Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (tremor)
18,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A repeated dose toxicity study of prulifloxacin, a new antibacterial agent, was conducted in beagle dogs. Male and female dogs were given the test material orally for 13 weeks at doses of 0 (control), 20, 100 and 500 mg/kg. After discontinuation of the treatment, a 5-week recovery test was also conducted. Vomiting, salivation and decreased body weight gain or reduced body weight were seen in the 100 and 500 mg/kg groups. In the 500 mg/kg group, tremor, paresis of posterior limb associated with prone or sitting position and decreased food consumption were also observed. There were no treatment-related effects on survival and water consumption. Ophthalmoscopic, electrocardiographic and hematologic examinations, and urinalysis failed to show any abnormalities attributable to the treatment. Blood chemical examination showed increased GPT and decreased beta- and gamma-globulins in the 100 and 500 mg/kg groups, and increased GOT in the 500 mg/kg group. In pathological examination, cavitations and erosions were seen in the humeral and femoral articular cartilages in the 100 and 500 mg/kg groups. The above-mentioned changes were satisfactorily reversible except for erosions in the humeral and femoral articular cartilages in the 100 and 500 mg/kg groups. No toxicological findings were seen in the 20 mg/kg group. The results show that the NOAEL of prulifloxacin is 20 mg/kg for 13-week repeated dose toxicity in dogs.
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PMID:[A 13-week oral toxicity study of prulifloxacin (NM441) in dogs followed by a 5-week recovery test]. 870 56

Haematological and serum biochemical measurements in male spontaneously epileptic rats (SER; double mutants homozygous for zitter and tremor genes) were compared with the values for related rat strains. Some haematological values were low in TRM rats and total leukocyte counts were high in ZI and TRM rats. TRM rats showed higher total cholesterol, phospholipid, high-density lipoprotein cholesterol and calcium values, and lower albumin value than Kyo: Wistar rats. Zitter homozygous rats including SER exhibited low total cholesterol, phospholipid and high-density lipoprotein cholesterol values. The SER showed an increase in urea nitrogen, aspartate aminotransferase and alanine aminotransferase values, and a decrease in glucose value, suggesting deterioration of the whole body with age.
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PMID:Haematological and serum biochemical values in spontaneously epileptic male rats and related rat strains. 958 5

We report a 74-year-old woman with parkinsonism and dementia, who died 4 years after the onset of the disease. She was well until 70 years of the age (1993) when she noted slowness in the movement in her left hand. She also developed gait disturbance and the similar symptoms spread to the right upper and lower extremities. Two years after the onset, she had difficulty in walk, and was admitted to our hospital on March 9, 1995. Her daughter had the onset of hand tremor at 50 years of the age and gait disturbance at 52. Her gait improved after levodopa treatment, but her MRI revealed a liner T2-high signal lesion along the outer surface of each putamen. On admission, the patient was alert but slighted demented. Higher cerebral functions were normal. She had a masked face and small voice. Her gait was of small step without arm swing. Retropulsion was present. Rigidity was noted in the neck but not in the limbs. She was bradykinetic but tremor was absent. She was treated with levodopa/carbidopa, dops, and bromocriptine with considerable improvement and was discharged on March 30, 1995. On January 19, 1996, she developed fever and hallucination; she became more akinetic and admitted again. She showed marked dementia and stage IV parkinsonism. She was treated by supportive measures with improvement in the general condition, but she was found to have a gastric cancer for which a subtotal gastrectomy was performed on March 11, 1996. Post-operative course was uneventful, but her parkinsonism progressed to stage V. She was transferred to another hospital on May 13, 1996. In July 21, 1996, she developed dyspnea and fever and was admitted to our hospital again. She was somnolent. Rigidity was moderate to marked and she was unable to stand or walk. By supportive cares, her general condition improved and was discharged to home on November 4, 1996. She developed fever on June 13, 1997 and admitted to our service again. Her BP was 150/90 mmHg. She was alert but markedly demented. Laboratory examination revealed increases in liver enzymes (GOT 75 IU/l, GPT 101 IU/l) and renal dysfunction (BUN 68 mg/dl, creatinine 3.27 mg/dl). Subsequent hospital course was complicated by renal failure and thrombocytopenia (33,000/ml). She expired on July 1, 1997. The patient was discussed in a neurologic CPC, and a chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had diffuse Lewy body disease and her daughter striatonigral degeneration. Some participants thought both the patient and her daughter had diffuse Lewy body disease. Post-mortem examination revealed marked degeneration of the substania nigra and the locus coeruleus. The medial part of the nigra also showed marked cell loss. Lewy bodies were found in the remaining nigral and coeruleus neurons. Cortical Lewy bodies were very few and the striatum was intact. Pathologic diagnosis was Parkinson's disease. Dementia was in part attributed to the marked degeneration of the medial part of the substantia nigra.
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PMID:[A 74-year-old woman with parkinsonism and dementia who died four years after the onset]. 973 28

Valproic acid (VPA) is an antiepileptic drug widely used and well-tolerated by most of patients. Its non-dose-dependent side effects seen mostly are the temporary gastrointestinal disturbances including anorexia and nausea, and hepatoxicity. As to its dose-dependent side effects are the weight loss, tremor, skin eruption and the alopecia. In this study we aimed to put forward the biotinidase deficiency considered as a possible cause of alopecia in the rats administered with valproic acid, and the correlation between liver and serum biotinidase enzyme activities (BEA) and transaminases, albumin and serum valproic acid levels. In our study, 4 groups of which one of them was a control group, each consisting of 15 male Wistar rats was organized. 200, 400, and 600 mg/kg/day of VPA, and distilled water, two divided doses per day, were administered per orally to VPA-1, VPA-2, VPA-3, and control group, respectively, in 60 days. Their serum and liver biotinidase enzyme activities, serum AST, ALT, albumin, and valproic acid levels were measured. Alopecia was seen in the subjects of 6.6% of VPA-1, 13.3% of VPA-2, and 26.6% of VPA-3. Significant difference in the liver tissues BEA was noted only between VPA-3 and the control group. Reductions were observed both in the liver tissues BEA and the serum BEA levels, which are inversely proportional to the VPA doses. A positive correlation between the liver biotinidase enzyme activities and the serum valproic acid levels, and the negative correlation between the liver tissues biotinidase activities and the serum valproic acid levels were noted, respectively. As a conclusion, the partial alopecia which is an initial symptom of reduced biotinidase activity may also be created depending on the reduction of biotinidase activity during valproic acid therapy. The alopecia which may further be observed in the patients receiving valproic acid therapy may be prevented by means of administration of biotin in a dose of 10 mg/day.
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PMID:Serum and liver tissue biotinidase enzyme activity in rats which were administrated to valproic acid. 1668 56

A 58-year-old woman complaining of finger tremor was referred to our hospital. The diagnosis of Graves' disease was made based on increased free triiodothyronine (18.88 pg/ml) and free thyroxine (7.47 ng/dl), low TSH (<0.005 microIU/ml) and increased TSH receptor binding antibody activity (70.9%). Serum level of AST (62 U/l) and ALT (93 U/l) were increased and liver biopsy revealed linkage of adjacent portal areas by lymphoplasmacytic infiltrates and fibrosis with piecemeal necrosis. Although antinuclear antibody was negative, these findings indicated that she had autoimmune hepatitis (AIH) according to the criteria of the International Autoimmune Hepatitis Scoring System. Slowly progressive type 1 diabetes mellitus (DM) was confirmed by a diabetic response pattern due to 75 g-oral glucose tolerance test, and seropositivity towards anti-glutamic acid decarboxylase (725 U/ml) and islet cell (80 JDF Units) antibodies. This case exhibited an extremely rare combination of three different autoimmune diseases, including Graves' disease, slowly progressive type 1 DM and AIH, and had no known sensitive human leukocyte antigen (HLA) typing or haplotype for these disorders. Although it is common for patients with Graves' disease to exhibit abnormal liver function, it is important to make an accurate diagnosis of AIH because of this life-threatening disorder.
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PMID:A case of polyglandular autoimmune syndrome type III complicated with autoimmune hepatitis. 1694 65

How to effectively mix small volumes of liquids within microplate wells is a still underestimated and often neglected challenge. The method the authors introduce here relies on violent turbulent motion within a liquid caused by spotting an organic solvent drop onto its surface. The amount needed, less than 1 to 3 microL, is generally small enough not to alter bioactive molecules. Moreover, a solvent may be selected for its compatibility with assay components. The method was tested with layers of aqueous liquids that differ in pH and concentration of a pH-dependent dye, allowing mixing to be monitored optically. Rapid mixing was caused by spotting drops of alcohols, acetone, acetonitrile, and aqueous solutions of these, as long as the difference of surface tension between the drop and the uppermost layer of the bulk liquid surpassed 30 dynes/cm. Along with this difference, position and velocity of spotting, as well as viscosity and geometry of the bulk liquid volume, may influence the turbulence evoked. No significant difference was found for the activity of aspartate aminotransferase, alanine aminotransferase, and alkaline phosphatase when measured after mixing by shaking and after mixing by spotting 1 microL of methanol onto assays within 96-well microplates.
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PMID:Turbo-mixing in microplates. 1725 92

Sodium azide poisonings occur very rarely. The mechanism of sodium azide toxic effect has not yet been fully explained. Despite the lack of an explicit procedure for the cases of sodium azide poisonings, in vitro tests and rare case reports suggest that treatment with antidotes for cyanide poisoning victims can be effective. This study describes two cases of suicidal sodium azide ingestion. Case 1. 30-year-old male ingested ca. 180 mg of sodium azide. On admission to hospital, within 4 hours from poisoning, the man complained of dizziness and anxiety. Physical examination revealed horizontal nystagmus, flapping tremor, HR 135/min. In laboratory tests, higher blood concentration of lactates (3 mmol/l) was detected, as well as lower potassium concentration (3.4 mmol/L) and increased transaminase activity (ALT 74 U/l, AST 90 U/l). Electrocardiographic tests showed a negative T wave in limb lead III. Other results were within normal. As the patient ingested a toxic dose of sodium azide, he was treated according to the therapy prescription for cyanide poisoning (amyl nitrite inhalation followed by intravenous administration of sodium nitrite and sodium thiosulphate). ECG record of the last day of hospitalization (7th day of treatment) showed negative T waves in lead III, V4-V6. He was discharged from hospital in good condition. Case 2.23-year-old male ingested 10 g of sodium azide 1.5 hours prior to admission to hospital. At the beginning, the patient's condition was good, but it changed to critical state within the first hours of hospitalization. He developed a deep coma, respiratory and circulatory insufficiency, metabolic acidosis, cardiac dysrrhythmias and anuria. Cardiac activity monitoring showed alternating tachycardia (140 beats per minute) and bradycardia (48 beats per minute), numerous additional supraventricular and ventricular extrasystoles and sinus dysrrhythmia. Cardiac arrest (asystolia) occurred twice, the second incident with fatal outcome. The patient received supportive therapy, he was also treated according to the therapy prescription for cyanide poisoning. Circulatory disturbances observed in both cases have been described in literature as symptoms of sodium azide poisoning. However, available literature data are scarce and lack systematization, most of them coming from several decades ago. The lack of patient's consent for detailed examination of circulatory system and liver made it impossible to gather further knowledge on the subject. The efficacy of treatment with antidotes for cyanide poisoning has not been unequivocally determined for this kind of intoxication.
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PMID:[Sodium azide--clinical course of the poisoning and treatment]. 1772 2

This study was carried out on 30 dwarf bucks to determine the effects of cypermethrin (CY) on clinical, hemato-biochemical and histopathological parameters. Animals were divided randomly into five equal groups, and each group was dipped in 0%, 0.1%, 0.4%, 0.8% or 1.6% CY, on days 0 and 15. Animals were monitored for clinical signs. Blood and serum samples were collected on day 0 and then fortnightly till day 75. Severe clinical signs comprising itching, restlessness, salivation, skin scratching and head shaking appeared at high doses (0.8% and 1.6% CY). Erythrocyte counts, hemoglobin, hematocrit, total protein, globulin and fibrinogen decreased significantly while total leukocyte counts, alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase concentration increased significantly in all the treated groups. In the liver, necrosis of hepatocytes along with cytoplasmic vacuolation and fibroblasts proliferation were observed at a high dose of CY (1.6%). Microscopically kidneys showed congestion of parenchyma and condensation of epithelial cells of tubules along with deposition of casts in tubules. Shrinkage of glomerular capillaries and increased urinary spaces were pronounced in the high-dose group. Lungs exhibited accumulation of fibrinous exudation, thickening of alveolar walls, collapse and broken alveoli in animals treated with a high dose of CY. It was concluded that CY caused dose-dependent effects on all parameters studied. High doses of CY (0.8% and 1.6% solution) affected the parameters on erythrocytes and leukocytes for whole evaluation period, while effects on plasma proteins were transient and on ALT, AST and fibrinogen were transient but lasted a few weeks longer.
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PMID:Effects of cypermethrin on some clinico-hemato-biochemical and pathological parameters in male dwarf goats (Capra hircus). 1877 26

Because of its excellent optical performance and electrical properties, TiO2 has a wide range of applications in many fields. It is often considered to be physiologically inert to humans. However, some recent studies have reported that nano-sized TiO2 may generate potential harm to the environment and humans. In this paper the in vivo acute toxicity of nano-sized TiO2 particles to adult mice was investigated. Mice were injected with different dosages of nano-sized TiO2 (0, 324, 648, 972, 1296, 1944 or 2592 mg kg(-1)). The effects of particles on serum biochemical levels were evaluated at various time points (24 h, 48 h, 7 days and 14 days). Tissues (spleen, heart, lung, kidney and liver) were collected for titanium content analysis and histopathological examination. Treated mice showed signs of acute toxicity such as passive behavior, loss of appetite, tremor and lethargy. Slightly elevated levels of the enzymes alanine aminotransferase and aspartate aminotransferase were found from the biochemical tests of serum whereas blood urea nitrogen was not significantly affected (P < 0.05). The accumulation of TiO2 was highest in spleen (P < 0.05). TiO2 was also deposited in liver, kidney and lung. Histopathological examinations showed that some TiO2 particles had entered the spleen and caused the lesion of spleen. Thrombosis was found in the pulmonary vascular system, which could be induced by the blocking of blood vessels with TiO2 particles. Moreover, hepatocellular necrosis and apoptosis, hepatic fibrosis, renal glomerulus swelling and interstitial pneumonia associated with alveolar septal thickening were also observed in high-dose groups.
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PMID:In vivo acute toxicity of titanium dioxide nanoparticles to mice after intraperitioneal injection. 1915 10

A female Japanese domestic shorthair cat showed gait abnormality at 5 months of age, and head shaking and tremor became apparent from 6 months of age. Serum biochemistry at 13 months of age revealed markedly elevated ALT and ALP. The cat died at 16 months of age. Histopathologic examination revealed prominent cytoplasmic swelling of neurons with accumulation of yellowish pigments. The storage pigments stained positively with periodic acid Schiff reaction, Schmorl method, and Oil red O stain. Ultrastructurally, the neuronal storage consisted of aggregates of dense materials, similar to the granular osmiophilic deposits in infantile ceroid-lipofuscinosis in humans. Hepatocytes were markedly swollen and contained faintly eosinophilic inclusion. To our knowledge this case is the sixth case of feline ceroid-lipofuscinosis, which is characterized by granular osmiophilic dense bodies in the neurons and prominent involvement of hepatocytes.
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PMID:Neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis in a Japanese domestic shorthair cat. 1949 97


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