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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Inbred Swiss mice were treated with technical DDT (1) orally with the diet or by intubation; (2) subcutaneously and (3) by skin painting. The total duration of the experiment was 80 weeks. There was no difference in body growth and mortality between the experimental and control groups. Toxic manifestations of DDT were observed in treated mice in the form of
tremor
, convulsions and corneal opacity usually after 40 weeks. Oral and subcutaneous DDT treatment resulted in a significant increase in the incidence of tumours mainly of
lymphoid
tissues, lung and liver. The highest tumour incidence was recorded in the group of mice receiving DDT by subcutaneous injections. Males and females were equally susceptible. No evidence of carcinogenicity was observed in the painted group.
...
PMID:Carcinogenicity of DDT (dichlorodiphenyl trichloroethane) in pure inbred Swiss mice. 86 49
Pre-treatment by neuraminidase of lymphocytes obtained from peripheral blood of normal donors significantly enhanced E- and EAC-rosette formation. Of other
lymphoid
cells only spleen cells showed significant enhancement of E-rosettes. The EAC-rosettes slightly increased when the peripheral blood lymphocytes from patients with acute lymphoblastic leukemia or chronic lymphocytic leukemia and MOLT-4
lymphoid
cells were pre-treated with this enzyme. The EAC-rosettes were not increased by neuraminidase treatment of phytohemagglutinin-induced blasts, thymus cells or spleen cells. Pre-treatment of peripheral blood lymphocytes with neuraminidase also increased the proportion of stable E-rosettes resistant to incubation at 37 degrees C and to vigorous
shaking
. Various concentrations of neuraminidase (1-100 U/ml) produced enhancement of E- and EAC-rosettes with the highest activity at 25 and 50 U/ml. Neuraminidase treatment of sheep red blood cells failed to increase the proportion of E-rosettes of peripheral blood lymphocytes. The increased rosette forming capacity induced by neuraminidase is probably related to changes in lymphocyte surface properties.
...
PMID:Enhanced E- and EAC-rosette formation by neuraminidase. 96 28
The growth characteristics of the human
lymphoid
cells were studied under various cultivation conditions. The cells were grown in flasks with different volumes of nutrient medium, in a spinner or in a specially constructed cultivator providing automatic maintenance of pH and gentle
shaking
of the suspension. It was found that the average time of the
lymphoid
cell generation decreases by 2-fold when the cells were grown in the cultivator. Under these conditions, normal growth of cells without lag period starts at a relatively low initial concentration (3.5 X 10(4) cells/ml) as compared with the usual eventual concentration (1.2 X 10(6) cells/ml). The same cells were used for the toxicity testing of some materials used for construction of the cultivation equipment.
...
PMID:[Characteristics of culturing human lymphoid cells]. 675 79
Antibody-coated erythrocytes are lysed by murine C5- whole blood but not by plasma separated from such blood. The lytic activity has been shown to derive from platelets that attach to sensitized cells probably through membrane receptors for C3b. Whole blood or platelet-rich plasma (prp) obtained from mice that have been treated with purified cobra venom factor has little or no activity unless it is fortified with fresh C5- plasma. Lysis is observed only if the reactants are incubated at 37 degrees C and mechanical
shaking
is practiced, at least intermittently, throughout the period of incubation. Adherence of platelets and subsequent lysis are mediated by antibodies of a variety of immunoglobulin classes, including those that fail to mediate complement-dependent lysis. Platelet-mediated lysis is limited to cells to which the platelets adhere; 51Cr labeled, unsensitized cells that are mixed with prp and sensitized, unlabeled cells do not release 51Cr. Normal murine
lymphoid
cells and ascites tumor cells of mice, rats, and guinea pigs were apparently unaffected by sensitization and incubation with prp. However, because adherence of platelets to these sensitized cells was not observed, it is not clear whether the cells are resistant to the lytic action of platelets or whether the conditions of incubation were unfavorable for the attachment of platelets to the surfaces of nucleated cells. The significance of the lytic reaction described here is not known but may lie in antibody mediated release of microbicidal substances from platelets.
...
PMID:Lysis of antibody-coated cells by platelets. 715 10
beta-mannosidosis is a recently recognized lysosomal storage disease in newborn Salers calves. Fourteen calves with beta-mannosidase deficiency were examined. Twelve calves were from routine laboratory submissions, and two calves were the result of a breeding trial. Salers calves with beta-mannosidase deficiency were of normal gestational weight, 36 +/- 6 kg, but were affected at birth. The head was moderately domed, and there was mild superior brachygnathism. The calves were recumbent and had a head
tremor
. There was bilateral renal enlargement, severe hypomyelination in the brain and variable thyroid gland enlargement. Severe cytoplasmic vacuolation was present within neurons, tubule epithelial cells, follicular cells and macrophages of the nervous, renal, thyroid and
lymphoid
tissues, respectively. Pedigree analysis and breeding trial results were consistent with an autosomal recessive disease. An initial biochemical survey of 1,494 Salers cattle indicated a carrier frequency of 23%.
...
PMID:Bovine beta-mannosidosis: pathologic and genetic findings in Salers calves. 847 Mar 35
We report herein a case of thyroid mucosa-associated lymphoid tissue (MALT) lymphoma in a patient receiving antithyroid drug therapy for Graves' disease. A 75-year-old woman first presented with finger
tremor
and was diagnosed with Graves' disease on the basis of clinical and laboratory findings. Three years later, she presented with rapid and painless enlargement of the thyroid. Ultrasonography revealed a circumscribed hypoechoic area bilaterally in each lobe of the thyroid, and fine-needle aspiration biopsy showed diffuse monotonous infiltration of small- to medium-sized atypical
lymphoid
cells. (67)Ga scintigraphy was positive exclusively in the thyroid. After total thyroidectomy, the patient received radiation therapy for treatment of stage IE primary thyroid lymphoma. Results of histological examination, immunohistochemical analysis, and flow cytometric analysis confirmed MALT lymphoma. To our knowledge, there have been few published reports of primary thyroid lymphoma associated with Graves' disease. Our experience with this case, though rare, indicates that an enlarged thyroid in cases of Graves' disease should be examined carefully for primary thyroid lymphoma.
...
PMID:Primary thyroid lymphoma associated with Graves' disease. 1536 Dec 65
A progressive neurological disease affecting twenty-two young adult dogs of smaller breeds is reported. The disease was most often acute in onset and the neurological signs included cervical pain, seizures, behavioural changes, ataxia, head tilt, muscle
tremor
and paresis. The lesions were those of a disseminated granulomatous meningoencephalomyelitis in which perivascular cuffs of macrophages and
lymphoid
cells were the predominant finding. Severe lesions were most often seen in the cerebral white matter although the brain stem, mid-brain and spinal cord were also commonly affected.
...
PMID:Granulomatous meningoencephalomyelitis of dogs in New Zealand. 1603 Sep 79
The pathogenesis of two Californian strains of myxoma virus (MSW and MSD) was examined in European rabbits (Oryctolagus cuniculus) that were either susceptible to myxomatosis (laboratory rabbits) or had undergone natural selection for genetic resistance to myxomatosis (Australian wild rabbits). MSW was highly lethal for both types of rabbits with average survival times of 7.3 and 9.4 days, respectively, and 100% mortality. Classical clinical signs of myxomatosis were not present except in one rabbit that survived for 13 days following infection. Previously described clinical signs of trembling and
shaking
were observed in laboratory but not wild rabbits. Despite the high resistance of wild rabbits to myxomatosis caused by South American strains of myxoma virus, the MSW strain was of such high virulence that it was able to overcome resistance. The acute nature of the infection, relatively low viral titers in the tissues and destruction of
lymphoid
tissues, suggested that death was probably due to an acute and overwhelming immunopathological response to the virus. No virus was found in the brain. The MSD strain was attenuated compared to previously published descriptions and therefore was only characterized in laboratory rabbits. It is concluded that Californian MSW strain of myxoma virus is at the extreme end of a continuum of myxoma virus virulence but that the basic pathophysiology of the disease induced is not broadly different to other strains of myxoma virus.
...
PMID:Virulence and pathogenesis of the MSW and MSD strains of Californian myxoma virus in European rabbits with genetic resistance to myxomatosis compared to rabbits with no genetic resistance. 1644 80
Cell-to-cell viral transfer facilitates the spread of lymphotropic retroviruses such as human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) and human T-cell leukemia virus (HTLV), likely through the formation of "virological synapses" between donor and target cells. Regarding HIV replication, the importance of cell contacts has been demonstrated, but this phenomenon remains only partly characterized. In order to alter cell-to-cell HIV transmission, we have maintained cultures under continuous gentle
shaking
and followed viral replication in this experimental system. In
lymphoid
cell lines, as well as in primary lymphocytes, viral replication was dramatically reduced in shaken cultures. To document this phenomenon, we have developed an assay to assess the relative contributions of free and cell-associated virions in HIV propagation. Acutely infected donor cells were mixed with carboxyfluorescein diacetate succinimidyl ester-labeled lymphocytes as targets, and viral production was followed by measuring HIV Gag expression at different time points by flow cytometry. We report that cellular contacts drastically enhance productive viral transfer compared to what is seen with infection with free virus. Productive cell-to-cell viral transmission required fusogenic viral envelope glycoproteins on donor cells and adequate receptors on targets. Only a few syncytia were observed in this coculture system. Virus release from donor cells was unaffected when cultures were gently shaken, whereas virus transfer to recipient cells was severely impaired. Altogether, these results indicate that cell-to-cell transfer is the predominant mode of HIV spread and help to explain why this virus replicates so efficiently in
lymphoid
organs.
...
PMID:Inefficient human immunodeficiency virus replication in mobile lymphocytes. 1707 92
A new disease having a characteristic and well defined symptom complex is described as occurring in young chickens in four New England states.
Tremor
, principally of the head and neck, and progressive ataxia are the characteristic symptoms, either or both of which may be present in a single bird. Age at onset in field epidemics ranges from 3 days to 6 weeks, with a majority of cases reported at 3 weeks. Morbidity in commercial flocks ranges from 5 to 50 per cent; mortality in affected hatches may be 50 per cent. The disease may or may not recur in successive hatches, and in the same flock in successive years. Although birds may survive an attack of the disease, nervous symptoms persist in a majority of cases. There is no evidence that nutritional factors are involved. Normal chickens have not contracted the disease by contact with affected birds. The disease has been reproduced in normal chickens by intracerebral inoculation of brain and spinal cord from affected birds. Twenty brain-to-brain passages have been made up to the present time. The incubation period in laboratory passages ranges from 6 to 44 days with symptoms appearing usually between 21 and 28 days. The proportion of inoculated birds developing symptoms has increased with successive passages. The infective agent in the brain has survived in 50 per cent glycerine for 69 days. No organism has been cultivated. The disease has been reproduced after inoculation with bacteriologically sterile filtrates obtained with Seitz and Berkefeld N filters. Attempts to demonstrate the presence of the infective agent in the chicken embryo have been inconclusive. Chicks hatched from eggs laid by birds which had survived the disease were not infected, nor were they immune to inoculation at 6 weeks of age. The characteristic lesion of the disease consists of microscopic focal collections of glia cells, perivascular infiltration, degeneration of Purkinje's cells, and degeneration of nerve cells. Foci of infiltration are present throughout the brain and spinal cord. In the viscera of birds from field epidemics, microscopic focal infiltrations of cells of the
lymphoid
series are often found. Their presence is most notable in the pancreas and heart. No cell inclusions have been demonstrated.
...
PMID:EPIDEMIC TREMOR, AN ENCEPHALOMYELITIS AFFECTING YOUNG CHICKENS. 1987 Feb 79
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