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Query: UMLS:C0036341 (
schizophrenia
)
60,220
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Using special brain antigen test-system ELITEST-24, ELISA assays of the serum of children with
cerebral palsy
were conducted. The data obtained were compared to relevant characteristics of the sera from neurologically and somatically healthy persons and patients with diagnoses of multiple sclerosis,
schizophrenia
, epilepsy and hepato-cerebral dystrophy according to special PC program VIZUAL and DIAGNOST. High specificity of the
cerebral palsy
anti-brain antigens reactivity was revealed by ELITEST technique. Moreover, the comparison of the mother-child pair immunoreactivity has been conducted. Evidence for hypothesis of epigenetically performing of children antibodies repertoires by mother-during-pregnancy immune status were obtained. Possible immunopathologic mechanisms of the disease are discussed.
...
PMID:[Serum antibodies to brain protein antigens in cerebral palsy in children]. 139 99
The transplantation (at an experimental level) of embryonic and fetal nerve tissue from different parts of the encephalon yields new possibilities for its use in humans in the future. The recent clinical application in the treatment of
schizophrenia
and Parkinson's disease is just the beginning to the long road toward cerebral reconstruction. The authors believe that this technique can also be used in the treatment of infantile
cerebral palsy
.
...
PMID:[Infantile cerebral palsy. The current status and future prospects of treatment]. 205 23
The outcome of elective hip arthroplasty in 11 mentally impaired patients was compared with a cohort of 244 mentally competent patients. The impaired patients had a diagnosis of
cerebral palsy
,
schizophrenia
, or Down's syndrome, and were unable to give their own surgical consent. Major complications requiring additional surgery occurred in 5 of the mentally impaired patients. Three patients sustained fractures of the femur below the stem and were treated with plating, 1 developed a deep infection requiring prosthesis removal, and 1 developed a thoracic decubiti with bone involvement requiring debridement and rotation flap coverage. Three of these patients also developed urinary tract infections. Of the other 6 mentally impaired patients, 3 developed urinary tract infections, and 1 had a deep venous thrombosis. Functional independence was improved after surgery in the mentally impaired patients. However, the average cost of hospitalization, length of stay, and complication rate were significantly higher (p < 0.05) than those of the mentally competent patients.
...
PMID:Hip arthroplasty in mentally impaired patients. 795 76
Single-photon emission computed tomography (SPECT) of the brain has been used to define functional abnormalities in two groups of childhood behavior disorders: (1) a "primary" category in which there is exclusive or predominant presentation with cognitive and/or behavioral dysfunction and (2) encephalopathies, often defined etiologically at the biochemical or molecular level, in which clinical expression includes, but is not confined to, neural dysfunction. Radiopharmaceuticals available for such studies are manifold, but those used to date have been predominantly perfusion agents, eg, Xenon-133 (133Xe) and technetium-99m (99mTc) hexamethylpropylene amine oxime, and studies with [99mTc]bicisate are eagerly awaited. Xenon-133 studies require that the patient be in the field of view of the detector while the tracer is administered. This renders it difficult for a subject to perform cognitive and other exercises while being imaged, because the environment is quite foreign. On the other hand, the 99mTc-labeled perfusion agents permit a scintigraphic "snapshot" of regional cerebral blood flow during a behavioral event without having to have the patient under the imaging instrument. Thus, one can separate the administration of the radiotracer, which can be done under more controlled and physiological conditions, from the actual imaging. In addition, greater spatial resolution is achieved with the technetium-based agents. Currently, multidetector or dedicated annular crystal-type cameras are the preferred brain SPECT devices, and they are essential to applications such as cortical "activation mapping" or tomographic detection of receptor systems. Close attention to technical detail and standardization of the child's behavioral environment during the investigation are critical to a successful study. The relative advantages and disadvantages of qualitative versus semiquantitative analysis of imaging date are reviewed. Among primary behavioral disorders, 133Xe SPECT studies in attention deficit disorder-hyperactivity (ADHD) have suggested a pattern of hypoperfusion of striatal and periventricular structures with sensorimotor cortical hyperperfusion. This pattern is consistent with some neurophysiological models of the disorder. In
cerebral palsy
, perfusional abnormalities have paralleled clinical deficits and may offer information to help predict outcome. The important field of childhood affective disorders (
schizophrenia
, juvenile autism, depression, etc) remains largely unstudied with SPECT. Finally, representative examples of the use of SPECT to study perfusion in encephalopathies with behavioral expression (phenylketonuria, MELAS (mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes) syndrome, Wilson's disease, etc) are given.
...
PMID:Brain single-photon emission computed tomography for behavior disorders in children. 837 98
Mesotelencephalic dopamine (DA) pathways are exquisitely vulnerable to ischemic-anoxic insult. These insults are known to produce long-term derangements in DA signaling and have been hypothesized to contribute, at least in part, to pathologic behaviors such as
cerebral palsy
,
schizophrenia
, and attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD). Whether modest intermittent hypoxia, such as that encountered with repetitive apneas in premature infants, contributes to clinically significant impairments in DA signaling, and how these impairments manifest at a systems level, is unknown. To address these voids there is a need to develop animal models emulating features of a common disorder of prematurity, namely, apnea with hypoxia. Behavioral traits exhibited by such models include disturbed sleep-wake architecture, excessive locomotion, and impaired working memory persisting 1 to 2 months post-insult. Western-blot analysis of expression patterns of proteins involved in DA signaling (e.g., DA and vesicular monoamine transporters, tyrosine hydroxylase, and D1 receptors) are consistent with that which might be expected from hyper- or hypodopaminergic functioning in DA-responsive prefrontal cortex and striatal circuits, respectively. These novel observations suggest that intermittent hypoxia occurring during a period of critical brain development disrupts development of those mesotelencephalic pathways modulating the expression of sleep and wakefulness, locomotion, and executive functioning.
...
PMID:Neonatal intermittent hypoxia impairs dopamine signaling and executive functioning. 1252 74
Perinatal infections are a risk factor for fetal neurological pathologies, including
cerebral palsy
and
schizophrenia
. Cytokines that are produced as part of the inflammatory response are proposed to partially mediate the neurological injury. This study investigated the effects of intraperitoneal injections of lipopolysaccharide (LPS) to pregnant rats on the production of cytokines and stress markers in the fetal environment. Gestation day 18 pregnant rats were treated with LPS (100 microg/kg body wt i.p.), and maternal serum, amniotic fluid, placenta, chorioamnion, and fetal brain were harvested at 1, 6, 12, and 24 h posttreatment to assay for LPS-induced changes in cytokine protein (ELISA) and mRNA (real-time RT-PCR) levels. We observed induction of proinflammatory cytokines interleukin (IL)-1 beta, IL-6, and tumor necrosis factor-alpha (TNF-alpha) as well as the anti-inflammatory cytokine IL-10 in the maternal serum within 6 h of LPS exposure. Similarly, proinflammatory cytokines were induced in the amniotic fluid in response to LPS; however, no significant induction of IL-10 was observed in the amniotic fluid. LPS-induced mRNA changes included upregulation of the stress-related peptide corticotropin-releasing factor in the fetal whole brain, TNF-alpha, IL-6, and IL-10 in the chorioamnion, and TNF-alpha, IL-1 beta, and IL-6 in the placenta. These findings suggest that maternal infections may lead to an unbalanced inflammatory reaction in the fetal environment that activates the fetal stress axis.
...
PMID:Maternal LPS induces cytokines in the amniotic fluid and corticotropin releasing hormone in the fetal rat brain. 1498 88
S100B protein plays a role in promoting the maturation of a variety of neurons in many different CNS regions. Behavioral dysfunction in S100B over-expressed transgenic mice and the chronic elevation of S100B in Down's syndrome and in
schizophrenia
suggest that S100B over-expression is related to abnormal brain function. Therefore, we believed that the over-expression of S100B protein might be implicated in developmental brain dysfunction. The purpose of this study was to evaluate the serum S100B protein levels in patients with developmental brain dysfunction, such as
cerebral palsy
and delayed development, and to determine the clinical relevance of serum S100B protein in these patients. The mean values of serum S100B protein were significantly increased in both conditions. Patients with
cerebral palsy
had a S100B protein level of 3455.8 +/- 5004.6 ng/L and those with delayed development of 2557.0 +/- 2321.0 ng/L, compared with a normal control level of 583.8 +/- 483.0 ng/L (P < 0.05). The over-expression of S100B (defined as the normal mean plus three standard deviations) was found in 47.1% of the total patient group (delayed development (47.5%) and
cerebral palsy
(47.0%)). The frequency of over-expression was not significantly related to clinical diagnosis, disease severity or to brain MRI findings. However, patients who had periventricular leukomalacia by brain MRI showed a wide range and very high levels of S100B exceeding 10,000 ng/L in some cases. These findings suggest that the pathogenesis implied by the over-expression of S100B protein during brain development may play a role in developmental brain dysfunction.
...
PMID:Over-expression of S100B protein in children with cerebral palsy or delayed development. 1503 Sep 8
Schizophrenia
is a psychiatric disease affecting around 1% of the population, the negative signs of which are correlated with inactivity of the prefrontal dorsolateral cortex, while an increased, more deeply localized, activity in the mesolimbic pathway may explain the positive signs. Several events occurring during pregnancy are likely to be involved in its genesis: hormonal supplementation by diethylstilbestrol, severe maternal denutrition, exposure to influenza virus, repeated psychological stress. From multicentric studies and meta-analyses in the psychiatric literature, the risk of
schizophrenia
appears to be multiplied by two if pregnancy is complicated, mainly by diabetes, Rhesus incompatibility, bleeding, preeclampsia, premature rupture of membranes and preterm birth. When delivery is linked to an abnormal presentation or happens via a caesarean birth for acute foetal distress, the time when the first signs of psychosis appear seems to be earlier in adolescence or in early adulthood. Cerebral imaging of schizophrenic patients shows ventriculomegaly and gray matter reduction, mainly in hippocampal volumes and in the dorsolateral prefrontal cortex. Similar alterations in the neuronal pathways have been experimentally reproduced in rats after repeated prenatal stress and perinatal hypoxia. A region on the distal portion of chromosome 1 has shown evidence for linkage to
schizophrenia
. Therefore, a two factor model seems to be able to explain the onset of
schizophrenia
in which obstetrical complications may interact with a genetic liability and in which the consequences of hypoxic events may lie on a continuum ranging from
cerebral palsy
in some children to subtle cognitive and behavioural disturbances in others.
...
PMID:Obstetrical complications and subsequent schizophrenia in adolescent and young adult offsprings: is there a relationship? 1514 May 4
1. An optimal intra-uterine environment is critical for normal development of the brain. It is now thought that abnormal development in a compromised prenatal and/or early postnatal environment may be a risk factor for several neurological disorders that manifest postnatally, such as
cerebral palsy
,
schizophrenia
and epilepsy. 2. The present review examines some of the effects of abnormal prenatal brain development and focuses on one disorder that has been hypothesized to have, at least in part, an early neurodevelopmental aetiology:
schizophrenia
. 3. The key neuropathological alterations and changes in some of the neurotransmitter systems observed in patients with
schizophrenia
are reviewed. Evidence in support of a neurodevelopmental hypothesis for
schizophrenia
is examined. 4. A summary of the animal models that have been used by researchers in an attempt to elucidate the origins of this disorder is presented. Although no animal model of a complex human disorder is ever likely to emulate deficits in all aspects of structure and function observed in patients with a neuropsychiatric illness, our findings and those of others give support to the early neurodevelopmental hypothesis. 5. Thus, it is possible that an adverse event in utero disrupts normal brain development and creates a vulnerability of the brain that predisposes an already at-risk individual (e.g. genetic inheritance) to develop the disorder later in life.
...
PMID:Investigating the neurodevelopmental hypothesis of schizophrenia. 1617 23
An episode of hyperthermia is not uncommon during pregnancy. The consequences depend on the extent of temperature elevation, its duration, and the stage of development when it occurs. Mild exposures during the preimplantation period and more severe exposures during embryonic and fetal development often result in prenatal death and abortion. Hyperthermia also causes a wide range of structural and functional defects. The central nervous system (CNS) is most at risk probably because it cannot compensate for the loss of prospective neurons by additional divisions by the surviving neuroblasts and it remains at risk at stages throughout pre- and postnatal life. In experimental animals the most common defects are of the neural tube, microphthalmia, cataract, and micrencephaly, with associated functional and behavioral problems. Defects of craniofacial development including clefts, the axial and appendicular skeleton, the body wall, teeth, and heart are also commonly found. Nearly all these defects have been found in human epidemiological studies following maternal fever or hyperthermia during pregnancy. Suggested future human studies include problems of CNS function after exposure to influenza and fever, including mental retardation,
schizophrenia
, autism, and
cerebral palsy
.
...
PMID:Review: Hyperthermia and fever during pregnancy. 1693 4
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