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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This review paper deals with the transport of the protein tracer horseradish
peroxidase
across cerebral vessels under normal and various experimental conditions. Electronmicroscopical investigations have revealed that, under normal conditions, a minor vesicular transfer of intravenously injected
peroxidase
occurs across the endothelium in segments of arterioles, capillaries and venules, especially in arterioles with a diameter about 15-30 mu. This normally occurring vesicular transport is susceptible to various experimental conditions. Thus the transfer of tracer increases when a hypertonic solution is injected into the internal carotid artery presumably due to vesicular transport. Extensive acute hypertension of short duration also increases the vesicular transfer of
peroxidase
from blood to brain. Identical observations are obtained when the hypertension is evoked by intravenous injection of phentolamine and by electrically induced
seizures
. During the postischemic period, one hour after release of the occlusion of an internal carotid artery in the Mongolian gerbil the vesicular transport of
peroxidase
is increased across the endothelium of cerebral vessels. The explanation may be release of serotonin from blood platelets during the occlusion. The serotonin could then increase the blood pressure locally in the brain resulting in an enhanced permeability. Serotonin, after perfusion through the cerebral ventricular system, is also able to increase the normally occurring vesicular transfer. The most likely mechanism behind this phenomenon seems at the moment to be local hypertension evoked by serotonin-induced vasoconstriction of arterioles. Finally, the enhanced vesicular transport across cerebral endothelium caused by porto-caval anastomosis is mentioned and the possible role of disturbances in the metabolism of amines as responsible for the extravasation is discussed.
...
PMID:The blood-brain barrier to horseradish peroxidase under normal and experimental conditions. 33 57
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.
...
PMID:Clinical, social and biochemical studies on Batten's syndrome, alias Spielmeyer-Vogot or Stengel's Syndrome. 87 40
The computed tomographic (CT) and magnetic resonance (MR) imaging findings in a middle-aged male with cerebral syphilis are described. He presented with convulsive
seizures
and focal neurological deficits. A CT scan revealed a slightly enhanced, low-density mass in the left parieto-occipital region. MR imaging showed low intensity on T1-weighted images and high intensity on T2-weighted images. He was initially diagnosed as having a low-grade glioma. However, intraoperative histological examination of a small surgical specimen revealed no tumor cells but heavy infiltration of inflammatory cells in the meninges and cerebral parenchyma. Immunostaining for Treponema organisms by the
peroxidase
-antiperoxidase method was positive. Although the clinical and radiological findings are nonspecific, neurosyphilis should be considered in any patient in whom a nonspecific mass lesion is demonstrated by CT and MR imaging.
...
PMID:Neurosyphilis manifesting as a focal mass lesion: computed tomographic and magnetic resonance imaging features--case report. 169 49
The E1 (epileptic) mouse is considered a model for complex partial seizures in humans.
Seizures
in E1 mice begin around 7-8 weeks of age and persist throughout life. To determine if astrocytic gliosis was present in adult seizing E1 mice, the distribution of glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) was studied in the hippocampus using an antibody to GFAP. The mean number of GFAP-positive cells per square millimeter of hippocampus was approximately 15- to 40-fold higher in adult E1 mice than in nonseizing control C57BL/6J (B6) mice or in young nonseizing E1 mice. Relative GFAP concentration (expressed per milligram of total tissue protein) in hippocampus and cerebellum was estimated by densitometric scanning of
peroxidase
-stained western blots. GFAP concentration was 2.7-fold greater in hippocampus of adult seizing E1 mice than in the control B6 mice. No differences in GFAP content were detected between the strains in the cerebellum. Because gangliosides can serve as cell surface markers for changes in neuronal cytoarchitecture, they were analyzed to determine if the gliotic response in E1 mice was associated with changes in neural composition. Although the total ganglioside concentration of hippocampus, cerebral cortex, and cerebellum was similar in adult E1 and control B6 mice, a synaptic membrane enriched ganglioside, GD1a, was elevated in the adult E1 cerebral cortex and hippocampus. The findings indicate that E1 mice express a type of gliosis that is not accompanied by obvious neuronal loss.
...
PMID:Biochemical correlates of epilepsy in the E1 mouse: analysis of glial fibrillary acidic protein and gangliosides. 172 17
Soman, an organophosphorous irreversible inhibitor of acetylcholinesterase, was studied for its effect on the rat blood-brain barrier (BBB) during the first 24 h of intoxication. Young adult male Sprague-Dawley rats, injected with Evans blue-dye and surviving a subsequent single convulsive dose of soman (114 micrograms/kg, 0.9LD50), presented focal and diffuse penetration of dye in areas of brain normally considered protected by the BBB. Invasion was widest during the first hour when signs of excitation, respiratory distress and convulsions peaked and was absent at 24 h. During this time period, cholinesterase inhibition, as measured by enzyme assay, persisted in brain and blood at 10% and 6% of control values respectively. Brains of nonconvulsing animals and animals pretreated with nembutal (45 mg/kg, I.P.) or with diazepam (10 mg/kg, I.P.) were free of extravasated dye. A ranking of dye-breached brain areas suggested that cerebellar and cerebral cortex were most frequently involved while brain stem was rarely stained. Ultrastructural analysis of breached areas with horseradish
peroxidase
as a tracer molecule, revealed that the probable subcellular mechanism of the induced breach was enhanced vesicular transport, a mechanism similarly described for
seizure
. Consequences of the breach were emphasized with the detection of significantly elevated levels of an exogenously administered quaternary compound, 3H-hexamethonium. These findings present additional evidence that an anticholinesterase-induced breach of the rat blood-brain barrier is convulsive dependent, demonstrates BBB mechanisms similar to that of
seizure
, and can allow CNS penetration of blood-borne drugs and circulatory proteins that normally would be slowed or excluded by an intact BBB.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Effect of an anticholinesterase compound on the ultrastructure and function of the rat blood-brain barrier: a review and experiment. 207 Mar 59
Kainic acid (KA) is a potent neuroexcitatory drug widely used in the experimental study of
seizure
activity. Subcutaneous injection of KA into rats (10 mg/kg in saline 10 mg/ml; pH 7.0) induced longlasting status epilepticus followed by damage of CNS tissue in the entorhinal/pyriform cortex and in the hippocampus. The studies covered by this report demonstrated the formation of cytotoxic brain edema characterized by massive swelling of perineuronal and perivascular astroglia with microcirculation disturbance after KA injection, resulting in parenchymal necrosis of the affected region; furthermore perivenous hemorrhages and necroses corresponding to herniation lesions of the brain appear. Tracer studies with Na-fluorescein, Evans blue, albumin, and horseradish
peroxidase
revealed only a mild increase in the permeability of cerebral vessels, topographically unrelated to areas of brain edema. Treatment of brain edema with dexamethasone did not influence the incidence and severity of edematous brain damage. Treatment with mannitol, however, completely prevented the lesion in 54% of animals injected with KA. The present results indicate that brain edema plays an important role in the pathogenesis of epileptic brain damage following systemic KA intoxication. It is suggested that in this model brain edema develops due to massive ionic imbalance caused by KA induced persistent neuronal excitation. In addition the model demonstrates the possible pathogenetic role of selective astrocytic swelling in the production of local hippocampal ischemia followed by herniation and its sequels. Such pathology originating from astrocytes probably may occur also in closed brain injury.
...
PMID:Some mechanisms of brain edema studied in a kainic acid model. 213 Jun 48
Epilepsy complicates severe head trauma. Development of persistent
seizures
appears to correlate with the extent of trauma. Although early reports suggested that prophylactic administration of antiepileptic drugs would prevent epileptogenesis, controlled studies have failed to corroborate this assumption. Head trauma initiates a sequence of responses that includes altered blood flow and vasoregulation, disruption of the blood-brain barrier, increases in intracranial pressure, focal or diffuse ischemia, hemorrhage, inflammation, necrosis, and disruption of fiber tracts. The presence of an intracranial hematoma has a robust association with the development of post-traumatic epilepsy. Extravasation of blood is followed by hemolysis and deposition of heme-containing compounds into the neuropil, initiating a sequence of univalent redox reactions and generating various free radical species, including superoxides, hydroxyl radicals, peroxides, and perferryl ions. Free radicals initiate peroxidation reactions by hydrogen abstraction from methylene groups adjacent to double bonds of fatty acids and lipids within cellular membranes. Intrinsic enzymatic mechanisms for control of free radical reactions include activation of catalase,
peroxidase
, and superoxide dismutase. Steroids, proteins, and tocopherol also terminate peroxidative reactions. Tocopherol and selenium are effective in preventing tissue injury initiated by ferrous chloride and heme compounds. Treatment strategies for prevention or prophylaxis of post-traumatic epilepsy must await absolute knowledge of mechanisms. Antioxidants and chelators may be useful, given the speculation that peroxidative reactions may be an important component of brain injury responses. However, potential treatment strategies involving gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABA) agonists, NMDA receptor antagonists, and barbiturates need further scientific assessment.
...
PMID:Post-traumatic epilepsy: cellular mechanisms and implications for treatment. 222 73
The protein transport of the neocortical blood vessels during experimental focal
seizures
was investigated in adult Wistar rats. The
seizure
focus was produced by the local application of isosmotic and isohydric 4-aminopyridine solution, while the electrocorticogram was monitored. The protein transport of the vessels was assessed through the histochemical detection of intravenously injected horseradish
peroxidase
. Serial sections of the whole
seizure
focus were evaluated in the light microscope, and the areas of protein extravasation were measured planimetrically. Two groups of animals were treated with diphenylhydantoin for 8 days, and the electro-corticographic and
seizure
experiments were then performed. Three main features of the pathological protein transport were found: 1) the increase in protein permeability was not mediated by a hypertensive crisis during the
seizure
; 2) the pathologic changes in the neurons and glia always preceded the breakdown of the blood-brain barrier; 3) this breakdown is probably closely related to neuronal hyperactivity, since it was prevented by diphenylhydantoin.
...
PMID:Vasogenic brain edema in focal 4-aminopyridine seizures: the role of neuronal hyperactivity. 235 56
Cerebrovascular permeability to protein (CVP-p) was assessed in rats following the systemic injection of either kainic acid (KA) or harmaline. The extravasation of a foreign (horseradish
peroxidase
, HRP) or an endogenous (rat immunoglobulin G, IgG) tracer protein was determined using immunohistochemical methods. During KA-induced
seizures
, an extravasation of both HRP and presumed IgG occurred in similar forebrain loci; a lamina-specific extravasation occurred within the dorsal hippocampus. During harmaline-induced tremors protein extravasation also occurred, but was tracer dependent. HRP reaction product was observed within the inferior olive, the cortex of the cerebellar vermis and the neocortex. However, IgG-like immunoreactivity was only detected within the circumventricular organs of harmaline-treated rats. Because KA, but not harmaline, is neurotoxic, the results are consistent with an influence of endogenous serum protein extravasation on
seizure
-related hippocampal damage. Possible homeostatic properties of altered CVP-p are also considered.
...
PMID:Foreign and endogenous serum protein extravasation during harmaline tremors or kainic acid seizures in the rat: a comparison. 314 May 71
Agarose isoelectric focusing, followed by protein transfer to cellulose nitrate membrane and double-antibody avidin-biotin
peroxidase
staining (avidin-biotin agarose isoelectric focusing), was used to demonstrate oligoclonal IgG bands in unconcentrated cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) and serum; 161 consecutive pediatric patients, ages 6 months to 16 years with a variety of mainly neurologic disorders, were studied. The procedure was standardized for agarose isoelectric focusing (AIF) using 5 microliter specimens containing 125 ng of IgG. Oligoclonal bands were found in the CSF of 12% of the patients; bands were found simultaneously in the CSF and serum of 10% of the patients, mostly those with nervous system infections, but also those with central nervous system tumors,
seizures
, or migraine. In about 50% of positive cases, oligoclonal bands constituted the only CSF abnormality, reflecting an abnormal humoral immune response within the CSF-central nervous system compartment. Avidin-biotin AIF can be recommended as an integrated part of routine CSF examinations in children.
...
PMID:Demonstration in children of oligoclonal IgG bands in unconcentrated CSF using agarose isoelectric focusing and immunolabeling. 333 4
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