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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Focal cortical CBF and oxygenation were measured in rats during repetitive
seizures
to determine whether CBF is maintained above a critical level for adequate delivery of O2. Cerebral oxygenation was determined by measuring relative changes in the oxidation/reduction level of
cytochrome aa3
and CBF was measured by the washout of H2. During early
seizures
, cortical CBF increased to 350% of control and cortical oxygenation also rose markedly. During later
seizures
, both the increases in CBF and in cortical oxygenation were attenuated progressively. This was accompanied also by attenuation of the associated increases in MABP. Cortical oxygenation decreased during a
seizure
if the increase in CBF failed to exceed 150-200% of control, defining the critical CBF value. Ventilating the rats on 97% O2 resulted in restoration of the
seizure
-associated increases in cortical oxygenation in 50% of the cases. The elevation of inspired O2 was effective only if CBF increased once again above 150-200% of control, confirming that the critical CBF lies within this range of values. We conclude that CBF must rise greater than 200% of control levels to provide sufficient O2 to meet the enhanced metabolic requirements of repetitive
seizures
.
...
PMID:Relative hypoperfusion in rat cerebral cortex during recurrent seizures. 184 66
Hyperglycemic, but not normoglycemic cats exposed to anoxia develop neurologic signs following reoxygenation including fasciculations, focal and tonic-clonic
seizures
and coma after a symptom-free period. These symptomatic hyperglycemic cats may develop brain edema and will show diffuse neuronal injury or brain infarction depending on length of survival. Brain mitochondria isolated from symptomatic but not asymptomatic cats have decreased ADP- and uncoupler-stimulated oxygen consumption rates. Since impaired respiration could result from altered electron transport chain function, we measured cytochrome c, b, and aa3 concentrations and the activities of the five electron transfer complexes in isolated brain mitochondria. In symptomatic cats marked alterations were present in particular in complex IV, cytochrome oxidase, with a 57% reduction in activity and a 45% reduction in prosthetic group (
cytochrome aa3
) concentrations. Less marked reductions in other segments of the chain included 27% and 41% decreases, respectively, in cytochrome c concentrations and in electron transfer complex II, succinate:ubiquinone oxidoreductase activity. Cytochrome b concentrations and complex I, II and V activities were unchanged. Small but significant decreases in
cytochrome aa3
concentrations (18%) and cytochrome oxidase activity (20%) were also present in mitochondria from postanoxic hyperglycemic cats prior to appearance of neurologic signs. These results indicate that delayed decreases in the activities of specific electron transfer complexes are correlated with impaired mitochondrial respiration and neurologic deterioration in postanoxic hyperglycemic cats. However, it is presently unclear if these postanoxic brain mitochondrial alterations are primary or secondary events in the development of brain injury.
...
PMID:Delayed decreases in specific brain mitochondrial electron transfer complex activities and cytochrome concentrations following anoxia/ischemia. 208 31
We previously demonstrated markedly inhibited brain mitochondrial respiration only in cats that (a) were hyperglycemic at anoxia and (b) had neurologic signs, i.e., fasciculations in tongue or facial muscles or focal
seizures
following reoxygenation. However, since the relationship between time of onset of mitochondrial dysfunction and neurologic signs was unclear, in the present study we killed postanoxic cats immediately when signs first appeared. Cerebrocortical homogenates and isolated brain mitochondria only from symptomatic cats showed markedly inhibited substrate-, ADP-, and uncoupler-stimulated respiration rates.
Cytochrome oxidase
activity and
cytochrome aa3
concentrations were also markedly reduced in these mitochondria. Since brain mitochondrial function was impaired when neurologic signs first appeared, mitochondrial alterations are an important early organellar change correlated with development of neurologic deterioration following anoxia.
...
PMID:Delayed onset of neurologic deterioration following anoxia/ischemia coincides with appearance of impaired brain mitochondrial respiration and decreased cytochrome oxidase activity. 215
A 2-month-old boy had progressive generalized weakness, hypotonia, and respiratory insufficiency requiring assisted ventilation. At age 3 1/2 months, he started having
seizures
and recurrent pulmonary infections; he died at age 7 months. Serum lactate was chronically elevated, but there was no aminoaciduria. Histochemical and ultrastructural studies of muscle biopsies at ages 2 and 3 months showed excessive mitochondria, lipid, and glycogen; a third biopsy at 6 months showed marked increase in perimysial fibrous and fat tissue. Cytochrome c oxidase activity was 7% of normal in the first biopsy and undetectable in the others. Cytochrome spectra of mitochondria isolated from postmortem muscle showed complete lack of
cytochrome aa3
. Antibodies were obtained against cytochrome c oxidase purified from normal human heart. Immunotitration and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) showed decreased immunologically reactive enzyme protein in the patient's muscle, but SDS-PAGE electrophoresis of immunoprecipitates of muscle mitochondrial extracts showed the presence of all cytochrome c oxidase subunits. These data suggest that decreased synthesis of one or more subunits may result in markedly decreased concentration of electrophoretically normal complex IV in skeletal muscle.
...
PMID:Fatal infantile cytochrome c oxidase deficiency: decrease of immunologically detectable enzyme in muscle. 298 57
Cerebral partial pressure of O2 (PO2), relative changes in the ratio of reduced/oxidized
cytochrome aa3
, blood flow, and the arteriovenous difference in O2 content were measured during
seizures
with and without pulmonary edema.
Seizures
were induced with bicuculline (0.2-1.2 mg/kg iv) in rats anesthetized with 70% N2O and paralyzed with curare. Briefer
seizures
were accompanied by increased cerebral PO2 and increased oxidation of
cytochrome aa3
. Lung water content and arterial O2 partial pressure (PaO2) remained normal. Longer duration
seizures
were also accompanied initially by increases in cerebral oxygenation. Within minutes, however, PaO2 fell from a mean of 118 to 51 mmHg, and lung water content increased from 76.2 to 83.6%. Cerebral PO2 fell but most often rose back to or above control levels, while
cytochrome aa3
became markedly reduced. Simultaneously, cerebral blood flow increased more than 300% above preseizure values and O2 delivery increased more than O2 consumption. The reductive shift of
cytochrome aa3
was greater than that produced by lowering PaO2 to equivalent values in
seizure
-free rats. The reductive shift of
cytochrome aa3
, despite increased O2 delivery, may be indicative of derangements in cerebral O2 diffusion or energy metabolism.
...
PMID:Seizure-associated pulmonary edema and cerebral oxygenation in the rat. 355 25
A 1-month-old boy was admitted because of failure to thrive. He was floppy and had bilateral ptosis, diminished reflexes, and poor suck. He had aspiration pneumonia, developed
seizures
, and died at age 3 1/2 months. Laboratory data showed lactic acidosis, proteinuria, glycosuria and generalized aminoaciduria. He was an only child, and family history was negative. Muscle biopsy showed large clumps of granules positive with oxidative enzyme stains and increased lipid droplets. Ultrastructural studies showed large aggregates of mitochondria, many of which were greatly enlarged and contained disoriented or concentric whorls of cristae and paracrystalline inclusions. Cytochrome c oxidase was absent in fresh frozen sections by histochemical staining. By biochemical assay, cytochrome c oxidase (
cytochrome aa3
) was 6% of normal in muscle biopsy and undetectable in autopsy muscle; spectra and content of cytochromes showed lack of
cytochrome aa3
, decreased cytochrome b and normal cytochrome cc1. In kidney, cytochrome-c-oxidase activity was 38% of normal and spectra showed decreased cytochromes aa3 and b. The association of fatal infantile mitochondrial myopathy, lactic acidosis and renal dysfunction was previously reported by Van Biervliet et al and appears to be a distinct nosologic entity, one of the few biochemically defined mitochondrial myopathies.
...
PMID:Fatal infantile mitochondrial myopathy and renal dysfunction due to cytochrome-c-oxidase deficiency. 625 6
We present two unrelated patients, a boy and a girl, with a progressive neurologic disorder, characterized by psychomotor retardation,
seizures
and paresis, the illness being exacerbated during stressful periods. Lactate levels in serum and cerebrospinal fluid were elevated in both patients. Histopathologic studies of muscle tissue revealed mitochondrial abnormalities in the boy; in the girl, slight neuronal degeneration was observed. A cerebral biopsy in the girl showed abnormalities compatible with progressive poliodystrophy. Autopsy in the boy demonstrated progressive poliodystrophy. Biochemical studies in muscle tissue showed a defect of
cytochrome aa3
in both patients, connected with a defect of cytochrome b in the girl. The association of defective pyruvate metabolism and progressive poliodystrophy is discussed.
...
PMID:Progressive poliodystrophy (Alpers' disease) with a defect in cytochrome aa3 in muscle: a report of two unrelated patients. 630 65
Fluorometry and dual-wave-length spectrophotometry were used to detect transitory shifts in the redox state of mitochondrial NADH and
cytochrome aa3
in the exposed cerebral cortex of anesthetized paralyzed cats as
seizures
were induced with pentylenetetrazol. In normotensive animals, NADH and
cytochrome aa3
oxidation accompany the
seizures
, but when the mean arterial pressure (MAP) is reduced to 40.2 +/- 1.1% of the base line by hemorrhaging, the NADH fluorescence response converts to a biphasic oxidation-reduction sequence. In extreme hypotension (MAP lowered to an average of 28%), only NAD reduction transients are observed with
seizures
, and
cytochrome aa3
is oxidized irrespective of the low MAP. Our data show that a reversible perfusion impairment, perhaps inhomogeneous in its distribution, appears in the cortex at the 40% MAP level and modifies electron flux in the respiratory chain between NADH and
cytochrome aa3
, and uniform oxygen insufficiency is an unlikely cause for the reversal of NADH oxidation toward reduction during
seizures
under hypovolemic conditions.
...
PMID:Redox transitions in mitochondria of cat cerebral cortex with seizures and hemorrhagic hypotension. 736 22
The hemodynamic response to
seizure
has long been a topic for discussion in association with the neuronal damage resulting from convulsion. Electroconvulsive therapy (ECT) is an appropriate clinical model for the investigation of the cerebral physiology of
seizure
. In this study, we monitored the oxygenation state of brain tissue using near infrared (NIR) spectrophotometry, and flow velocity at the middle cerebral artery (MCA) using transcranial Doppler ultrasonography (tc-Doppler) in ninety cases where flow velocity at the middle cerebral artery (MCA) using transcranial Doppler ultrasonography (tc-Doppler) in ninety cases where ECT was prescribed to patients suffering from endogenous depression. Under general anesthesia with thiopental and succinyl choline, an electrical current was applied bilaterally at the minimal energy level. Throughout the therapy, end-tidal CO2 tension was maintained at 30-35 mmHg, and the SpO2 value was maintained above 98% by manual ventilation assistance. The total- and oxy-hemoglobin contents in the brain were reduced during the electrical shock, and then recovered to the pre-shock value (total-hemoglobin; 44.13 +/- 12.88 s after the shock, oxy-hemoglobin; 88.62 +/- 11.69 s after the shock). Subsequently, these values further increased beyond the preshock value. On the other hand, the deoxy-hemoglobin content increased for 90.73 +/- 15.88 s during and after the electrical shock, and decreased afterward. Reduction of
cytochrome aa3
began 3.04 +/- 0.51 s after the electrical shock, and this was reoxygenated at 171.88 +/- 12.95 s after the shock.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The cerebral hemodynamic response to electrically induced seizures in man. 775 84
The study investigated the hypothesis that delayed cerebral injury after transient cerebral ischemia is associated with vasoconstriction and decreased cerebral oxygenation. Eight chronically instrumented, late gestation fetal sheep were subjected to 30 min of cerebral ischemia in utero. Cortical impedance (CI) and electrocorticogram (ECoG) were recorded to determine the time course of cellular dysfunction. Histologic outcome was assessed 4 d postischemia. Changes in cerebral vascular tone and oxygenation were observed during and for 4 d after the insult using near infrared spectroscopy to measure changes in total cerebral Hb ([tHb]), oxyhemoglobin ([Hbo2]), and oxidized
cytochrome aa3
([Cyto2]). Results are expressed as mean +/- SEM. CI increased transiently during ischemia; then a delayed increase commenced 17.5 +/- 2.3 h postischemia and peaked at 42.3 +/- 2.4 h. ECoG was depressed during and after the insult.
Seizures
started 13.6 +/- 3.0 h postinsult and persisted for 25.4 +/- 3.2 h. Increases in [tHb] indicated two periods of cerebral vasodilation: immediately after early reperfusion, lasting 2.3 +/- 0.4 h and peaking to 20 +/- 2.0 mumol.L-1; and a later phase, commencing 12.8 +/- 2.0 h postischemia, peaking to 43 +/- 4.0 mumol.L-1 and lasting 43.1 +/- 5.2 h. [Hbo2] was relatively elevated (18 +/- 3.0 mumol.L-1) during d 4 postischemia, demonstrating a delayed increase in mean cerebral oxygen saturation. [Cyto2] fell during the insult (-0.7 +/- 0.2 mumol.L-1); and, commencing at 28-30 h postischemia, fell progressively to reach a minimum of -5.0 +/- 2.8 mumol.L-1 at 78-80 h postischemia. A greater fall in [Cyto2] was related to worse cerebral injury (p < 0.05). Delayed cerebral injury is accompanied by vasodilation and increased mean cerebral oxygen saturation, although a progressive fall in [Cyto2] might indicate a fall in mitochondrial oxygenation, cell loss, or changes in tissue optical characteristics.
...
PMID:Delayed vasodilation and altered oxygenation after cerebral ischemia in fetal sheep. 882 85
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