Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The application of recombinant DNA technology to the production of tumor necrosis factor has resulted in the availability of large quantities of a highly purified protein product. This product has been evaluated extensively in preclinical studies, which have documented a direct cytostatic and cytotoxic effect on human tumor cells, as well as a variety of immunomodulatory effects on various immune effector cells, including neutrophils, macrophages, and T cells. In addition, a number of anti-infective and metabolic effects have been documented. In addition to its in vitro effects, rTNF has been shown to have antitumor activity in vivo in preclinical studies involving both transplantable murine tumors and human tumor xenografts. Such observations have led to the evaluation of rTNF as a potential antineoplastic agent in humans. Both single- and multiple-dose phase I studies have confirmed that rTNF can be safely administered to patients with advanced malignancies in a dose range associated with anticancer effect without concomitant serious toxicities such as shock and cachexia. The most commonly observed clinical toxicities include constitutional symptoms, such as fever, chills, headache, and fatigue, and toxicities, which can be at least partially controlled with concomitant administration of nonsteroidal anti-inflammatory drugs, such as acetaminophen and meperidine. Hypotension, which occurs at high doses administered by short intravenous infusion, can usually be prevented by prehydration with intravenous fluids or otherwise controlled by the administration. An intense local inflammatory reaction at the injection site as well as thrombocytopenia appear to be the dose-limiting toxicities after subcutaneous and intramuscular administration. Neurologic toxicity is infrequent, except following continuous intravenous infusion, where it may manifest as transient focal neurologic deficits or seizure. Prolonged administration of rTNF at higher doses may be associated with transient, subclinical decreases in diffusing capacity. Patients with underlying cardiopulmonary disease should be excluded from rTNF therapy in future clinical studies until the end-organ toxicities of this agent are better defined. For at least one preparation of rTNF there appears to be no evidence for the formation of antibodies to rTNF in patients who receive multiple administrations of the agent. Pharmacokinetic studies have shown a relatively rapid clearance following intravenous infusion with a half-life of 15 to 30 min and dose-dependent pharmacokinetics. rTNF can be detected in the serum following intramuscular or subcutaneous injection at only relatively high doses, suggesting a decreased bioavailability with the routes of administration. Early phase I studies defined tolerable dose ranges for each route of administration and began to explore immunomodulatory and metabolic effects of rTNF.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:Recombinant human TNF-alpha: preclinical studies and results from early clinical trials. 155 Aug 75

The patient presented with progressive joint deformity, a hoarse voice, subsequent cachexia, and myoclonic seizures. She was first seen aged 22 months and died aged 6 years. A diagnosis of Farber's disease was made by demonstrating a deficiency of acid ceramidase both in leucocytes and fibroblasts.
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PMID:Farber's disease (lysosomal acid ceramidase deficiency). 366 45

Out of over 100 children with the Lennox-Gastaut syndrome observed in the Outpatient Clinic and Department of Paediatric Neurology, Children's Health Center the authors present 6 cases in which the course of the disease was progressive and devastating. The main signs were astatic-myoclonic and generalized seizures, regression of psychomotor development, followed by mental regression, pareses of extremities, decortication symptoms and somatic cachexia. The authors suggest that the clinical course, the character of epileptic seizures very poor prognosis in certain children with the Lennox-Gastaut syndrome make the syndrome similar in its clinical aspects to subacute sclerosing panencephalitis and require careful differential diagnosis for excluding the latter disease.
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PMID:[Epilepsy with myoclonic-astatic attacks (Lennox-Gastaut syndrome) with particularly unfavorable course]. 393 Sep 80

Cyclopiazonic acid (CPA) was found to have many pharmacological properties in common with the antipsychotic drugs chlorpromazine and reserpine. Thus, in mice CPA at ip doses of 5-14 mg/kg body weight produced hypokinesia, hypothermia, catalepsy, ptosis, sedation without loss of righting reflex, tremor, gait disturbance, dyspnoea, opisthotonus, atypical convulsion and prolonged barbiturate-induced sleep. The ip LD50 of CPA was found to be 13 +/- 0.05 mg/kg. The tremors induced by near-lethal doses of CPA were associated with voluntary or forced movements (action tremors); they worsened during the days following treatment, but they were weak compared with the exhausting and continuous tremors of the whole body caused by 20 mg tremorine/kg (used for comparison). When death occurred only 24-259 min after administration of CPA (11-14 mg/kg), it was preceded by dypsnoea, cyanosis, opisthotonus and clonic leg movements and tonic extension of hind legs (convulsions). When death was delayed (2-6 days after CPA administration), it was preceded by prostration, ptosis, hypothermia, tremor and cessation of food and water intake resulting in cachexia; convulsions were not seen in this group of mice. CPA did not affect the rate of convulsion or death caused by either maximal electroshock or metrazol administration but it did delay the onset of metrazol-induced seizures. In rabbits, 10 mg CPA/kg body weight initially produced tachycardia, tachypnoea and sedation with an activated electroencephalogram. Of three rabbits given 10 mg CPA/kg one died, and in this rabbit slow delta waves were seen just before and during a brief period with clonic leg movements. In this animal death was accompanied by tonic extension of the hind legs, respiratory arrest and cardiac fibrillation; and epileptiform EEG was not seen at any time. The unexpected EEG activation with sedation in rabbits treated with CPA was similar to the effect of reserpine on EEG.
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PMID:Toxicity and neuropharmacology of cyclopiazonic acid. 404 83

A 60 year-old woman with a scalp epithelioma underwent radiotherapy, the dose being 57 Gray. A first epileptic seizure occurred twenty months later. Neurological examination revealed signs of left hemisphere involvement. gamma EG, angiography, CT scans, demonstrated a pseudotumoral avascular process. On account of the localisation, the patient being right-handed, no surgical procedure was performed. In spite of corticotherapy and anticonvulsive treatment, seizures recurred and neurological signs slowly progressed. The patient died, 22 months after the first seizure, of an associated disseminated carcinoma with cachexia. Neuropathological examination showed a massive lesion presenting all the features of delayed radionecrosis in the left hemisphere: situated mainly in the white matter; numerous vascular abnormalities; wide-spread demyelination; disappearance of oligoglial cells. The Authors recall the clinical and anatomical aspects of this condition for which the only successful treatment is surgical removal when location and size of the lesion permit. Finally, the mechanisms which have been proposed to explain this delayed cerebral radionecrosis are discussed.
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PMID:[Pseudo-tumoral form of delayed radionecrosis of the brain]. 407 99

The clinical history and autopsy findings are reported on a case of infantile Alexander's disease (AD). The patient, a white baby girl, developed seizures at age 4 months accompanied by internal hydrocephalus. She died at age 11 months following a progressive, downhill course of profound psychomotor retardation, recurrent seizures and cachexia. The general autopsy was remarkable for cachexia. The formalin fixed brain and spinal cord were studied by light and electron microscopy (EM). The brain was normal in weight for age but showed diffuse pallor of white matter and marked cavitation involving the cerebral and cerebellar subcortical white matter, most profound in the frontal lobes. Microscopically the CNS showed classic features of AD with diffuse paucity of myelin and massive proliferation of astrocytes bearing Rosenthal fibers (RF). The latter appeared as granular osmiophilic deposits associated with 8-10 nm filaments within astrocytic processes and cell bodies by EM. This case of AD is remarkable for the extreme degree of cavitation. Cavitary changes affect up to one third of typical cases of AD and are invariably present in the frontal white matter. Affected patients are generally much younger and have a shorter clinical course than AD patients without brain cavitation. The dysmyelination of AD inversely parallels the temporal sequence of normal myelination and suggests a relative resistance of early myelinated structures to the presumed astrocytic defect causing AD. Adults with de novo formation of RF's in the CNS have a varied clinical and pathological appearance, rarely show brain cavitation and should probably be distinguished from classic AD in children.
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PMID:Prominent white matter cavitation in an infant with Alexander's disease. 803 60

Whipple's disease is a rare, generalized inflammatory disorder due to the recently described bacterium Tropheryma whippelii. We report an unusual, successfully treated case of a 32-year-old woman, who presented with a 25 month history of large abdominal lymphomas, polyserositis and cachexia. The diagnosis of Whipple's disease was confirmed by duodenoscopy, lymph node and duodenal histology and polymerase chain reaction analysis of biopsy material and cerebrospinal fluid. A prolonged convulsive seizure with a subsequent 5 day period of coma were interpreted as signs of cerebral involvement. Under antibiotic treatment with trimethoprim-sulfamethoxazole (co-trimoxazole) the patient recovered completely, CT scans showed a complete regression of abdominal lymphomas. The therapy was continued over 18 months without the occurrence of a relapse.
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PMID:Abdominal lymphomas, convulsive seizure and coma: a case of successfully treated, advanced Whipple's disease with cerebral involvement. 983 15

Neuropeptide Y (NPY), the most abundant peptide present in the mammalian brain, exhibits a wide spectrum of central and peripheral activities mediated by at least six G-protein coupled receptors. The latter observation, and the implication of NPY in the pathophysiology of feeding, seizures, diabetes, intestinal dysfunction, cardiovascular diseases and respiratory disorders, have led to vigorous efforts to dissociate various effects of NPY and develop receptor selective ligands required for fundamental investigations, and possible clinical utility. These efforts have made significant advancement in the development of antagonists, especially for Y(1) and Y(5) receptors mediating NPY effects on feeding and/or thermogenesis. However, only a limited progress has been made in the case of Y(2) ligands, and none in the case of Y(4) ligands. Moreover, most of the nonpeptidic ligands developed to date have little use clinically because of their solubility and toxicity problems and their limited passage through blood-brain barrier. Furthermore, no progress has been made in developing lower molecular weight agonists, which may also have clinical potential in treating seizures, intestinal dysfunction, respiratory disorders, cachexia and anorexia. Thus, despite significant advances, NPY research is expected to attract scientists for years to come in the pursuit to develop clinically useful ligands. The recent advances in the peptide drug delivery techniques have given added impetus for these efforts. This article reviews the usefulness of widely used ligands as well as those developed more recently.
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PMID:Neuropeptide Y (NPY) family of hormones: progress in the development of receptor selective agonists and antagonists. 1276 44

We describe an 18-year-old girl who presented with severe systemic lupus erythematosus with multiple organ involvement. The disease was further complicated by recurrent seizures and intracerebral left parieto-occipital bleeding that required neurosurgical treatment. Postoperative rebleeding occurred due to disseminated intravascular coagulation and platelet dysfunction. Catastrophic antiphospholipid syndrome was suspected, but could not be confirmed during follow-up. Additional treatment with plasmapheresis and intravenous pulse cyclophosphamide in combination with corticosteroids was started. Liquor drainage via a ventriculo-peritoneal (vp)-shunt was necessary because of a hydrocephalus malresorptivus. The patient's recovery was slow and incomplete (cachexia and amaurosis persisted). Follow-up was further complicated by an intraperitoneal vp-shunt cyst, which was initially treated conservatively, but finally had to be revised operatively.
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PMID:A severe case of systemic lupus erythematosus with cerebral involvement. 1562 2

Mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy is a rare disorder affecting the pediatric age group with a heterogeneous multisystem involvement. We happen to manage a young child with symptoms of constipation since infancy along with cachexia, seizures and peripheral neuropathy. The child later went into encephalopathy preterminally. This clinical syndrome fitted very well with mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalomyopathy. The child had elevated lactate levels and electron microscopy of the rectal biopsy was suggestive of a mitochondrial disorder To the best of our knowledge there is no case report of this syndrome from India and since this presents with diagnostic difficulties so is being reported.
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PMID:Mitochondrial neuro-gastrointestinal encephalopathy syndrome. 1720 42


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