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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The clinical and biochemical data on 13 patients with Batten's syndrome are described. Clinically the disease was characterized by progressive maental and somatic deterioration. Initially, vision loss was found between the ages 4 and 8 years. This was associated with 1 or 2 years of normal school attendance followed by attendance at a school for mentally retarded from the age of 8 to 11; then warding was established at a school for blind children and later on a hospital for epileptic patients when seizures and mental retardation made hospitalization necessary. Biochemically, an increased peroxidation rate was revealed in peripheral thrombocytes. This abnormality was associated with a significant decrease in peroxidase activity of leucocytes assayable with p-phenylenediamine, but not with Guajacol. The peroxidase defect seemed to concern an azide-resistant peroxidase. However, in serum the glutathione peroxidase was only found insignificantly decreased.
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PMID:Clinical, social and biochemical studies on Batten's syndrome, alias Spielmeyer-Vogot or Stengel's Syndrome. 87 40

4 children with intractable seizures, repeated infections, and intolerance to anticonvulsants had evidence of glutathione peroxidase deficiency. 2 had low intracellular enzyme activity but normal blood selenium and high plasma glutathione peroxidase concentrations. The other 2 had low intracellular glutathione peroxidase activity with low circulating glutathione peroxidase and selenium concentrations. The clinical state of the children improved after discontinuation of anticonvulsant medication and selenium substitution.
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PMID:Glutathione peroxidase deficiency and childhood seizures. 167 2

Exposure of rats to 100% O2 at high pressure (greater than 2.0 ATA) results in generalized convulsions and death within several hours. The tripeptide, glutathione, has been shown to protect rats exposed to hyperbaric hyperoxia with delayed onset of seizures and prolonged survival. To investigate the hypothesis that glutathione exerts its protective effects via the glutathione redox cycle, we injected selenium-deficient rats and their selenium-supplemented controls with either glutathione (1 mmol/kg) or an equivolume of saline before exposure to 100% O2 at 4 ATA. Selenium-deficient rats exhibit marked reduction in liver glutathione peroxidase activity (GSH-Px). Glutathione administration significantly delayed both the onset of seizures and time to death in the control animals. In selenium-deficient rats, however, glutathione administration was not protective, having no significant effects on time to seizure or time to death. We also measured changes in glutathione concentrations in lung, liver, and brain of these same groups of animals exposed either to hyperbaric hyperoxia or to room air. In control rats, lung and brain glutathione concentrations did not change with the hyperbaric exposure regardless of glutathione pretreatment status, but hepatic glutathione concentration declined significantly during the exposure when glutathione was not supplied. If these animals were pretreated with glutathione, the decline in hepatic glutathione concentrations did not occur. In selenium-deficient rats, the hyperbaric exposure did not result in changes in lung, brain, or liver glutathione concentrations either in the glutathione-pretreated or in the saline-pretreated animals. Exogenous GSH administration does not protect selenium-deficient rats from hyperbaric hyperoxia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Effects of selenium deficiency on glutathione-induced protection from hyperbaric hyperoxia in rat. 261 Feb 68

Antioxidation system in the brain and blood of rats with generalized bemegride-induced epileptic activity was studied. Antioxidation enzyme activity (superoxide dismutase, glutathione peroxidase and glutathione reductase) and alpha-tocopherol content were determined at an early convulsive stage, immediately after generalized seizures and 10-15 min after seizure. Antioxidation enzyme activity and alpha-tocopherol level in the brain homogenate and blood remained unchanged at any stages of investigation. It is suggested that the increased level of lipid peroxidation products in the brain and blood of rats upon the development of bemegride-induced epileptic activity is not related to the decrease in antioxidation system activity. The effect is mediated by the activation of the reaction initiating free radical brain lipid transformations.
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PMID:[State of the antioxidant system during induction in rats of primary generalized epileptic activity]. 406 95

Exposure to oxygen at pressures greater than 2.8 ATA (OHP) results in central nervous system toxicity seen as grand mal seizures. The time to onset of seizures (ts) is related to the pO2 above the 2.8 ATA threshold. The components of the endogenous antioxidant defense mechanism, superoxide dismutase (SOD), glutathione measured here as nonprotein sulfhydryl content (NPSH), glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (G-6-PD), glutathione reductase (GR), and glutathione peroxidase (GPx) occur in brain. Their role in OHP-induced CNS toxicity is not clear. This study examined the effect of inhibition of SOD by diethyldithiocarbamate (DDC) on ts at 4 ATA O2. Antioxidant components (SOD, NPSH, G-6-PD, GR, and GPx) were measured in male Sprague-Dawley rats pretreated with 250, 500, and 1000 mg/kg DDC ip, 2 hr prior to termination in room air. SOD activity was inhibited 11, 31, and 49%, respectively, when compared with control values. Among the other antioxidant components, only GPx showed a significant loss of activity of 24% at 1000 mg/kg DDC. Rats were also pretreated 2 hr prior to exposure to hyperbaric oxygen with either 250, 500, or 1000 mg/kg DDC. Ts for the treated animals was significantly shortened by 12, 55, and 75%, respectively, compared to the saline-treated, oxygen-exposed control animals. These studies demonstrated that the rate of onset of CNS oxygen toxicity was increased by inhibition of SOD by DDC. These data suggested that SOD plays a role as part of an endogenous antioxidant defense mechanism in the brain.
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PMID:Influence of rat brain superoxide dismutase inhibition by diethyldithiocarbamate upon the rate of development of central nervous system oxygen toxicity. 608 74

Several indices of free radical generation were determined in limbic structures after kainate (KA)-induced seizure activity in adult and postnatal day (PND) 12 and 17 rats. Superoxide dismutase, catalase, and glutathione peroxidase activities were measured in piriform cortex and hippocampal subfields at 8, 16, 48 h, and 5 days after KA injection in adults and pups, and also at 3 weeks postinjection in adults. KA-induced seizure activity had no significant effect on enzyme activities in PND 12 and 17 rats. In adults, superoxide dismutase and catalase activities were significantly increased at 5 days after KA administration, and returned to preinjection levels by 3 weeks. Glutathione peroxidase activity was also increased significantly at 5 days postinjection, but remained elevated at 3 weeks. Lipid peroxidation, as indicated by malondialdehyde (MDA) concentration, exhibited an early significant increase at 8 and 16 h, followed at 48 h and 5 days by a significant decrease. At 3 weeks postinjection, MDA levels were still significantly decreased in CA3 and dentate gyrus. KA administration in PND 12 and 17 rats had no significant effect on MDA content. KA-induced seizure activity in adults also resulted in a large and sustained increase in protein oxidation in piriform cortex and hippocampus. The early increase in MDA and protein oxidation in adult rats strongly suggests the involvement of oxygen free radicals in the initial phases of KA-induced pathology, whereas the changes in scavenging enzyme activities and MDA content at 5 days and 3 weeks post KA injection possibly reflect glial proliferation subsequent to neuronal death.
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PMID:Oxygen free radicals in rat limbic structures after kainate-induced seizures. 762 35

Kainic acid-induced seizures in the rat brain cause severe brain damage that is thought to result, in part, from oxidative stress. In this study, we examine the consequences of systemic administration of kainic acid on expression of several genes that encode proteins thought to play roles in protection from oxidative stress, including metallothionein-I, and -III. Kainic acid causes an increase in metallothionein-I and heme oxygenase-I mRNAs, as well as an increase in c-fos, heat shock protein-70, and interleukin-1 beta mRNAs. The induction of these mRNAs is seizure dependent, and is greater in brain areas with extensive damage (e.g. piriform cortex) than in areas with minimal damage (e.g. frontal cortex and cerebellum). In contrast, little or no change in mRNA for metallothionein-III, manganese superoxide dismutase, copper-zinc superoxide dismutase, glutathione-s-transferase ya subunit or glutathione peroxidase occur. The prolonged and robust concordant induction of the metallothionein-I and heme oxygenase-I genes may reflect the oxidative stress produced by kainic acid-induced seizures. In addition, the induction of interleukin-1 beta gene expression suggests an inflammatory response in brain regions damaged by kainic acid-induced seizures. Delineating the regulation of genes associated with oxidative and inflammatory responses can contribute to a fuller understanding of seizures and associated brain damage.
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PMID:Temporalspatial patterns of expression of metallothionein-I and -III and other stress related genes in rat brain after kainic acid-induced seizures. 765 48

Examination of 13 patients suffering from generalized epilepsy has shown about 20-25% decreases in the activity of superoxide dismutase (SOD) and glutathione peroxidase (GP) in red blood cells. Out of them 9 patients were treated with the antioxidant alpha-tocopherol (600 mg daily). Prior to alpha-tocopherol treatment all patients showed abnormal electroencephalographic (EEG) changes; 4 weeks later the effects of the antioxidant appeared as positive EEG changes, reduced frequency of epileptic seizures, increased SOD activity and patients' improved general state. Thus, the addition of the antioxidant to the multitherapy of epilepsy enhances antioxidative activity and therapeutical effects.
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PMID:[The antioxidant system in the dynamic combined treatment of epilepsy patients with traditional anticonvulsant preparations and an antioxidant--alpha-tocopherol]. 811 50

The paradox of aerobic life, or the 'Oxygen Paradox', is that higher eukaryotic aerobic organisms cannot exist without oxygen, yet oxygen is inherently dangerous to their existence. This 'dark side' of oxygen relates directly to the fact that each oxygen atom has one unpaired electron in its outer valence shell, and molecular oxygen has two unpaired electrons. Thus atomic oxygen is a free radical and molecular oxygen is a (free) bi-radical. Concerted tetravalent reduction of oxygen by the mitochondrial electron-transport chain, to produce water, is considered to be a relatively safe process; however, the univalent reduction of oxygen generates reactive intermediates. The reductive environment of the cellular milieu provides ample opportunities for oxygen to undergo unscheduled univalent reduction. Thus the superoxide anion radical, hydrogen peroxide and the extremely reactive hydroxyl radical are common products of life in an aerobic environment, and these agents appear to be responsible for oxygen toxicity. To survive in such an unfriendly oxygen environment, living organisms generate--or garner from their surroundings--a variety of water- and lipid-soluble antioxidant compounds. Additionally, a series of antioxidant enzymes, whose role is to intercept and inactivate reactive oxygen intermediates, is synthesized by all known aerobic organisms. Although extremely important, the antioxidant enzymes and compounds are not completely effective in preventing oxidative damage. To deal with the damage that does still occur, a series of damage removal/repair enzymes, for proteins, lipids and DNA, is synthesized. Finally, since oxidative stress levels may vary from time to time, organisms are able to adapt to such fluctuating stresses by inducing the synthesis of antioxidant enzymes and damage removal/repair enzymes. In a perfect world the story would end here; unfortunately, biology is seldom so precise. The reality appears to be that, despite the valiant antioxidant and repair mechanisms described above, oxidative damage remains an inescapable outcome of aerobic existence. In recent years oxidative stress has been implicated in a wide variety of degenerative processes, diseases and syndromes, including the following: mutagenesis, cell transformation and cancer; atherosclerosis, arteriosclerosis, heart attacks, strokes and ischaemia/reperfusion injury; chronic inflammatory diseases, such as rheumatoid arthritis, lupus erythematosus and psoriatic arthritis; acute inflammatory problems, such as wound healing; photo-oxidative stresses to the eye, such as cataract; central-nervous-system disorders, such as certain forms of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, certain glutathione peroxidase-linked adolescent seizures, Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's dementia; and a wide variety of age-related disorders, perhaps even including factors underlying the aging process itself. Some of these oxidation-linked diseases or disorders can be exacerbated, perhaps even initiated, by numerous environmental pro-oxidants and/or pro-oxidant drugs and foods. Alternatively, compounds found in certain foods may be able to significantly bolster biological resistance against oxidants. Currently, great interest centres on the possible protective value of a wide variety of plant-derived antioxidant compounds, particularly those from fruits and vegetables.
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PMID:Oxidative stress: the paradox of aerobic life. 866 Mar 87

We evaluated oxidative stress associated with a model of experimental epilepsy. Male Wistar rats were injected i.p. with 150 mg/kg convulsant 3-mercaptopropionic acid and decapitated in two stages: during seizures or in the post-seizure period. Spontaneous chemiluminescence, levels of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances, total antioxidant capacity and antioxidant enzyme activities were measured in cerebellum, hippocampus, cerebral cortex and striatum. In animals killed at seizure, increases of 42% and 90% were observed in spontaneous chemiluminescence of cerebellum and cerebral cortex homogenates, respectively, accompanied by a 25% increase in cerebral cortex levels of thiobarbituric acid reactive substances. In the post-seizure stage, emission completely returned to control levels in cerebral cortex and partly in cerebellum, thus showing oxidative stress reversibility in time. Hippocampus and striatum seemed less vulnerable areas to oxidative damage. A 30% decrease in glutathione peroxidase activity was only observed in cerebral cortex during seizures, while catalase and superoxide dismutase remained unchanged in all four areas during either stage. Likewise, total antioxidant capacity was unaffected in any of the studied areas. It is suggested that oxidative stress in this model of epilepsy arises from an increase in oxidant species rather than from depletion of antioxidant defences.
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PMID:Regional vulnerability to oxidative stress in a model of experimental epilepsy. 982 Nov 50


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