosis had improved since one week after the ictus. Light reflex of the left pupil had seen 5 days after the ictus. At the same time, the left pupil revealed an oval-shape. Right internal ophthalmoplegia continued to exist. One year later, the right eye deviated externally, and the left deviated inferio-medially. Abduction of both eyes was normal. Infraduction of both eyes was seen, but limited on the left. Upgaze paresis remained unchanged, and adduction of the right eye was absent. Adduction of the left eye showed almost full recovery. There was right complete ptosis, but left ptosis became indefinite. These ocular findings indicated typical right oculomotor paresis plus superior rectus paresis of the left eye, which suggested a destructive lesion in the right oculomotor nucleus. Also, her left extremities showed a hemiparesis as a pyramidal tract sign (Weber's syndrome) and an ataxia as a cerebellar sign (Claude's syndrome).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Midbrain arteriovenous malformation causing bilateral total ophthalmoplegia as an initial ocular symptom--a case report]. 337 Jan 70

Two brothers and their sister aged 8, 13, and 7 years were found to have unusual facies (gross, rough and abundant hair, wide forehead, mild palpebral ptosis, small nose, anteverted nostrils, thick lips, and down-slanting corners of the mouth), dysarthria, delayed psychomotor development, scoliosis, feet deformities, and limb and gait ataxia. The characteristic clinical picture in the three sibs, once compared with other ataxic syndromes, allowed one to conclude that this could correspond to a distinct entity probably inherited as an autosomal recessive disorder.
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PMID:A distinct dysmorphic syndrome with spinocerebellar ataxia and probable autosomal recessive inheritance. 398 16

Thiamine deficiency in the monkey is the animal counterpart of Wernicke's disease in humans. In the present study, thiamine deficiency was induced in 11 monkeys while three monkeys were given paired feedings supplemented by thiamine hydrochloride and three monkeys were maintained on regular chow. The typical clinical symptoms were apathy, inattention to peripheral stimuli, ataxia, ptosis, mydriasis progressing to pupillary areflexia, nystagmus, and ophthalmoparesis progressing to total ophthalmoplegia. With thiamine treatment, recovery was prompt and complete in mild to moderate cases but delayed and incomplete in severe cases. The animals were killed six or more months after discontinuance of the experiments to determine the chronic effects of treated thiamine deficiency. The significant abnormalities in the brain stem were symmetric gliosis and neuronal loss in the inferior colliculi, the regions of the third and sixth nerve nuclei, and the medial vestibular nuclei. White matter was characteristically spared. With the exception of the inferior colliculi, the target sites for neuropathologic changes were the centers for ocular motor control.
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PMID:Ocular signs in thiamine-deficient monkeys and in Wernicke's disease in humans. 402 52

In rhesus monkeys, acute administration of levonantradol and nantradol produced signs of CNS depression, including ataxia with body sag, pupil dilation, ptosis, dozing, and reduced responsivity to external stimuli. Neither compound suppressed the morphine withdrawal syndrome; however, both alleviated the chronic abdominal contraction associated with withdrawal. The directly observable effects of these compounds were not antagonized by naloxone. When levonantradol was administered every 6 hours, marked tolerance developed to both the effects of levonantradol and nabilone and THC. No signs of withdrawal were observed when levonantradol injections were abruptly discontinued. When substituted in lieu of codeine under an intravenous drug self-administration procedure, neither levonantradol nor nantradol maintained responding at rates higher than those maintained by their vehicle. Finally, the discriminative effects of levonantradol were not equivalent to those of the narcotics ethylketazocine or etorphine.
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PMID:Behavioral effects of levonantradol and nantradol in the rhesus monkey. 627 36

Vitamin E malabsorption and deficiency during chronic childhood cholestasis has been associated with a progressive ataxic neurologic syndrome. Hyporeflexia, the first sign of neurologic dysfunction, may begin prior to age 2 years, but severe symptoms do not develop until age 5 to 10 years. To establish the age of onset of neuropathologic lesions, we prospectively evaluated four young children with severe cholestasis. Malabsorption and deficiency of vitamin E were documented by low serum vitamin E concentrations, low serum vitamin E to total serum lipids ratios, elevated hydrogen peroxide hemolysis, and impaired absorption of a pharmacologic dose of alpha-tocopherol. Abnormal neurologic findings in two patients were limited to areflexia, ptosis, mild truncal ataxia, and hypotonia; two patients had minimal signs of neurologic dysfunction. Sural nerve histology at age 6 to 25 months revealed a degenerative axonopathy involving large-caliber myelinated fibers, but without quantitative axonal loss. Muscle histology and histochemistry tests yielded normal results. Our study suggests that neurologic injury may occur during the first two years of life in vitamin E-deficient children with cholestatic hepatobiliary disease, obligating aggressive attempts at correcting this deficiency state at a very young age.
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PMID:Vitamin E deficiency during chronic childhood cholestasis: presence of sural nerve lesion prior to 2 1/2 years of age. 630 96

Pharmacological effects of ritodrine hydrochloride (ritodrine), a beta 2-adrenoceptor agonist, were investigated in comparison with that of isoxsuprine hydrochloride (isoxsuprine) on the motor nervous system and the central nervous system. Ritodrine (1-30 mg/kg, i.v.) suppressed spontaneous movements in mice, rats and dogs. The animals became slightly sedative and immobile. Ritodrine caused an increase of water intake and vomitting in dogs. These fingings were recovered in 3-5 hr. Isoxsuprine showed similar effects on general behaviour, but the depressive action was more potent than that of ritodrine. Ritodrine slightly suppressed exploratory behaviour in high dose, but had little effect on emotional behaviour. Ritodrine had no effects on conditioned avoidance response, tremor, motor coordination, thiopental induced sleeping time and few types of convulsions. Ritodrine showed no analgetic effects or muscle relaxant actions. Isoxsuprine, in high dose, suppressed motor coordination and showed ataxia. Ritodrine slightly raised body temperature and dose-dependently suppressed hypothermia and ptosis induced by reserpine. Ritodrine (1-10 mg/kg, i.v.) caused a slight resting pattern of spontaneous EEG in rabbits. On the other hand, arousal responses evoked by auditory stimulation, photic stimulation or electrical stimulation of mesencephalic reticular formation were unaffected by ritodrine at any doses used. These results suggest that ritodrine shows little effect on the motor nervous system and central nervous system, and its effects may be nonspecific.
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PMID:[Effects of ritodrine hydrochloride on motor nervous system and central nervous system]. 650 Apr 5

The authors report the case of a 12 year-old child who presented with a syndrome, isolated in Quebec, including spasticity, ataxia, distal muscle wasting, pes cavus, retinal striation, and the frequent presence of a prolapse of the mitral valve. This autosomal recessive disease is similar to Friedreich disease.
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PMID:[Recessive autosomal spastic ataxia]. 662 48


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