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 H2-He-O2 mixture with 54 to 56% hydrogen was studied with 6 subjects (professional divers) during 2 dives to 450 m. The 38-h compression was the same as that used with other types of breathing mixtures (He-O2 and He-N2-O2). The results obtained during compression and during the stay at 450 m in H2-He-O2 show that the EEG changes (increase of theta activities in the anterior regions of the skull, decrease of alpha activities) are similar to those found with other respiratory mixtures. On the other hand, the other symptoms of high pressure neurologic syndrome (HPNS) were clearly improved for the same depths. Thus, neurologic symptoms (tremor, dysmetria, myoclonia, drowsiness) are nonexistent, and the performances during psychometric tests remain similar to those of the surface. Hydrogen, with its narcotic potency, suppresses some symptoms of HPNS and seems to open new perspectives for deep diving.
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PMID:Effects of a H2-He-O2 mixture on the HPNS up to 450 msw. 321 43

The autofluorescence of isolated rat liver cell plasma membranes was characterized in vitro in relation to the autofluorescence used previously for fluorescence recovery after photobleaching (FRAP) studies. The fluorescence of membrane preparations displayed an emission pattern with a maximum at around 525 nm when excited with a 468 nm blue light. The excitation spectrum monitored at 525 nm closely resembled that of flavin compounds (riboflavin, FAD, FMN). The chloroform extract of the membrane fraction showed practically no fluorescence, whereas, both the water-soluble and water-insoluble protein fractions remaining after chloroform extraction were strongly fluorescent. The fluorescence disappeared almost completely under the effect of sodium hydrosulfite, and recovered after oxidation either by shaking in air or by adding buffered hydrogen peroxide solution. The fluorescence of the acid extract of the plasma membranes photolyzed in an alkaline medium was quite similar to that of lumiflavin obtained from the photolysis of riboflavin in an alkaline medium. The plasma membranes prepared from isolated hepatocytes (which were completely devoid of endothelial cell contamination) exhibited the same autofluorescence in the liver cell plasma membranes. The results suggest that the autofluorescence of the liver cell plasma membranes is most likely of a character similar to that of flavin, bound to hepatocyte plasma membrane proteins. This fluorescence is suitable for measuring the average lateral diffusion constant of proteins by means of FRAP methods.
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PMID:Characterization of the autofluorescence of rat liver plasma membranes. 335 26

The sonographic appearance of a hematoma may be affected by various factors, including the age of the hematoma. The effect of mechanical motion on the echogenicity and histologic appearance, and on the proton relaxation times T1 and T2 of blood clots, was studied in vitro for up to 21 days. All clots were of similar echogenicity and microscopic appearance during the first 2 days. The minimally disturbed clots were sonolucent from day 4 onwards, whereas moderate mechanical disturbance changed the microscopic structure of the blood clots and caused them to retain their echogenicity. Proton relaxation times T1 and T2 of both minimally disturbed and vigorously manipulated blood samples showed a rapid shortening of T1 and a less marked decrease of T2 between days 1 and 4, which was independent of mechanical motion. The ultrasonic appearance reflected the histologic appearance but not necessarily the age of the clot. The magnetic resonance (MR) parameters T1 and to a lesser extent T2 accurately reflected the age of the clot during the first 6 days. Although relatively gentle motion caused a large change in the ultrasonic appearance of the clots, vigorous shaking did not affect the magnetic resonance appearance of human blood clots.
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PMID:Effect of motion on the sonographic and magnetic resonance patterns of ageing blood. 353 88

[2-(14)C,(2R)-2-(3)H(1)]- and [2-(14)C,(2S)-2-(3)H(1)]-Mevalonates were rapidly incorporated into phytoene, lycopene, rubixanthin and zeaxanthin in a Flavobacterium system obtained by disruption of the bacterial cells by shaking with glass beads. Four hydrogen atoms arising from the 2-pro-S-hydrogen atoms of mevalonate were lost in the desaturation of phytoene to lycopene, rubixanthin and zeaxanthin. The desaturation of phytoene involves trans-elimination of hydrogen in the introduction of the double bonds at C-7, C-11, C-7' and C-11'.
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PMID:Carotenoid biosynthesis in a Flavobacterium sp.: stereochemistry of hydrogen elimination in the desaturation of phytoene to lycopene, rubixanthin and zeaxanthin. 476 56

Competitive mixed cultures were grown from inocula of a large number of bacteria of a genotypically nonfimbriate (fim(-)) strain of Salmonella typhimurium and a small number of a genotypically fimbriate (fim(+)) variant strain that formed type 1 fimbriae and had been derived from the fim(-) strain by phage transduction. The fim(+) strain differed from the fim(-) strain in fermenting l-rhamnose (rha(+)), and the viable fim(+) and fim(-) bacteria present in the cultures after different periods at 37 C were counted differentially in platings on rhamnose media. When the cultures were grown under aerobic static conditions in tubes of nutrient broth, the fim(+) bacteria rapidly outgrew the fim(-) bacteria, so that, although starting as a small minority (e.g., 1 in 10(7)), they approached or surpassed the number of the fim(-) in 48 hr. A pellicle consisting of fimbriate bacteria was formed on the surface of the broth between 6 and 24 hr, and it is thought that the advantage of access to atmospheric oxygen enjoyed by these bacteria in the pellicle enabled them to outgrow the fim(-) bacteria confined in the oxygen-depleted broth. The fim(+) bacteria did not show selective outgrowth in mixed cultures grown in broth aerated by continuous shaking, in static broth incubated anaerobically in hydrogen, and on aerobic agar plates, i.e., under conditions not allowing an advantage from pellicle formation. The outgrowth of fim(+) bacteria in aerobic static broth was prevented by the addition of alpha-methylmannoside, a substance that inhibits the adhesive and early pellicle-forming properties of bacteria with type 1 fimbriae. A motile flagellate (fla(+)) variant of a fim(-)fla(-) strain of S. typhimurium outgrew its parent strain in mixed cultures in aerobic static broth, but the selective advantage conferred by motility was weaker than that conferred by fimbriation.
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PMID:Selective outgrowth of fimbriate bacteria in static liquid medium. 491 69

Maximum growth of Campylobacter fetus subsp. jejuni, strain C-61, occurred when the cultures were incubated with shaking in atmospheres containing approximately 30% hydrogen, 5% oxygen, and 10% CO2. Suspensions of cells grown under these conditions consumed oxygen with formate as the substrate in the presence of 0.33 mM cyanide, which completely inhibited respiration with ascorbate-N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine and with lactate. Spectroscopic evidence with intact cells suggested that a form of cytochrome c, reducible with formate but not with lactate or ascorbate-N,N,N',N'-tetramethyl-p-phenylenediamine, can be reoxidized by a cyanide-insensitive system. Analysis of membranes from the cells showed high- and low-potential forms of cytochrome c, cytochrome b, and various enzymes, including hydrogenase, formate dehydrogenase, and fumarate reductase. The predominant carbon monoxide-binding pigment appeared to be a form of cytochrome c, but the spectra also showed evidence of cytochrome o. The membrane cytochromes were reduced by hydrogen in the presence of 2-heptyl-4-hydroxyquinoline-N-oxide at concentrations which prevented the reduction of cytochrome c with succinate as the electron donor. Reoxidation of the substrate-reduced cytochromes by oxygen was apparently mediated by cyanide-sensitive and cyanide-insensitive systems. The membranes also had hydrogen-fumarate oxidoreductase activity mediated by cytochrome b. We conclude that C. fetus jejuni has high- and low-potential forms of cytochrome which are associated with a complex terminal oxidase system.
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PMID:Aerobic and anaerobic respiratory systems in Campylobacter fetus subsp. jejuni grown in atmospheres containing hydrogen. 628 61

Hydrogen peroxide production in reconstituted skim milk (10%) and low-fat milk by four strains lf Lactobacillus acidophilus was studied at 37 and 4 C. Strains A and B produced little, but strains C and D produced larger amounts, especially if agitated continuously during growth at 37 C or storage at 4 C. Continuous shaking was required at 4 C for C or D (4.0 X 10(8)/ml) to produce sufficient hydrogen peroxide to retard growth of Pseudomonas fragi. Flavin adenine dinucleotide stimulated the oxidation of reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide by dialyzed cell-free extracts of C and D, which indicated that the reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide oxidases of these strains produce hydrogen peroxide as an end product.
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PMID:Production of Hydrogen peroxide by Lactobacillus acidophilus. 676 78

Deltamethrin is a pyrethroid insecticide which produces reversible motor symptoms in mammals involving facial movements, progressive incoordination, and choreoathetosis. These symptoms were found to be preceded and accompanied by increases in blood flow in the caudate nucleus and cerebral cortex of conscious rats. Blood flow, measured by the hydrogen polarography method, showed a 2.8-3.8 fold increase in the caudate nucleus and a 1.9-2.6 increase in the cortex after intraperitoneal deltamethrin. The increase in caudate blood flow provided an early and sensitive indicator of the development of motor symptoms, and preceded development of EEG spike discharges. A different pattern of motor symptoms consisting largely of tremor with no choreoathetosis was produced for comparison using another pyrethroid, cismethrin. This, whilst producing a similar increase in cortical flow, did not produce the disproportionate increase in caudate flow characteristic of deltamethrin. Although the actions of deltamethrin were shown not to be restricted to the extrapyramidal system, the selectivity of the blood flow increases, and the nature of the symptoms produced show deltamethrin to be a useful tool for the production of experimental extrapyramidal motor hyperactivity.
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PMID:Changes in brain blood flow associated with deltamethrin-induced choreoathetosis in the rat. 679 14

To investigate the role of hydrogen peroxide in Cr(VI) toxicity in vivo toward bacterial cells, we examined the effect of Cr(VI), hydrogen peroxide, sodium azide, and mannitol on the viability of Escherichia coli. Bacterial cells were incubated for 1 h with shaking in the presence of Cr(VI), hydrogen peroxide, sodium azide as catalase inhibitor, and/or mannitol as radical scavenger. The colony-forming ability and double-strand DNA degradation were examined. The viability assays revealed that Cr(VI) toxicity depended on hydroxyl radicals generated in the reaction involving hydrogen peroxide and chromium. Moreover, incubation of E. coli cells with 10 mM Cr(VI) and 3 mM hydrogen peroxide caused the degradation of double-strand DNA in vivo, which was suppressed by the addition of mannitol. These results indicated that hydroxyl radicals generated in the incubation degraded DNA of E. coli cells, resulting in cell death. In the absence of added hydrogen peroxide, the intracellular concentration of hydrogen peroxide in E. coli was low (below 1 microM). A catalase-defective strain incubated in the absence of added hydrogen peroxide remained fully viable after 1 h but showed decreased viability after prolonged incubation (4-8 h). The addition of mannitol suppressed this decrease, suggesting that hydroxyl radicals may be involved in the expression of Cr(VI) toxicity even without added hydrogen peroxide.
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PMID:Mechanism of chromium(VI) toxicity in Escherichia coli: is hydrogen peroxide essential in Cr(VI) toxicity? 759 39

Extrapyramidal signs are frequently observed in toxic diseases due to environmental and industrial chemical substances. The predominant manifestations are Parkinsonism and less frequently tremor. Parkinsonism has been described among the toxic diseases due to carbon monoxide, hydrogen sulfide, and hydrogen cyanide. In these diseases, Parkinsonism used to appear in the recovery stage from coma in the severe cases. This was also true in methyl alcohol poisoning. The extrapyramidal signs are usually symmetrical. Akinesia and rigidity are main features. Tremor is absent or mild. Levodopa and the other antiparkinsonian drugs are not so effective. Brain CT studies have revealed symmetrical low density areas in the globus pallidus and putamen. On the other hand, postural tremor is main neurological findings in the poisonings by inorganic mercury and tetraethyl lead. In general, tremor in the toxic disease is reported to be self-limited.
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PMID:[Extrapyramidal syndrome induced by chemical substances]. 827 73


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