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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The mutagenicity of acrylonitrile (vinyl
cyanide
, propenenitrile) has been demonstrated in the Ames Salmonella typhimurium/liver microsome assay system. Acrylonitrile, in the presence of a mouse liver homogenate produced mutations in the TA 1535, TA 1538 and TA 1978 strains. Exposure of the bacteria was achieved by spotting the acrylonitrile on a "lawn" of salmonella, by
shaking
a reaction mixture consisting of bacteria, liver homogenate and acrylonitrile, and by exposing the homogenate and bacteria to an atmosphere containing the acrylonitrile. Mutagenesis by this latter method was observed at exposures as low as 57 ppm, less than three times the TLV of 20 ppm that is designated in the United States.
...
PMID:Mutagenic studies with acrylonitrile. 32 11
The effect of
cyanide
on whole-brain calcium levels was determined in mice administered KCN and correlated with the neurotoxic signs manifested during acute
cyanide
poisoning. KCN (10mg/kg, sc) significantly increased whole-brain total calcium levels from 48.1 +/- 1.8 to 66.5 +/- 3.9 micrograms/g dry wt within 15 min after administration. The levels remained elevated for 3 hr and returned to control readings after 12 hr. Dose-response studies revealed KCN, at doses of 10-15 mg/kg, produced significant elevations of whole-brain calcium 30 min after administration. No measurable effect was obtained from lower doses which suggested a threshold effect. Pretreatment 15 min before KCN with diltiazem, a calcium channel blocker, prevented the
cyanide
-induced rise in whole-brain total calcium.
Cyanide
-induced tremors, which are centrally mediated symptoms of intoxication, were quantified and correlated with the observed changes in whole-brain calcium.
Tremors
were detected at 10 and 12 mg/kg KCN and peak intensity was observed at 15 min postcyanide. Pretreatment with diltiazem markedly attenuated the
cyanide
-induced tremors. It appears that a correlation exists between
cyanide
-induced change in whole-brain calcium and tremors. This study suggests that intraneuronal calcium may play an important role in mediating
cyanide
neurotoxicity and calcium channel blocking agents may be useful in limiting the severity of the centrally mediated symptoms of acute
cyanide
intoxication.
...
PMID:Cyanide-induced neurotoxicity: role of neuronal calcium. 372 69
By a combination of luciferase and fluorescence methods adenine nucleotide pools in Neurospora crassa have been examined under various conditions of growth and metabolic inhibition. During sustained exponential growth (25 C,
shaking
liquid cultures), the intracellular adenosine 5'-triphosphate (ATP) concentration, [ATP](i), rises slowly from the conidial level near 1 mM (1 mmol/kg of cell water) to a maximum of 2.0 to 2.5 mM at 14 h, after which it slowly declines. The adenosine 5'-diphosphate and adenosine 5'-monophosphate (AMP) curves show two peaks, at 8 and 20 h, with a minimum at 16 h. The "energy charge" function varies around a mean of 0.72 throughout the period of exponential growth. Transferral of growing cells to buffer lacking a nitrogen source stabilizes the [ATP](i) near 2.5 mM, apparently independent of the cell age, and most studies of metabolic inhibitors were carried out on cells grown 14 to 16 h and then shifted to N-free buffer. Under these conditions sudden respiratory blockade (
cyanide
) produces exponential decay of ATP with a time constant of about 5.7 s (half-time of 3.9 s), and at a rate which implies a minimal ATP turnover of 0.44 mM/min. This figure is about one-third the rate (1.17 mM/min) which would be calculated from steady-state respiration, a discrepancy which may partly be accounted for by transphosphorylation from appreciable amounts of non-adenine nucleoside di- and triphosphates present in Neurospora. For all three adenine nucleotides, the transients associated with sudden respiratory blockade include overshoots or undershoots of several minutes duration, which are consistent with feedback regulation of glycolysis by the AMP/ATP ratio.
...
PMID:Adenine nucleotide levels in Neurospora, as influenced by conditions of growth and by metabolic inhibitors. 426 34
The oxy-form of sickle hemoglobin (Hb S) is abnormally unstable and precipitates at a 10-fold faster rate than does oxyhemoglobin A (oxy-Hb A) during mechanical
shaking
. The apparent rate of precipitation of heterozygous hemolysate (AS) is approximately half that of oxy-Hb S. The deoxy-form of Hb S, on the other hand, is resistant to the mechanical treatment. This stabilization is attributed to the conformational change of hemoglobin rather than the lack of oxygen, because carbonmonoxide hemoglobin S, which is known to have conformational properties similar to those of oxy-Hb, is unstable even under anaerobic conditions. Methemoglobin S is most unstable, although addition of
cyanide
stabilizes the protein. The precipitation of oxy-Hb S is inhibited by ethanol and other organic solvents. The relationship of the mechanical instability of sickle oxyhemoglobin to intraerythrocytic denaturation and vaso-occlusive phenomena in sickle cell disease to be determined.
...
PMID:Abnormal precipitation of oxyhemoglobin S by mechanical shaking. 452 7
Sheets of mucosal epithelial cells were released from guinea pig small intestine after incubation with ethylenediaminetetraacetate. Cells in sheets retained their columnar shape for 24 hr at room temperature, and exclusion of nigrosine suggested they had intact plasma membranes. When sheets were disaggregated individual cells had normal morphology for at least 4 hr. During isolation 16% of the total protein and 24% of the total lactic dehydrogenase were lost from the cells, but subsequent enzyme leakage was low. Leakage increased with
shaking
, incubation at 37 degrees C, or increasing the oxygen tension of the suspending medium, but was minimal when the Na(+):K(+) ratio in the medium was 8:1 and the osmolarity was high. Losses of particulate enzyme activities were negligible. Respiration was constant for up to 4 hr and was insensitive to calcium, bicarbonate, oxygen tension, and pH. It was inhibited by
cyanide
and iodoacetate and varied with the Na(+):K(+) ratio of the extracellular fluid and the structural integrity of the cells. All preparations concentrated potassium and excluded sodium, but lost this ability if ouabain was added or cells were broken. Potassium-42 uptake was also sensitive to temperature, ouabain, and structural integrity. The preparations are being used to study cell metabolism in the intestinal epithelium.
...
PMID:Studies on epithelial cells isolated from guinea pig small intestine. 500 Jan 70
When Neurospora mycelium is transferred from a medium containing sucrose to one containing acetate as sole source of carbon, a preferential synthesis of many Krebs cycle, glyoxylate cycle, and associated enzymes occurs. Respiration was inhibited during preferential enzyme synthesis in the following ways. (i) The amount of aeration (
shaking
) was reduced, (ii)
cyanide
was added to the culture, (iii) the carbon source, acetate, was removed, (iv) a mutant strain was starved of its Krebs cycle intermediates, and (v) respiration was inhibited by mutation. The effect of this respiratory inhibition on the synthesis of a number of enzymes was measured. It was found that the synthesis of nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NAD)-linked glutamate dehydrogenase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase was significantly less inhibited under conditions of respiratory inhibition than was the synthesis of Krebs cycle, glyoxylate cycle, and most other cell proteins synthesized during the adaptation period. This differential inhibition of enzyme synthesis was almost certainly not due to differential repression by regulatory metabolic end product effectors. Inhibition of mitochondrial respiration under these conditions most likely results in a limitation of the energy supply of the cell. Thus, it is suggested that the inhibition of synthesis of most proteins after inhibition of mitochondrial respiration results from a lack of energy in a utilizable form. Possible reasons to account for the relative insensitivity of NAD-linked glutamate dehydrogenase and phosphoenolpyruvate carboxykinase to inhibition under these conditions are discussed.
...
PMID:Selective inhibition of enzyme synthesis under conditions of respiratory inhibition. 509 92
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.
...
PMID:Aerobic and anaerobic respiratory systems in Campylobacter fetus subsp. jejuni grown in atmospheres containing hydrogen. 628 61
We report 2 patients with neurological sequelae of oral
cyanide
intoxication who were evaluated clinically and neuropsychologically, with high-resolution magnetic resonance imaging and one of them with positron emission tomography. The clinical syndrome was characterized by extrapyramidal motor and cerebellar symptoms such as bradykinesia, hypomimia, slowed speech, anteropulsion, and marked retropulsion, but little
tremor
. The sensory and pyramidal motor systems were normal or relatively spared. On neuropsychological testing the intellectual capacity and memory functions were normal, whereas the speed of motor reaction and verbal fluency were reduced. Magnetic resonance imaging showed damage of the globus pallidus, putamen, substantia nigra, subthalamic nucleus, and cerebellum in both patients, whereas the sensory-motor cortex and hippocampus were relatively spared. 18F-6-Fluoro-dopa positron emission tomography revealed a symmetrical reduction of striatal dopa uptake by 42% on average that was similar in the putamen and caudate. 18F-2-Fluoro-2-deoxyglucose positron emission tomography showed a regional reduction of the glucose metabolism in the posterior putamen and temporo-parieto-occipital and cerebellar cortex.
...
PMID:Neurological sequelae of cyanide intoxication--the patterns of clinical, magnetic resonance imaging, and positron emission tomography findings. 748 75
We studied the relative etiologic importance upon the development of Parkinson's disease (PD) of occupational exposure to herbicides and other compounds, ionizing radiation exposure, family history of PD and essential
tremor
, smoking, and history of various viral and other medical conditions. We identified patients (n = 130) with neurologist-confirmed idiopathic PD through contacts with Calgary general hospitals, long-term care facilities, neurologists, the Movement Disorder Clinic, and the Parkinson's Society of Southern Alberta, and selected two matched (by sex and age +/- 2.5 years) community controls for each case by random digit dialing. We obtained lifetime work, chemical, radiation, medical, and smoking exposure histories and family histories of PD and essential
tremor
by personal interviews, and analyzed the data using conditional logistic regression for matched sets. After controlling for potential confounding and interaction between the exposure variables, using multivariate statistical methods, having a family history of PD was the strongest predictor of PD risk, followed by head trauma and then occupational herbicide use. Cases and controls did not differ in their previous exposures to smoking or ionizing radiation; family history of essential
tremor
; work-related contact with aluminum, carbon monoxide,
cyanide
, manganese, mercury, or mineral oils; or history of arteriosclerosis, chicken pox, encephalitis, hypertension, hypotension, measles, mumps, rubella, or Spanish flu. These results support the hypothesis of a multifactorial etiology for PD, probably involving genetic, environmental, trauma, and possibly other factors.
...
PMID:Parkinson's disease: a test of the multifactorial etiologic hypothesis. 817 May 64
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.
...
PMID:[Extrapyramidal syndrome induced by chemical substances]. 827 73
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