Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Progabide, a specific and clinically used GABA receptor agonist, was tested for its ability to suppress ethanol withdrawal syndrome. Male rats were rendered physically dependent on ethanol by feeding for 12 days on a liquid diet in which ethanol isocalorically replaced
dextrose
. Progabide (100-400 mg/kg i.p.), administered 8 h after ethanol was withdrawn, produced a dose-related inhibition of both tremors and audiogenically induced
seizures
. A single dose of 400 mg/kg of progabide completely suppressed all ethanol withdrawal reactions.
Seizures
were more sensitive to the drug than tremors. The results support the view that a decrease in GABA transmission plays a role in ethanol withdrawal symptoms and suggest that progabide may be tested as a possible treatment of ethanol withdrawal syndrome in man.
...
PMID:Suppression by progabide of ethanol withdrawal syndrome in rats. 298 5
We investigated the blood pressure response elicited by microinjection of various hypertonic solutions into the area of the nucleus tractus solitarii (NTS) of the brainstem, an area rich in catecholaminergic neurons. Equiosmolar solutions of NaCl,
dextrose
, LiCl and KCl were employed. NaCl produced a prolonged blood pressure rise; LiCl and normal saline produced a similar rise of short duration; and KCl produced epileptic-type
seizures
with postictal hypertension. Dextrose had no effect and neither had NaCl microinjection in areas relatively distant from the NTS. The rise in blood pressure was not reversed by a vasopressin antagonist injected systemically, but was totally abolished by systemic alpha-adrenergic blockade with phentolamine. These findings suggest that sodium can cause hypertension by direct stimulation of the central sympathetic nervous system without participation of peripheral mechanisms such as fluid volume expansion or alteration of the vascular wall.
...
PMID:Hypertensive response to saline microinjection in the area of the nucleus tractus solitarii of the rat. 299 26
We have performed positron emission tomography (PET) with 2-deoxy-2[18F]fluoro-
D-glucose
(FDG) in eight infants and children (aged 18 days to 5 years) with medically refractory epilepsy of neonatal onset. It was hypothesized that in at least some of these infants a surgical approach (focal resection, cerebral hemispherectomy) might be of benefit in achieving
seizure
control, and that PET might assist in surgical selection. In three of the eight subjects, interictal PET revealed unilateral diffuse hypometabolism; following cerebral hemispherectomy in these three patients, all
seizures
ceased and there were no adverse effects. In one child, ictal PET showed hypermetabolism in the left frontal cortex, left striatum, and right cerebellum; a partial left cerebral hemispherectomy guided by intraoperative electrocorticography was performed, following which all
seizures
ceased. One infant had relative hypermetabolism in the right temporal and occipital lobes, right thalamus, and left frontal lobe on ictal PET, and EEG telemetry revealed a right occipitotemporal epileptic focus; this infant died from anesthetic complications following right occipitotemporal cortical resection. Of the three unoperated patients, one is a potential candidate for right frontal lobectomy, but the other two were not considered to be surgical candidates due to bilateral epileptogenicity. Neuropathologic correlation in our series revealed that PET is a sensitive test capable of detecting cytoarchitectural disturbances whereas CT and MRI failed in this regard. In addition, PET provides a very unique and important assessment of the functional integrity of brain regions outside the area of potential resection.
...
PMID:Surgical treatment of intractable neonatal-onset seizures: the role of positron emission tomography. 326 Oct
Aluminum tartrate (AlT) but not sodium tartrate (NaT) produces a progressive encephalopathy when injected intracerebroventricularly in the rat. This syndrome, lethal within 30-35 days, is characterized by progressively deranged behavior. An early startle reaction (day 14), later joined by locomotor discoordination (day 19) is followed by locomotor and electrocorticographic (ECoG)
seizures
(day 21) in chronically instrumented AlT rats. There is early dissociation between ECoG and locomotor aspects. When tested in the shuttlebox for estimation of learning and memory function 7-8 days after AlT injection, marked impairment of both active and passive avoidance was observed. Glucose uptake capacity of synaptosomes from brain areas of AlT and NaT animals was indexed by the 2-deoxy-
D-glucose
method. Striatal and cortical synaptosomes showed reduced uptake activity 7 days following AlT injection. By day 14, hypothalamic areas also became affected, striatal uptake was further inhibited, and cortical uptake was reduced to 57% of control. The ECoG background rhythm remained unchanged until days 20-23, when the mean peak frequency was reduced. The model may be useful in the study of central aluminum toxicity and may have predictive validity in the testing of procedures to counter aluminum-associated encephalopathies in man.
...
PMID:Aluminum induced encephalopathy in the rat. 334 87
Phenobarbital-N-
glucoside
(PNG) has recently been identified as a significant metabolite of phenobarbital (PB). Five neonates treated with PB alone for
seizures
were studied. Serum concentration of PB ranged from 30 to 80 mg/l. Serial single daily voided specimens were analyzed for PB, PNG, and total p-hydroxyphenobarbital (PHPB). PNG was detected on the 14th day of life in 1 patient, who was the oldest by gestational age. On the 20th day of life, PNG accounted for 50% of the dose excreted in the urine. No PNG was detected in other patients by the 12th, 15th, or 16th day of life. PHPB was found on day 4, in the first urine examined, in the patient who made PNG. In other patients, PHPB was first excreted on the 4th day of life in 2 patients and on the 10th day in 2. It appears that N-glucosidation, when activated, rapidly becomes a significant route for PB metabolism in the neonate.
...
PMID:Development of phenobarbital glucosidation in the human neonate. 338 23
The effect of fluid (5%
dextrose
in water or lactated Ringer's solution) administered intravenously on the development of
seizures
after cervical myelography with metrizamide was studied in 10 dogs. In a crossover experimental design, 8 dogs were used twice. Urine output was measured during the second part of the study to determine whether diuresis was a factor affecting
seizure
development. Dogs given 5%
dextrose
in water had significantly (P less than 0.05) fewer
seizures
than did dogs given lactated Ringer's solution. This was attributed to an increase in CSF glucose concentration and was not associated with diuresis.
...
PMID:Effect of intravenous administration of dextrose or lactated Ringer's solution on seizure development in dogs after cervical myelography with metrizamide. 343 4
As temporal lobe dysfunction has been postulated in the affective disorders, the authors investigated glucose utilization in the temporal lobes of 13 affectively ill patients in comparison with 18 normal volunteer controls and 17 previously reported schizophrenic patients, following injections of fluorine 18-2-deoxy-
D-glucose
(FDG) during somatosensory stimulation to the right forearm. Using a boundary-finding algorithm to outline each temporal lobe, maximum glucose use relative to maximums elsewhere in the same positron emission tomography (PET) slice were calculated. In a small group of moderately to severely depressed patients, this relative measure was significantly reduced in the right (with a similar trend in the left) temporal lobe compared to normal volunteers and the other comparison groups. The lack of a significant increase in glucose utilization, measured either as a maximum or in relation to other areas in the PET scan slice, suggests that a temporal lobe activation or a
seizure
-like process is not generally occurring during active depressive phases of the illness.
...
PMID:Glucose utilization in the temporal cortex of affectively ill patients: positron emission tomography. 349 97
Diuresis by IV administration of 5%
dextrose
in a balanced electrolyte solution (BES) reduced the frequency of occurrence of postmyelographic
seizures
in dogs. In the first study, a single myelogram was obtained in 8 dogs without
dextrose
diuresis. Two of these dogs weighed greater than 15 kg and both had
seizures
after metrizamide myelography. The remaining 6 dogs weighed less than 15 kg and only 2 had
seizures
. Greater body weight may have increased the risk of postmyelographic convulsions. In a crossover study, myelograms were obtained in 12 dogs weighing 20 to 31 kg. Six dogs were given 5%
dextrose
in BES (20 ml/kg of body weight/hr [diuresed]) and 6 were given BES alone (10 ml/kg/hr [not diuresed]). When myelography was repeated 10 days later, the 6 dogs that had been given 5%
dextrose
in BES were given BES only and the 6 dogs that had been given BES alone were given 5%
dextrose
in BES. The frequency of convulsions after metrizamide myelography was lower when dogs were given
dextrose
(33%) than when they were not (100%).
...
PMID:Prevention of postmetrizamide myelographic seizures in dogs, using 5% dextrose solution. 370 Feb 26
The intrinsic processes involved in the initiation and arrest of
seizures
are not completely understood. Cortical and cerebellar inhibitory mechanisms, accumulation of metabolic products, and glial uptake of extracellular potassium (K+o), anions, and released neurotransmitters are all important processes that limit focal firing and terminate a
seizure
once it has been initiated. Of these, the intrinsic cortical inhibitory mechanisms--i.e., recurrent and surround inhibition--appear to be the most important. Active cation and anion transport processes are two metabolic events that have yet to be elucidated but clearly could be involved in terminating a
seizure
discharge. For example, without an active mechanism to transport chloride, opening of the chloride channel by the inhibitory transmitter GABA would not result in increased chloride permeability. The transient hypoxia and hypercapnia and lactic acidosis that follows a severe tonic-clonic seizure produces a mixed systemic metabolic and respiratory acidosis. In experimental animals, the hypercapnia that results is sufficient to block
seizure
discharges. Increasing the CO2 concentration significantly reduces the extension to flexion (E/F) ratio of mice given maximal electroshock
seizures
(MES) and increases the time required for 50% of the animals to recover sufficiently from a first MES to be able to have another MES. The decreased E/F ratio and the increased recovery time (RT50) are both indicative of a decrease in
seizure
activity. Since the extent to which CO2 is allowed to accumulate in the brain is regulated by the glial specific enzyme carbonic anhydrase (CA), it follows that the glial cell has an integral role in the mechanisms involved in arresting
seizure
activity. In contrast, hypoxia increased the E/F ratio and decreased the RT50, evidence that
seizure
activity was enhanced. Another metabolic factor affecting duration of
seizure
activity, susceptibility to
seizures
, and recovery from
seizures
is glucose. Recovery from
seizures
depends in part on an adequate supply of this energy source. An inverse correlation (R = 0.95) between RT50 and blood sugar was found when the blood sugar was altered experimentally by treatments that altered the endocrine status (pancreatectomy, treatment with alloxan, cortisol, insulin, glucagon, and
dextrose
). Since glial cells contain (as glycogen) the small amount of glucose present in the brain, they probably hasten the ability of the brain to recover normal function following a
seizure
.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Role of glial cation and anion transport mechanisms in etiology and arrest of seizures. 370 23
We have administered the glycolysis inhibitors 2-deoxy-
D-glucose
and 5-thio-
D-glucose
to C3H/HeJ mice bearing KHT or 16/C transplantable tumors to seek evidence for hypoxic cell toxicity in vivo. The drugs were given (a) with or without insulin, (b) as large single doses or as multiple hourly injections, and (c) alone or immediately after the tumors had received radiation to kill most of the aerobic cell population. Tumor response was assessed by growth delay or by lung colony assay. Limiting toxicity of 2-deoxy-
D-glucose
and 5-thio-
D-glucose
was neurological, leading to
seizures
and/or death, and this toxicity was increased by insulin. The drugs had at most minimal effects on the growth of either untreated or irradiated tumors at maximal tolerated doses. Despite the known selective toxicity of these glucose analogues for hypoxic cells in tissue culture, we have found them to be ineffective in killing hypoxic cells of two murine tumors.
...
PMID:Failure of 2-deoxy-D-glucose and 5-thio-D-glucose to kill hypoxic cells of two murine tumors. 633 9
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>