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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twenty-two fetal lambs were inoculated in utero with tissue suspension prepared from lambs born with weakness, incoordination and clonic
tremor
. Clinically, affected newborn lambs had clonic
tremor
, were generally weak and had abnormally pigmented hairy fleece. The inoculation resulted in a disseminated encephalomyelitis with secondary teratologic changes in a significant number of fetuses. The mononuclear inflammatory changes were most obvious 14 days after inoculation, after which there was rapid resolution. Changes seen at birth were chronic astrocytosis with neuron loss in the spinal cord and cerebellar
dysplasia
. Single radioimmunodiffusion studies showed consistently low IgG in infected fetuses and high IgG in lambs at birth.
...
PMID:Transmissible congenital demyelinating encephalopathy of lambs. 62 70
During an 8-year period, oedema in the dorsal cervical region that produces a characteristic
tremor
on ballotement of the fetal head (nuchal oedema) was observed in 145 (7%) of the 2,086 fetuses that underwent karyotyping in our unit because of fetal malformations and/or growth retardation. Nuchal oedema was distinguished from nuchal cystic hygromata and from hydrops foetalis. In 132 (91%) of the cases with nuchal oedema, there were other fetal malformations, and 53 (37%) fetuses had chromosomal abnormalities, mainly trisomy 21 but also other trisomies, deletions or translocations, triploidy and Turner syndrome. Furthermore, the chromosomally normal fetuses with nuchal oedema had a very poor prognosis because, in many cases, there was an underlying skeletal
dysplasia
, a genetic syndrome or cardiac defect.
...
PMID:Fetal nuchal oedema: associated malformations and chromosomal defects. 150 47
Four psychiatric patients with SCS are described. All exhibited essential
tremor
, minimal cerebral dysfunctions, speech disorders, bradyphrenia, disorders of personality with psychasthenie and suspicious traits, restrictions, increased irritability and depressivity, one case of mutism due to abnormal reaction and one of alcohol hallucinosis. The possibility of cosmetic handicap caused by craniofacial
dysplasia
should be taken into mind and perhaps surgically corrected. Because the craniofacial
dysplasia
is mostly moderate and the syndactylies are slight the SCS remains often unrecognized, but apart from psychic maldevelopment it is significant as the result of frequent association with other malformations.
...
PMID:[Neuropsychiatric manifestations of Saethre-Chotzen syndrome]. 156 96
The events which followed the introduction of a heifer into a dairy herd were consistent with the animal being persistently infected with bovine diarrhoea-mucosal disease virus. Obvious damage was limited to the progeny of cows which were in the first 168 days of gestation at that time. Only fetuses up to 81 days of gestation at the putative time of introduction of infection became persistently infected in calfhood and, although they exhibited body
tremor
, two such calves necropsied at three months of age lacked macroscopic or microscopic lesions in the central nervous system. In contrast calves which had been more advanced in gestation, at 146 and 153 days at the time of infection, had eliminated the infection and had lesions of cerebellar
dysplasia
and multifocal retinal atrophy.
...
PMID:Pestivirus fetopathogenicity in cattle: changing sequelae with fetal maturation. 375 9
In many tissues the preinvasive stage of neoplastic progression can be identified histologically as
dysplasia
or in situ disease. There is much interest in defining the molecular events associated with the early stages of neoplasia. Retrieval of histologically recognisable preinvasive neoplastic tissue uncontaminated by inflammatory or stromal cells is important for genetic studies using polymerase chain reaction (PCR) assay. A novel method for microdissection is described in which 10 microns sections are dewaxed, stained with haematoxylin and eosin, dried, covered with Sellotape, and the tissue cut out using a scalpel blade under direct visual control. The method is quick, eliminates problems of operator
tremor
, preserves the architecture of the micro-dissected tissue (for photographic documentation) and requires no special equipment. The presence of Sellotape and adhesive in the reaction mixture has no detrimental effect on the ability to extract DNA or to perform PCR.
...
PMID:Microdissection of stained archival tissue. 935 Mar 7
Sudden and brief involuntary movements of central nervous system (CNS) origin called myoclonus may be cortical (motor strip), thalamocortical (thalamocortical loop) or reticular (caudal reticular formation). Epileptic, cortical and thalamocortical myoclonus are combined with a spike which, when it is focal, needs back-averaging to be demonstrated. Negative myoclonus due to lapse of tone can only be demonstrated during antigravidic posture and may be combined with either a slow wave or the second, positive component of a polyspike-wave. Epileptic myoclonus must be distinguished from epileptic spasms and tonic seizures, and from non-epileptic myoclonus, tics,
tremor
and chorea. Myoclonus may occur in partial symptomatic (mainly Rasmussen and
dysplasia
), cryptogenic (frontal) or idiopathic (negative myoclonus in CSWS) epilepsy. Generalized myoclonus is part of inborn errors of metabolism, non-progressive encephalopathy (mainly Angelman) and idiopathic epilepsy (juvenile and infantile benign and severe forms, and myoclonic-astatic epilepsy). Carbamazepine, vigabatrin and eventually lamotrigine may worsen myoclonus whereas it may be improved by benzodiazepines, valproate, lamotrigine, zonisamide and piracetam according to etiology. Pathophysiology must take in account maturation processes, lesions and genetic predisposition. However, precise mechanisms remain unknown and only hypotheses can be proposed, that could clarify the age-related EEG and clinical expression of the various syndromes.
...
PMID:Myoclonus and epilepsy in childhood: 1996 Royaumont meeting. 960 May 41
This study describes the developmental neuropathology of two infants who survived 7 and 9 years, respectively, an episode of violent
shaking
(shaken infant syndrome) early in their lives. The
shaking
injuries include cortical and subcortical contusions, hemorrhages, hypoxic/ischemic and axonal damage, and severe edema. The types, distribution, and resolution of these
shaking
injuries are detailed by sequential radiographic studies and by pathologic examination at postmortem. Despite their severity and extent, these injuries resolved in a relatively short period of time. By 6 months, the original injuries are repaired and the resultant encephaloclastic encephalopathies (e.g., multicystic encephalomalacia, porencephaly, generalized white matter attenuation, diffuse cortical atrophy, microgyria, ulegyria, and hydrocephalus ex vacuo) are well established. No appreciable pathologic differences are detected when radiographic findings at 6 months of age are compared to postmortem observations. On the other hand, undamaged and/or partially damaged cortical regions survive the original insult and undergo post-injury reorganization that transforms the residual cortex structural and presumably functional organization. Prominent features of this post-injury reorganization include progressive cortical
dysplasia
with cytoarchitectural disorganization, laminar obliteration, morphologic and functional (synaptic reorganization) transformation of some neurons, preservation of layer 1 intrinsic fibers and Cajal-Retzius cells, and the presence of large (hypertrophic) intrinsic neurons with intense neurofilament immunoreactivity. We propose that this progressive dysplastic process modifies the residual cortex structural and functional organization, influences the child's neurological and psychological maturation, and may play a significant role in the pathogenesis of ensuing neurological and/or psychological sequelae.
...
PMID:Shaken infant syndrome: developmental neuropathology, progressive cortical dysplasia, and epilepsy. 1190 51
Leukodystrophies are inherited neurological disorders involving central nervous system white matter. They are uncommon in animals but a few, breed-specific entities have been described. In 2002, two young-adult, purebred Bullmastiff dogs from central New York State presented to their referring veterinarians displaying moderate to severe ataxia of all limbs, spastic tetraparesis that was worse in the pelvic limbs, and a diffuse, action-related, whole-body
tremor
. Clinical signs were insidious in onset and slowly progressive. Anatomic diagnoses considered were a C1-C5 lesion or, based on the whole-body
tremor
, a diffuse central nervous system disorder. No gross lesions were apparent in the brain or spinal cord. Histopathologically, numerous, multifocal, sharply demarcated, small, ovoid to angular areas of myelin pallor (plaques) were present throughout the major white matter tracts of the brainstem and spinal cord. These plaques, which often were traversed by axons, did not stain with luxol fast blue for myelin and were associated with minimal astrocytosis. Ultrastructural findings include occasional hypertrophic glia in white matter, rare unmyelinated segments of axons, and focal proliferation of tubule-containing cytoplasmic glial cell processes (oligodendroglial). The described clinical and morphological findings and age of onset are similar to the well-characterized, presumably hereditary, bovine syndrome known as Charolais ataxia or oligodendroglial
dysplasia
. This article presents the first description of a leukodystrophy in the Bullmastiff breed and the first report of oligodendroglial
dysplasia
in animals other than Charolais cattle.
...
PMID:Oligodendroglial dysplasia in two bullmastiff dogs. 1640 84
Ebstein's malformation (EM) is characterized by
dysplasia
and displacement of the tricuspid inferior and septal leaflets from the true atrioventricular (AV) junction. Left ventricular hypertrabeculation/non-compaction (LVHT) including the 'atrialized' portion in EM has not been described. A 42-year-old man with a history of radiofrequency ablation of a Mahaim-like bundle suffered from chest pain. Coronary angiography was normal, but echocardiography showed a septal tricuspid leaflet inserting 3.5-cm apically beyond the AV junction, deep recesses of the atrialized interventricular septum, and a heavily trabeculated left ventricle; these were confirmed by cardiac magnetic resonance imaging. Neurologically, hypoacusis, positive pyramidal signs, postural
tremor
and brisk tendon reflexes were identified.
...
PMID:Non-compaction of the right atrium and left ventricle in Ebstein's malformation. 1704 81
Focal cortical
dysplasia
(FCD) is an important cause of intractable epilepsy. Previous rat studies have utilized freeze lesioning of neonatal animals to model FCD; however, such models are unable to demonstrate spontaneous seizures without seizure-provoking events. Therefore, we created an animal model with multiple FCD, produced during embryonic development, and observed whether spontaneous seizures occurred. Furthermore, we examined the relationship between FCD and epileptogenesis using immunohistochemistry. At 18 days postconception, a frozen metal probe was placed bilaterally on the scalps of Sprague-Dawley rat embryos through the uterus wall to produce multiple FCD. Electroencephalogram (EEG) and video recording were performed from postnatal day (P) 35 to P77. Brain tissues were examined immunohistochemically at P28 and P78 using semiquantitative densitometry. Eleven of 16 rats (68.8%) showed spontaneous seizures arising in the hippocampus from P47. Movement cessation followed by sniffing and mastication, culminating in wet-dog
shaking
, was seen during the hippocampal EEG discharges. FCD was observed in the bilateral frontoparietal lobes. The expression levels of N-methyl-d-aspartate receptor (NMDAR) subunits 1, 2A, 2B, the glutamate/aspartate transporter and the glial glutamate transporter 1 (GLT1) at FCD sites were increased at P28 and P78. There were no major histological abnormalities in the hippocampi compared with those in the cortex. However, the expression levels of NMDAR 2A and 2B were increased at P28. Levels of NMDAR1, 2A and 2B, the glutamate/aspartate transporter and GLT1 were also increased at P78. We created an animal model showing spontaneous seizures without a provoking event except for the existence of cortical
dysplasia
, and without a genetic or general systematic cause like MAM injection or irradiation. The seizures resembled human temporal lobe epilepsy both clinically and on EEG. Alterations in the levels of glutamatergic and GABAergic receptors were investigated during growth. This model should enable better clarification of the mechanisms underlying the development of human epilepsy.
...
PMID:Spontaneous seizures in a rat model of multiple prenatal freeze lesioning. 2363 21
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