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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a 50-year-old woman, working as a dental assistant for more than ten years, chronic
mercury
poisoning developed insidiously, apparently from careless handling of
mercury
-amalgam. The main signs consisted of mental and neurological changes such as erethism,
tremor
and mercurial psellism. Peripheral arterial circulatory disorders occurred in the course of the disease, as well as abdominal colic and a polyneuropathy, which provided the first clues to panarteritis nodosa subsequently confirmed histologically.
...
PMID:[An unusual case of panarteritis nodosa associated with chronic mercury poisoning (author's transl)]. 1 86
Accidental acute
mercury
vapor poisoning in three persons is reported. Three hours after exposure, symptomatology began by chills, vomiting, diarrhea and chest pain. Two patients, respectively 67 and 77 year old, presented severe pulmonary edema, then neurological symptoms with
tremor
and coma. This toxic pulmonary edema, which entailed artificial ventilation, was followed in both cases by an acute interstitial pulmonary fibrosis which led to death respectively after six and sixteen days. In the third case (a thirty eight year old patient) a skin rash, erythematous and pustuliform was observed. Analysis for total
mercury
by flameless atomic absorption showed very high
mercury
levels in blood and urine of the three patients. The effect of treatment by Dimercaptopropanol on renal excretion of
mercury
was studied. Optic and electron microscopy of the lung of the two patients who died showed the pulmonary changes of acute interstitial fibrosis.
...
PMID:Accidental acute mercury vapor poisoning. 50 88
Workers exposed to metallic
mercury
vapor were subjects for
tremor
, EMG, and psychomotor tests. Regression analysis revealed statistically significant trends in these test results related to workers' urine
mercury
histories. Effects were subclinical, functionally insignificant and most associated with those workers whose urine
mercury
had exceeded 0.5 mg/L in the previous year. In agreement with previous reports, effects were reversible upon reduction of
mercury
exposure.
...
PMID:Evaluation of workers exposed to elemental mercury using quantitative tests of tremor and neuromuscular functions. 74 1
I present a new, simple colorimetric method for detecting and estimating barbiturates in urine. After the barbiturates are extracted with ether, an aliquot of the washed ether phase is added to the color reagent (a bivalent
mercury
/dithizone chelate in chloroform). On addition of diluted pyridine and
shaking
, a pinkish-violet color appears if a barbiturate is present. The overall sensitivity of the above method was evaluated by probit analysis in the case of sodium phenobarbital. The concentration of sodium phenobarbital in urine detectable at least 99% of the time was 6.72 mg/liter, with 95% confidence limits of 5.37 to 10.36 mg/liter. Sodium phenobarbital, 10 mg/liter, can be detected in the presence of phenytoin (50 mg/liter), glutethimide (100 mg/liter), or bemegride (100 mg/liter). The whole procedure requires less than 10 min. An excretion study illustrates application of the procedure.
...
PMID:Simple, highly selective screening method for barbiturates in urine. 116 89
Workers exposed to metallic
mercury
vapor were subjects for EMG, hand
tremor
and psychomotor tests conducted over an eighteen month period. Performance decrements in neuromuscular functions and psychmotor skills were found to be reversible and correlated with blood and urine
mercury
levels.
...
PMID:Subclinical psychomotor and neuromuscular changes in workers exposed to inorganic mercury. 118 Feb 6
Possible effects of
mercury
on the central nervous system (CNS) were examined in a group of chloralkali workers exposed to
mercury
(n = 89) and compared with a control group (n = 75), by registration of subjective symptoms, personality changes, forearm
tremor
, and performance on six computerised psychometric tests in the two groups. The groups were similar in age, education, verbal comprehension, and work tasks. In the chloralkali group, median blood
mercury
concentration (B-Hg) was 55 nmol/l, serum
mercury
concentration (S-Hg) 45 nmol/l, and urine
mercury
concentration (U-Hg) 14.3 nmol/mmol creatinine (25.4 micrograms/g creatinine). Corresponding concentrations in the control group were 15 nmol/l, 4 nmol/l, and 1.1 nmol/mmol creatinine (1.9 micrograms/g creatinine) respectively. The number of self reported symptoms, the scores for tiredness and confusion in the profile of mood states (POMS), and the degree of neuroticism in the Eysenck personality inventory (EPI), were significantly higher in the
mercury
exposed group compared with the controls. Performance on the psychometric tests and
tremor
frequency spectra did not differ significantly between the two groups. Dose-response calculations showed weak but statistically significant relations between symptom prevalence and current
mercury
concentrations in both blood and urine. The performance on three of the psychometric tests was negatively correlated with earlier peak exposures. The findings indicate a slight
mercury
induced effect on the CNS among the chloralkali workers.
...
PMID:Effects of occupational exposure to mercury vapour on the central nervous system. 151 46
Tremor
was measured from the index finger during low force, position holding in 18 control subjects and 18 battery workers with low level exposure to
mercury
. All workers were asymptomatic on clinical neurological examination. No differences were found in average
tremor
amplitudes between the groups, but statistically significant abnormalities in
tremor
frequency distribution existed.
Tremor
power spectra in the group of
mercury
workers were shifted toward the higher frequencies and compressed into narrow frequency peaks. These results suggest that measurements of finger
tremor
that evaluate the frequency distribution can produce a higher diagnostic yield than traditional visual clinical judgement. The findings also confirm other reports that currently permitted exposures to
mercury
are associated with subtle but distinctive differences in
tremor
accompanying voluntary movement.
...
PMID:Differences in frequency of finger tremor in otherwise asymptomatic mercury workers. 227 92
Dental personnel are exposed to low concentrations of
mercury
vapor in their working environment and from their own amalgam fillings. This study included 505 occupationally exposed individuals working at 82 dental clinics in northern Sweden and 41 controls without occupational
mercury
exposure. The concentration of
mercury
in air was measured. Urine
mercury
was determined for all participants, who also answered a questionnaire focused on four symptoms known from the literature to be connected with
mercury
exposure, namely loss of appetite,
tremor
, insomnia and anxiety. The median value of
mercury
vapor in air in the dental surgeries was low compared with other investigations; 1.5 micrograms m-3 in public dental care and 3.6 micrograms m-3 in private dental care. The urine
mercury
concentrations (HgU) were low, and of the same order of magnitude as for the Swedish population as a whole. Median values among different groups of dental personnel ranged from 1.4 to 2.9 nmol Hg/mmol creatinine. For those occupationally exposed, the load from their own amalgam fillings was estimated to be of the same order of magnitude as from the working environment. The prevalence of any of the four symptoms investigated in the groups of exposed personnel and controls as low, less than or equal to 11%. In our study, which included
mercury
intakes up to twice the contribution from amalgam fillings, no increase in the prevalence of symptoms could be detected in relation to
mercury
concentrations in urine.
...
PMID:Urine mercury levels and associated symptoms in dental personnel. 236 35
Hand
tremor
measurement was evaluated in a group of 54 male workers (mean age 38.5 years) exposed to
mercury
vapor (average duration of exposure 7.7 years) using an accelerometer test and two psychomotor tests (eye-hand coordination and hand steadiness). The results were compared with those obtained in a well-matched control group of 48 workers. The intensity of current
mercury
vapor exposure was rather moderate as reflected by the mean (geometric) levels of
mercury
in blood (2.4 micrograms/dl) and in urine (63 micrograms/g creatinine). The hand steadiness test and eye-hand coordination test revealed preclinical alterations in postural and intentional
tremor
, whereas the changes evidenced by the accelerometer test were not statistically significant. Furthermore the practical advantage of the psychomotor tests over the accelerometer test makes them most appropriate for the early detection of
mercury
-induced hand
tremor
. The present study also suggests that young adults (less than 21 years) may be more susceptible to the neurotoxic effect of
mercury
vapor.
...
PMID:Detection of hand tremor in workers exposed to mercury vapor: a comparative study of three methods. 275 3
We examined 502 subjects, 247 of whom had occupational elemental
mercury
exposures 20 to 35 years previously, to identify potential exposure-related neurological abnormalities. Few significant (p less than 0.05) differences existed between exposed and unexposed subjects. However, multiple linear regression analysis demonstrated several significant correlations between declining neurological function and increasing exposure as determined by urine
mercury
measurements from the exposure interval. Subjects with urine
mercury
peak levels above 0.6 mg/L demonstrated significantly decreased strength, decreased coordination, increased
tremor
, decreased sensation, and increased prevalence of Babinski and snout reflexes when compared with the remaining subjects. Furthermore, subjects with clinical polyneuropathy had significantly higher peak levels than normal subjects (0.85 vs 0.61 mg/L; p = 0.04), but not increased exposure duration (20.1 vs 20.8 quarters; p = 0.34), and 28% of subjects with peak levels above 0.85 mg/L had clinical evidence of polyneuropathy, compared with 10% of remaining subjects (p = 0.005). Although exposure was not age dependent, several neurological measures showed significant age-
mercury
interaction, suggesting that natural neuronal attrition may unmask prior exposure-related subclinical abnormalities.
...
PMID:Neurological abnormalities associated with remote occupational elemental mercury exposure. 284 69
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