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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A series of 4-aminophenylacetamides was prepared and evaluated for anticonvulsant activity. These compounds were prepared during studies designed to determine the relationship between benzamide-like compounds and anticonvulsant effects. Unlike benzamides, these phenylacetamides have a methylene group between the aromatic ring and the amide carbonyl. Consequently, formal conjugation is lost, and the number of conformational degrees of freedom has increased. The compounds were tested in mice against
seizures
induced by electroshock and pentylenetetrazol, and in the rotorod assay for neurologic deficit. The more active and selective anticonvulsants prepared in this study were those having an additional aromatic ring as part of the substituent on the amide
nitrogen
. Compound 16, the 4-aminophenylacetamide derived from 2,6-dimethylaniline, was the most potent compound observed (ED50 = 50.50 mg/kg against electroshock-induced convulsions and ED50 = 93.20 mg/kg against pentylenetetrazol-induced convulsions).
...
PMID:Anticonvulsant activity of some 4-aminophenylacetamides. 358 17
Central nervous system oxygen toxicity in hyperbaric oxygen-inert gas mixtures was studied by exposing male rats to various gas mixtures having the same oxygen partial pressure and varying pressures of inert gases. The duration of the latent period until the appearance of electrical discharges in the electroencephalogram was used as the criterion for the sensitivity to CNS oxygen toxicity. Two hundred and twenty rats with chronically implanted cortical electrodes were subjected to a single exposure to 1 of 11 different gas mixtures at ambient pressures ranging from 5 to 10 ATA. All gas mixtures had a constant oxygen partial pressure of 5 ATA and varying pressures of inert gas (helium or
nitrogen
). The duration of the latent period was found to be significantly different in the 11 experimental groups (P less than 0.001). While increasing the inert gas pressure, the latency gradually shortened, reaching the lowest values in mixtures of 5 ATA oxygen and 3 ATA of either inert gas. On further increase in the inert gas pressure up to a total ambient pressure of 10 ATA, the latency returned to control (pure 5 ATA oxygen) values. No difference was found between
nitrogen
and helium of equal partial pressures. These findings suggest that the risk of CNS oxygen toxicity in gas mixtures is not determined solely by the PO2, and even a relatively low pressure of inert gas can contribute to the imminence of hyperbaric-oxygen-induced
seizures
.
...
PMID:CNS oxygen toxicity in oxygen-inert gas mixtures. 368 42
Three adolescent patients with severe
seizure
disorders were treated with phenacemide. All three patients showed elevated serum creatinine and normal blood urea
nitrogen
values while on phenacemide. Simultaneous urea and creatinine clearance studies performed on each patient demonstrated normal urea clearances and decreased creatinine clearances. Inulin clearance performed in one patient was normal. The medication was discontinued in two of the patients because of co-existing neutropenia. Serum creatinine values returned to normal after phenacemide treatment was terminated. The elevation in serum creatinine values with phenacemide appears to be dose related, reversible, and unrelated to impairment of glomerular filtration.
...
PMID:Elevated serum creatinine levels in three patients treated with phenacemide. 395 82
Selectively substituted hydantoins 1 (15 examples), 4-hydroxy-2-imidazolidinones 2 (13 examples), 2-imidazolones 3 (10 examples), 2-imidazolidinones 4 (four examples), vicinal diamines 5 (two examples), and simple amino acid derivatives 6 (four examples) have been prepared and evaluated in the maximal electroshock
seizure
(MES), subcutaneous pentylenetetrazole
seizure
threshold (sc Met), and rotorod (Tox) tests. The medium effective doses (ED50) and the medium toxic dose (TD50) for the most active compounds are reported. In general, the most pronounced activity was observed for hydantoins 1 and protected amino acids 6. Within each series of compounds, enhanced anticonvulsant activity was often noted for compounds containing an aromatic group one carbon removed from a
nitrogen
atom. Among the most active compounds observed were the amino acid derivative N-acetyl-D,L-alanine benzylamide (6d) and the two 2-imidazolones 4-methyl-1-(phenylmethyl)-1,3-dihydro-2H-imidazol-2-one (3e) and 1-phenyl-1,3-dihydro-2H-imidazol-2-one (3g). Compound 6d proved to be slightly more potent in the MES test than phenacemide.
...
PMID:Effect of structural modification of the hydantoin ring on anticonvulsant activity. 398 20
The activity of the free radical scavenger, superoxide dismutase, was studied in focal cerebral ischemia produced in Mongolian gerbils (Meriones unguiculatus) by occluding the right common and left external carotid arteries under halothane anesthesia. After recovery from anesthesia animals were classified according to their neurologic symptoms. Five animals exhibiting neurologic symptoms such as hemiparesis and rolling
seizures
were reanesthetized 120 min after vascular occlusion and their brains frozen in situ with liquid
nitrogen
. A series of 20-micron-thick coronal sections was cut in a cryostat; pictorial representations of tissue pH, ATP, and glucose were obtained using fluorescent and bioluminescent techniques. Using a highly sensitive bioluminescent technique, Cu,Zn-superoxide dismutase (Cu,Zn-SOD) and Mn-superoxide dismutase (Mn-SOD) activities were then measured in samples from both ischemic and nonischemic regions of the remaining tissue block. Cu,Zn-SOD and Mn-SOD activities were, respectively, 13.9 +/- 0.7 X 10(3) units/g and 5.4 +/- 0.3 X 10(3) units/g in the nonischemic tissue, and 13.2 +/- 0.6 X 10(3) units/g and 5.0 +/- 0.2 X 10(3) units/g within the ischemic tissue. Thus focal cerebral ischemia does not lead to a global decrease in SOD activity, as observed by others after heart and liver ischemia.
...
PMID:Superoxide dismutase activity in experimental focal cerebral ischemia. 406 77
The authors valued some metabolic parameters (sodium, potassium, calcium, blood levels of glucose, proteins,
nitrogen
, creatinine) in 159 children with febrile convulsions and compared the results with those of a group of children with fever (50 subjects) and of a group of health, fever free children (50 subjects). In the patients with febrile convulsions serum levels of sodium, calcium and osmolarity resulted significantly lower than those obtained in both control groups. The electrolytic modification (overall hyponatremia, probably due to a SIADH) may have a role in short-term relapses of febrile convulsions. Hyponatremia is present also in some children with high fever, without
seizures
; it may be that hyponatremia, in predisposed subjects, lower the threshold of neuromuscular excitability.
...
PMID:[Electrolytic changes in febrile convulsions]. 409 12
Since the mid-1960s, millions of dollars in federal funds have been used for research in the development of the Total Artificial Heart (TAH). Significant advances in bio-materials and pump and energy systems, as well as animal experimentations, have led to the clinical reality of the TAH's use in man. On December 2, 1982, Dr. Barney Clark became the first recipient of a permanent TAH. He had been suffering from terminal congestive heart failure secondary to idiopathic cardiomyopathy. No other treatment was available, since, at the age of 61, he was too old for heart transplant. Dr. Clark's 112-day hospitalization was complicated by pulmonary problems, renal insufficiency,
seizures
, nosebleeds, and a broken heart valve. Dr. Clark appeared malnourished before surgery, and his numerous postoperative complications confounded attempts at nutritional support. Standard nutritional assessment techniques were inadequate or inappropriate in the face of severe edema, renal failure, and multiple transfusions. Although
nitrogen
balance was achieved intermittently, for the majority of his hospitalization Dr. Clark remained in negative
nitrogen
balance, due mainly to renal insufficiency. Some of the nutritional complications seen in the first TAH patient might have been preventable with early nutritional assessment and more aggressive support. The Artificial Heart Management Team at the University of Utah now includes a nutritionist, and future protocols outline detailed nutrition monitoring.
...
PMID:Nutrition for the first Total Artificial Heart patient: implications for future patients. 642 92
A symptomatic elevation in plasma ammonium concentration, termed hyperammonemia, is associated with numerous congenital and acquired conditions (Table 11). In some cases, such as urea cycle disorders, ammonia is the principal toxin. In other instances, such as portal systemic encephalopathy, it is but one of a number of metabolic disturbances, However, in either case hyperammonemic episodes should be treated aggressively to prevent coma, subsequent brain damage, or death. This involves restricting protein intake, providing adequate calories, and giving agents that remove accumulated
nitrogen
. Long-term therapy relies on diagnosing the specific disease rate. This rarely requires invasive procedures such as liver biopsy. In most cases measurement of plasma amino acids and urinary organic acids will identify the defect. Treatment involving restriction of
nitrogen
intake, vitamin supplementation, or stimulation of alternative pathways of waste
nitrogen
excretion can then be instituted. Early therapy, especially in patients with neonatal-onset hyperammonemia, is imperative to avoid severe brain damage. On this basis, the plasma ammonium level should be determined in virtually every newborn with lethargy, hypotonia, poor feeding,
seizures
, and/or respiratory distress of unclear origin (Table 12).
...
PMID:Hyperammonemia. 651 17
The interrelation between the metabolic responses to ischemia and
seizure
propensity was studied in two groups of
seizure
prone (SP) and non-
seizure
prone (NSP) gerbils. The metabolic state was evaluated in vivo using the light guide surface fluorometry as well as in the frozen brain scanned at liquid N2 temperature for Fp/PN ratio after monitoring the brain in vivo. The results could be summarized as follows. (1) Unilateral carotid artery occlusion led to partial ischemia in the ipsilateral hemisphere while the contralateral hemisphere remained normoxic. (2) Animal variability in the degree of the ischemia insult due to unilateral occlusion was not side dependent or in correlation with
seizure
propensity. (3) Significant correlation was found between the NADH increase during ischemia and the redox state measurements done in the same brain after funnel freezing with liquid
nitrogen
. (4) In a large number of the gerbils (not depending on the origin or strain) a peculiar inter-hemispheric blood supply connection was found. A narrow band (1 mm in width) of tissue near the midline obtained its blood via the same vessels supplying the contralateral hemisphere. (5) We did not find any correlation between blood vessel anatomy to the brain and
seizure
propensity.
...
PMID:Brain metabolic responses to ischemia in the mongolian gerbil: in vivo and freeze trapped redox scanning. 662 5
Many benzodiazepines used as anticonvulsants have
nitrogen
radicals in positions 1 and 4. Clobazam has
nitrogen
radicals in positions 1 and 5. We studied the antiepileptic effect of clobazam in 36 patients with intractable epilepsies in childhood. Their ages were 1 year 1 month to 16 years 5 months (mean 8 years). The mean initial dose was 0.33 mg/kg of daily doses and increased up to 0.71 mg/kg. Nine cases (primary generalized epilepsy 2/2, secondary generalized epilepsy 7/29) were completely free from
seizures
, and another 9 (secondary generalized epilepsy 8/29, partial epilepsy 1/5) experienced a decrease of 50% or more in
seizure
frequency.
Seizure
frequency did not change in 16, and increased in the other 2 (secondary generalized epilepsy 2/29). The antiepileptic effects were observed on the first day to 10th day after clobazam treatment. There were recurrences of
seizures
in 4 out of 9 patients with complete control of
seizures
, 1 month alter in 3 and 10 months later in one. Mean serum clobazam level of 7 improved cases was 73 ng/ml and that of 3 cases with no response was 94 ng/ml. Although mild clinical side effects such as drowsiness were observed transiently in 17 cases, no abnormality was found in laboratory investigations performed.
...
PMID:Antiepileptic effects of clobazam in children. 703 90
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