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)

Administration of 5% formalin into the rat or guinea pig hind paw evokes two spontaneous responses: flinching/shaking and licking/biting of the injected paw. The temporal and behavioral characteristics of these objective endpoints are described. Additionally, several practical suggestions aimed at standardizing this test for the evaluation of analgesics are presented. The early/acute and late/tonic (0-10 and 20-35 min post-formalin, respectively) phases of flinching were used to quantitate antinociception in the rat. PD 117302, the kappa selective agonist, was three times more potent than morphine against tonic flinching after SC administration. Formalin may therefore be a noxious stimulus of choice in the evaluation of kappa agonists. Morphine was only twice as potent against tonic flinching as against acute flinching or the tail-dip reflex to water (50 degrees C). In contrast, PD 117302 was 27 times less potent on early phase and was inactive in the tail-dip test. Thus, while morphine is essentially equipotent across tests, PD 117302 shows a spectrum of activity with impressive potency and efficacy being obtained against tonic pain. Kappa receptors may therefore be prominently involved in tonic pain states. Aspirin given orally was not consistently antinociceptive in either phase of the formalin test. Spinal transection completely abolished late phase responding but only partly attenuated flinching in the early phase. This suggests that the relative involvement of spinal (as opposed to supraspinal) processing of noxious inputs may, at least in part, be a function of stimulus intensity and underlie the differences in antinociceptive potency observed in this work.
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PMID:Standardization of the rat paw formalin test for the evaluation of analgesics. 188 2

Recovery from inhalation anesthesia is often marked by the occurrence of postoperative tremor that resembles shivering, which is known to be associated with an increase in oxygen uptake (VO2), CO2 output (VCO2), and minute ventilation (VE). This study determined the time course of the ventilatory changes observed during the first hour of recovery from isoflurane anesthesia. Ten patients (ASA PS 1) scheduled for minor orthopedic surgery (knee arthroscopy) were included in this study. Anesthesia was induced with thiopental (5 mg/kg) and maintained with 70% N2O and isoflurane (1-2%) in oxygen, allowing spontaneous ventilation. In the recovery room, after N2O had been discontinued, patients were connected to a Beckman Metabolic measurement cart, which allowed a continuous monitoring of VE, VO2, VCO2, and PETCO2. Postoperative tremor was observed in all patients within 7.1 +/- 1.2 min (mean +/- SEM) after isoflurane discontinuation and was associated with a marked increase in the following: VO2, from 173 +/- 26 ml/min at the end of anesthesia to 457 +/- 88 ml/min; VCO2, from 149 +/- 18 ml/min at the end of anesthesia to 573 +/- 98 ml/min; and VE, from 6.8 +/- 0.7 l/min at the end of anesthesia to 16.6 +/- 2.8 l/min (values obtained 20 min after isoflurane discontinuation). In three patients during intense shivering, VO2, VCO2, and VE reached peak values higher than 800 ml/min, 1,300 ml/min and 30 l/min, respectively. This study shows that postoperative tremor following isoflurane anesthesia may be associated with prolonged and large increases in oxygen uptake, CO2 output, and minute ventilation.
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PMID:Changes in ventilation, oxygen uptake, and carbon dioxide output during recovery from isoflurane anesthesia. 249 61

Formalin which was said to produce prolonged pain and inflammation was injected subcutaneously into the back of guinea pigs, and minor tremor pain response (MTP-response) was measured using the MT-pick up, integrator and digital volt meter. The MTP-response curve showed a biphasic pattern. Immediately after injection, the MTP-response curve showed a significant peak which lasted for about 2 min (the first phase) and subsequently dipped rapidly, and after 5 min, it began to rise slowly again and had a peak at 30 min (the second phase). Morphine (6 mg/kg, s.c.) inhibited completely the first and second phases. Levallorphan (1.2 mg/kg), however, reversed the inhibitory effect of morphine at the first phase, but not at the second phase. Aspirin (200 mg/kg, i.p.), aminopyrine (100 mg/kg, s.c.) and pentazocine (5 mg-10 mg/kg, s.c.) inhibited significantly the formalin-induced MTP-response at both phases. Pyridinol carbamate (200 mg/kg, i.p.) and hydrocortisone (25 mg/kg, i.p.) had no effect on the MTP-response at the first phase, but inhibited it at the second phase. There was a parallelism between the time course of the vascular permeability induced by formalin and that of the second phase of MTP-response. From these results, it is suggested that the first phase of MTP-response is derived from the direct effect of formalin on free nerve endings, while the second phase is derived from the inflammation. Since two kinds of pain features were differentiated in this method, the relationships with so-called "immediate pain" and "delayed pain" were discussed. Furthermore, this method can be utilized to assess pain and the action of analgesics objectively and quantitatively.
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PMID:[Formalin-induced minor tremor response as an indicator of pain]. 651 Aug 42

The clinical records of patients withdrawn from the UK-TIA Aspirin Trial after identification of a brain tumour were reviewed. Certain features of transient focal neurological dysfunction were associated with an underlying brain tumour rather than transient ischaemia: a) focal jerking or shaking; b) pure sensory phenomena; c) loss of consciousness; d) isolated aphasia or speech arrest. In several patients the misdiagnosis occurred because these features were interpreted as the sequelae of previous ischaemic damage. When a transient focal neurological attack is associated with any of these features, a brain tumour must be considered. If patients later develop epilepsy the diagnosis of cerebral ischaemia should be reviewed.
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PMID:Intracranial tumours that mimic transient cerebral ischaemia: lessons from a large multicentre trial. The UK TIA Study Group. 850 52

A novel, colon-targeted delivery system (CODES), which uses lactulose, was investigated in this study. Lactulose is not absorbed in the upper GI tract, but degraded to organic acids by enterobacteria in the lower gastrointestinal tract, especially the colon. A CODES consists of three components: a core containing lactulose and the drug, an inner acid-soluble material layer, and an outer layer of an enterosoluble material. When a CODES containing a pigment was introduced into the rat cecum directly after shaking in JP 2nd fluid for 3 h, pigment release was observed 1 h after introduction. A CODES containing 5-aminosalicylic acid (5-ASA) was orally administered to fasting and fed dogs to evaluate its pharmacokinetic profiles. 5-ASA was first detected in plasma after 3 h, which is the reported colon arrival time for indigestible solids, after dosing to fasting dogs. The T(max) in fed dogs was delayed by 9 h when compared to fasting dogs. This corresponds to the gastric emptying time. However, the C(max) and AUC under fed conditions were almost as same as those under fasting conditions. The results of this study show that lactulose can act as a trigger for drug release in the colon, utilizing the action of enterobacteria.
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PMID:Studies on lactulose formulations for colon-specific drug delivery. 1243 32

The effects of surface type (stainless steel, acetal resin, and fiberglass reinforced plastic wall paneling [FRP]), soil, and temperature on the survival of Listeria monocytogenes, Salmonella spp., and Yersinia enterocolitica, in the presence of condensate were evaluated. Surface coupons--half soiled with sterile porcine serum--were exposed to cell suspensions made from individual five-strain cocktails composed of organisms from the same genus (10(7) CFU/ml) in Butterfield's phosphate buffer and incubated for 2 h at 25 degrees C allowing attachment of cells to coupon surfaces. Coupons were rinsed to remove unattached cells, incubated at either 4 or 10 degrees C under condensate-forming conditions, and sampled at six time intervals over a 15-day period. For enumeration, cells were removed from the coupons by vigorous shaking in 100 ml of Butterfield's phosphate buffer with 3 g of glass beads and plated on tryptic soy agar with 0.6% yeast extract. Stainless steel did not support the survival of Listeria as well as acetal resin or FRP. Acetal resin and stainless steel were less supportive of Salmonella than FRP. All surfaces supported the survival of Yersinia over the 15-day trial equally. Temperature had little effect on survival of all organisms across all surfaces with one exception. However, Yersinia displayed growth on FRP at 10 degrees C. but death at 4 degrees C. Serum had a protective effect on L. monocytogenes on all surfaces, with populations sustained at significantly (P < or = 0.05) higher numbers over time than unsoiled coupons. Serum didnot effect survival of Salmonella or Yersinia on stainless steel, acetal resin, or FRP.
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PMID:Surface material, temperature, and soil effects on the survival of selected foodborne pathogens in the presence of condensate. 1563 69

This study was performed to compare the anesthetic efficacy and safety of three local anesthetic agents: racemic bupivacaine and its two isomers: ropivacaine and levobupivacaine, in patients undergoing lower abdominal surgery. One hundred-twenty patients, ASA I-III, were randomized to receive an intrathecal injection of one of three local anesthetic solutions. Group A (n = 40) received 3 ml of isobaric bupivacaine 5 mg/ml (15 mg). Group B (n = 40) received 3 ml of isobaric ropivacaine 5 mg/ml (15 mg). Group C (n = 40) received 3 ml of isobaric levobupivacaine 5 mg/ml (15 mg). The onset and duration of sensory block at dermatome level T8, maximum upper spread of sensory block, time for 2-segment regression of sensory block as well as the onset, intensity and duration of motor block were recorded, as were any adverse effects, such as bradycardia, hypotension, hypoxia, tremor, nausea and/or vomiting. Time to unassisted standing up and voluntary micturition was also recorded. The onset of motor block was significantly faster in the bupivacaine group compared with that in the ropivacaine group and almost the same of that in the levobupivacaine group (P < 0.05). Ropivacaine presented a shorter duration of both motor and sensory block than bupivacaine and levobupivacaine (P < 0.05). Bupivacaine required more often the use of a vasoactive drug (ephedrine) compared to both ropivacaine and levobupivacaine and of a sympathomimetic drug (atropine) compared to the ropivacaine group.
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PMID:Spinal anesthesia: comparison of plain ropivacaine, bupivacaine and levobupivacaine for lower abdominal surgery. 1865 2

Drugs used for treating inflammatory bowel disease are known to have a number of gastrointestinal and liver adverse effects. 5-ASA products are relatively safe and have few adverse events. In contrast sulfasalazine has side effects in 11-40% of treated patients including fatigue, nausea, abdominal pain and diarrhoea. Glucocorticoids can induce or propagate peptic ulcers and upper GI bleeding especially in combination with NSAIDs. Thioguanins may have severe gastrointestinal side effects including gastrointestinal complaints (in up to 12%), hepatotoxicity (up to 4%) and pancreatitis (1%). Nodular regenerative hyperplasia (NRH) is an important potential side effect of thiopurine therapy especially in men with Crohn's disease after ileocecal resection. NRH may ultimately lead to portal hypertension. A major concern of methotrexate therapy in IBD besides myelosuppression and pulmonary fibrosis is hepatotoxicity. 5mg of folic acid substitution per week potentially decreases gastrointestinal side effects by 80% without interfering with the efficacy of methotrexate. Besides renal dysfunction, tremor, hirsutism, hypertension and gum hyperplasia cyclosporine is known to have a number of gastrointestinal side effects that occur with less frequency such as diarrhoea (up to 8%) nausea and vomiting (up to 10%) and hepatotoxicity in 1-4%. Rare gastrointestinal adverse events are gastritis and peptic ulcers. Paying attention to these potential deleterious side effects is mandatory for physicians treating IBD patients.
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PMID:Gastrointestinal and liver adverse effects of drugs used for treating IBD. 2022 29

Aspirin (acetylsalicylic acid) has been widely used as an over-the-counter drug to relieve pain throughout the world. In suicide attempts, aspirin is one of the most common drugs taken in large quantities. The concentration of salicylic acid shows a low-level distribution in the mouse brain, a site that may be critical regarding the expression of symptoms (e.g. hyperpnea, coma, convulsion and tremor) during acute aspirin toxicity. Therefore, it was suggested that sensitivity to salicylic acid concerning acute toxicity was higher in the brain than in other organs. Moreover, it is thought that it is common for aspirin and ethanol to be ingested at the same time. Therefore, the present study was designed to investigate the influence of ethanol on the distribution of salicylic acid, which is a primary metabolite of aspirin, and its related metabolite, salicyluric acid. The oral co-administration of aspirin (0.5g/kg) and ethanol (2.5g/kg; 10ml/kg of 25% (w/v)) enhanced the concentrations of salicylic acid in the plasma and organs, especially in the brain, compared with the aspirin alone-treated group. On the other hand, ethanol did not influence the concentrations of salicyluric acid in the plasma and kidney compared with the aspirin alone-treated group. These results suggest that ethanol enhances aspirin absorption from the gastrointestinal tract but has no influence on its metabolism. Thus, it is dangerous to ingest the alcohol and aspirin at the same time, as this may exacerbate the acute toxicity of aspirin.
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PMID:Oral administration of ethanol with aspirin increases the concentration of salicylic acid in plasma and organs, especially the brain, in mice. 2030 49

Rigorous measurement of intercellular binding energy can only be made using methods grounded in thermodynamic principles in systems at equilibrium. We have developed tissue surface tensiometry (TST) specifically to measure the surface free energy of interaction between cells. The biophysical concepts underlying TST have been previously described in detail. The method is based on the observation that mutually cohesive cells, if maintained in shaking culture, will spontaneously assemble into clusters. Over time, these clusters will round up to form spheres. This rounding-up behavior mimics the behavior characteristic of liquid systems. Intercellular binding energy is measured by compressing spherical aggregates between parallel plates in a custom-designed tissue surface tensiometer. The same mathematical equation used to measure the surface tension of a liquid droplet is used to measure surface tension of 3D tissue-like spherical aggregates. The cellular equivalent of liquid surface tension is intercellular binding energy, or more generally, tissue cohesivity. Previous studies from our laboratory have shown that tissue surface tension (1) predicts how two groups of embryonic cells will interact with one another, (2) can strongly influence the ability of tissues to interact with biomaterials, (3) can be altered not only through direct manipulation of cadherin-based intercellular cohesion, but also by manipulation of key ECM molecules such as FN and 4) correlates with invasive potential of lung cancer, fibrosarcoma, brain tumor and prostate tumor cell lines. In this article we will describe the apparatus, detail the steps required to generate spheroids, to load the spheroids into the tensiometer chamber, to initiate aggregate compression, and to analyze and validate the tissue surface tension measurements generated.
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PMID:Measurement of aggregate cohesion by tissue surface tensiometry. 2150 11


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