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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
It has been known that various derangements in ionic homeostasis develop following neural trauma. In particular, potassium efflux out of and calcium influx into the cells are thought to play important roles in causing cell damage. Concomitantly we have previously reported that increased extracellular potassium per se provoked by head injury induces convulsive
seizure
such that the sustained high extracellular potassium leads to animal death. The purpose of the present study was further to examine the beneficial effect of drugs which could inhibit such detrimental ion movements in experimental head injury. Awake male mice of dd-strain were restrained and subjected to head injury using a bakelite weight of 30 gm dropped from a height of 17.6 cm above the skull. This injury resulted in immediate loss of consciousness in 100%, convulsive
seizure
in about 70% and death in about 30% of animals. The severity of consciousness disturbance was evaluated by a pair of indices in time interval; time required for the recovery of righting reflex (RR) and for the recovery of spontaneous movement (SM). Ethacrynic acid, a loop diuretics, blocks carrier-mediated chloride transport into astroglia associated with sodium and
water
in the presence of high extracellular potassium. Animals were treated with either 0.5-1.0 mg/kg or 2.0-4.0 mg/kg of ethacrynic acid administered via tail vein 10 min before injury. In the other group of animals, a calcium entry blocker, flunarizine was injected intraperitoneally in doses 5, 10 and 20 mg/kg one hour pre-insult.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Protective effect on the brain of ion-blockers in experimental head injury]. 243 80
Trimethyltin (TMT) produces prominent neuron death in the hippocampus. The time-course of TMT-induced damage was studied using reduced-silver procedures for impregnation of degenerating axons and their terminals, and a modified Timm's stain procedure for visualization of hippocampal transitional metals. Standard cell body stains were also used. Fifty-four, adult, Long-Evans rats were gavaged with 6.0 mg TMT/kg b.wt. and 10 rats were gavaged with distilled
water
as controls. Five TMT-gavaged rats and one saline-gavaged rat were sacrificed on either postgavage day 1, 3, 6, 9, 14, 19, 30, 45, 70 or 99. Histological examination revealed a band of degenerating terminals in the stratum lucidum, below the hippocampal subfields CA3a,b pyramidal cells, by postgavage day 3. This preceded dentate gyrus granule cell loss supplying the mossy fiber input to the stratum lucidum by several days. Hippocampal pyramidal cell necrosis continued through the examination period while dentate granule cell loss subsided between postgavage days 9 and 14. Fiber and terminal degeneration was more extensive in the dorsal hippocampus than in the ventral hippocampus, although Timm's-stained sections revealed "bleaching" of stainable metal in the mossy fiber pathway of the ventral hippocampus. These data suggest that loss of ventral dentate granule cells might reduce TMT-induced necrosis of pyramidal cells in the ventral (temporal) part of the Ammon's horn, possibly by preventing the spread of
seizure
activity in this region of the hippocampus. Additionally, although previous studies have reported the toxic effects of TMT to last approximately 60 days, the results of the present study indicate that TMT-induced degeneration continues for more than 3 months. Reduced-silver stains, such as the Fink-Heimer procedure, appear to be more sensitive indicators of enduring neuropathology than more traditional cell stains.
...
PMID:The time-course of trimethyltin-induced fiber and terminal degeneration in hippocampus. 247 Oct 52
The long-term prognosis and factors associated with good and poor prognosis were studied in 95 patients with partial
seizures
. Thirty-nine per cent of the patients became
seizure
free. Significant prognostic factors were: male sex, most attacks while awake, attacks precipitated by a hot-
water
bath, presence of autonomic phenomena and complex symptoms, chronicity and severity of the illness, and
seizure
activity and the presence of symmetric synchronous EEG foci in the initial EEG records. Regularity of medication, duration of illness and autonomic phenomena were 3 predictive factors for long-term prognosis.
...
PMID:Seizure prognosis for partial epilepsies in India. 249 35
Venous pressures were measured within the vein of Galen aneurysm/straight sinus complex in 15 patients with Galenic arteriovenous fistulae and vein of Galen aneurysms. Pressures exceeded normal (less than 5 cm of
H2O
) in each instance, ranging between 9 and 55 cm of
H2O
. Measured values exceeding 20 cm of
H2O
were associated with an increased occurrence of brain calcification. Mean venous pressures were relatively higher in the patients with thalamic arteriovenous malformations, and relatively lower in patients with true vein of Galen fistulae and choroidal type malformations. A pressure gradient across the straight sinus was measured in one patient and suspected in three others when disproportionate dilatation of the vein of Galen occurred in the presence of a small or normal-sized straight sinus. No clear relationship existed between levels of venous pressure elevation and degree of ventriculomegaly. Refractory heart failure occurred only in neonates with choroidal type fistulae and no apparent venous outflow obstruction. It is likely that the degree of venous pressure elevation reflects the hemodynamic significance of arteriovenous shunt, provided it is interpreted in context with the current clinical status and the angioarchitecture of the Galenic fistula. Such data may assist in the timing of embolotherapy. Patients with lower venous pressure are not likely to develop brain calcification or
seizures
, and therefore can tolerate transtorcular embolotherapy staged at wider intervals.
...
PMID:Venous pressure measurements in vein of Galen aneurysms. 249 63
The effects of large doses of L-phenylalanine and of aspartame on
seizure
susceptibility and severity have been assessed in baboons Papio papio from Senegal which show photosensitive epileptic responses similar to primary generalised epilepsy in man. L-Phenylalanine, 50, 150 or 450 mg/kg, or aspartame, 300 or 1000 mg/kg, were administered orally. Peak plasma L-phenylalanine concentrations of approximately 2000 mumoles/l occurred 1-4 h after the highest dose of L-phenylalanine or aspartame. The plasma L-phenylalanine to large neutral amino acid ratio increased approximately 30-fold at this time. Compared with
water
administration there were no changes in epileptic responses 1-5 h after either treatment. In this primate model of epilepsy acute increases in plasma phenylalanine concentration are neither pro- nor anticonvulsant.
...
PMID:Lack of effect of aspartame or of L-phenylalanine on photically induced myoclonus in the baboon, Papio papio. 250 88
This report describes the investigation of a spontaneous grand mal seizure in a 55-year old woman, being treated with drugs and ECT for depression. The spontaneous
seizure
was due to hyponatremia caused by self-induced
water
intoxication, although psychotrophic medication may have contributed by lowering the
seizure
threshold. The diagnosis of hyponatremia is discussed.
...
PMID:Hyponatremic seizure following ECT. 250 79
Rhythmic activity of the spike-and-wave type was induced by administration of metrazol (25 or 50 mg/kg s.c.) in male rats with implanted cortical electrodes. The animals were deprived of
water
and then allowed to lick
water
from a tube. Under control conditions they licked for 3-4 min without an interruption. Rhythmic metrazol activity deranged the licking; when this pathologic activity represented about one third of the time, the licking was fully blocked. We conclude that the impairment of highly motivated behaviour confirms the adequacy of the rhythmic metrazol activity as a model of human primary generalized
seizures
of the absence type.
...
PMID:Rhythmic metrazol activity in rats as a model of human absences. 250 25
Brain
water
content was measured by gas-chromatography in rats following intraperitoneal injection of drugs and fatty acids related to the etiology of Reye syndrome. A statistically significant increase in brain
water
content was observed following injection of 5% glucose solution, valproic acid, acetyl salicylic acid, calcium hopantenate, margosa oil, 4-pentenoic acid, linolenate and arachidonate.
Seizures
occurred in all animals given valproic acid, margosa oil and 4-pentenoic acid, and in 25% of those given 5% glucose solution + anti-diuretic hormone. The results of these studies may help in the selection of appropriate agents for experimental induction of acute encephalopathy and brain edema in animal models of Reye syndrome.
...
PMID:Effects of drugs and fatty acids related to Reye syndrome on brain water content in rats. 251 90
Renal failure and its treatment are associated with a number of neurologic complications that must be differentiated from the nervous system complications of the disease leading to renal failure. Uremic encephalopathy is characterized by clinical signs of depressed brain function coexisting with excitation, often in the form of generalized epileptic
seizures
. Peripheral neuropathy, due to axonal involvement, is common and is characterized by ascending sensory and motor dysfunction. The treatment of renal failure also may lead to the development of neurologic abnormalities in the form of dialysis disequilibrium characterized by headache, nausea, irritability that may progress to
seizures
, coma, and death, which is caused by the entry of free
water
into the brain and swelling. Dialysis dementia, caused by the toxic effects of aluminum, is now rare. Renal transplant recipients may develop cerebrovascular disease, infections by opportunistic organisms, or malignant neoplasms, particularly primary lymphoma of the brain. As transplant recipients live longer and more operations are performed, additional complications may be seen in the future.
...
PMID:Neurologic complications of renal disease. 254 62
Fluid overload and dehydration are potentially serious physiologic perturbations. Their effects on the pharmacodynamics of drugs are essentially unknown. This investigation was designed to determine the effects of acute fluid overload or
water
deprivation on the hypnotic activity of phenobarbital and on the neurotoxicity of theophylline in male Lewis rats. In the first experiment, 5% dextrose in
water
(D5W) was infused i.v. in an amount equal to 5 or 10% of body weight and phenobarbital was infused immediately thereafter until the onset of loss of righting reflex (LRR). The total infused dose and the serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) concentrations of phenobarbital at that time were significantly lower than in control animals. When phenobarbital was infused about 2.5 hr after D5W, the infused dose and the serum and CSF concentrations of phenobarbital at LRR were normal. When the rats received D5W and an injection of vasopressin, 25 I.U./kg, or vasopressin only, the infused dose and the serum and CSF concentrations of phenobarbital at LRR were significantly lower than in controls despite the 2.5-hr interval between the respective pretreatments and the phenobarbital infusion.
Water
deprivation for 24 or 48 hr had no significant effect on phenobarbital dose and concentrations at LRR. Intravenous infusion of D5W to 10% of body weight immediately or 2.5 hr before theophylline infusion had no significant effect on the total infused dose and the serum and CSF concentrations of theophylline at onset of maximal
seizures
. This lack of effect occurred despite appreciable hyponatremia and hypomagnesemia immediately after D5W infusion.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Kinetics of drug action in disease states. XXXVII. Effects of acute fluid overload and water deprivation on the hypnotic activity of phenobarbital and the neurotoxicity of theophylline in rats. 260 Aug 17
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