Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (tremor)
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Pituitary apoplexy is characterized by a wide spectrum of clinical features. A quite rare case of painless thyroiditis, hypopituitarism and central diabetes insipidus (DI) followed by pituitary apoplexy was presented. A 61-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital in May, 1986 because of marked general malaise, polydipsia and weight loss which became progressively worse. Four months earlier she had experienced episodes of abrupt onset of severe headache associated with nausea and blurring vision. Physical examinations revealed a fine tremor, dry skin and nervousness. The thyroid gland was not palpable. Visual fields were intact. Her blood pressure was 105/64 mmHg with variable tachycardia. The routine laboratory studies were normal or negative except for hypoalbuminemia, hypocholesterolemia and hypernatremia. Erythrocyte sedimentation rate was 12 mm/hr. An impairment in corticotropin secretion was suspected from the low plasma cortisol and the low urinary excretion of 17-OHCS and the sufficient response to ACTH. Basal levels of GH and gonadotropin were also low, and responses to the stimulation tests (Insulin-stress, L-DOPA, and LH-RH) were all blunted. Brain computed tomographic scan and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated a suprasellar mass that, after infusion, developed peripheral ring-like enhancement and large hyperintense pituitary mass, respectively. A diagnosis of pituitary apoplexy with anterior pituitary failure was made. However, the initial levels of thyroid hormones showed elevated as follows: Free T3 7.6 pg/ml, Free T4 3.3 ng/dl and T3-resin uptake 41.1%. TSH responses to TRH were all suppressed. TSH receptor antibody (TBII) was negative. Both antithyroglobulin and antimicrosomal antibodies were repeatedly positive. A thyroid scan with 99mTc revealed no uptake in the thyroid area. These findings led us to the diagnosis of "painless autoimmune thyroiditis". She had become hypothyroid without any medication. At that time radioactive 99mTc and 123I uptakes increased significantly. When hydrocortisone was substituted, daily urine output abruptly increased to about 10 liters with low osmolality, and the presence of DI was suspected. This diagnosis was confirmed by water deprivation and hypertonic saline infusion tests and subsequent pitressin test. She is currently quite well on L-thyroxine, hydrocortisone and desmopressin (1988). This association with pituitary apoplexy must be a rare occurrence, as a literature search has failed to find a similar case. The pathogenetic trigger of "painless thyroiditis" in this case may be responsible for some immunological change due to secondary adrenal insufficiency after pituitary apoplexy.
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PMID:[An unusual association of transient resolving thyrotoxicosis due to painless thyroiditis, hypopituitarism and central diabetes insipidus associated with spontaneous pituitary apoplexy]. 230 57

The bactericidal activity of antituberculosis drugs against two strains of M. avium complex 13008 (serotype 20) and 13016 (serotype 4), was observed using modified Dubos liquid medium (1.3 g of Dubos Broth Base (Difco) in 180 mil of distilled water plus 20 ml of bovine serum). The strains were most susceptible to antituberculosis drugs among M. avium complex strains (Table). The test strains were cultivated in Ogawa egg medium at 37 degrees C for 10 days, and growing colonies were homogenized by shaking with glass beads for 10 minutes and suspended in the modified Dubos liquid medium to a concentration of 2 mg wet weight per ml. The media containing drug and containing no drug were incubated at 37 degrees C for 24 hours under shaking (8 cm-moving range and 56 strokes per minute). After incubation, the medium was diluted by a 0.1% Tween 80 aqueous solution to 10(-7), and each 0.02 ml-sample of 10(-4) to 10(-7) suspensions was inoculated onto Ogawa egg medium. The Ogawa egg medium slants were incubated at 37 degrees C for 28 days, and the number of colonies was counted. The bactericidal activity was determined as a ratio of the number of colony-forming units in 10 ml-aliquot of drug-containing Dubos liquid medium against the number of colony-forming units in the control Dubos liquid medium. The results are shown in Figures 1 and 2. Under the condition tested, rifampicin, isoniazid, ethambutol, ethionamide and cycloserine did not exhibit any bactericidal activity, and only streptomycin and enviomycin exhibited bactericidal activity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Bactericidal activity of antituberculosis drugs against Mycobacterium avium complex]. 231 66

When given a two-bottle choice between gradually increasing morphine concentrations (in 0.2% saccharin) and plain tap water, C57BL/6J mice consumed almost 90% of their daily fluid intake from the morphine-saccharin bottle, while the DBA/2J strain, in contrast, consumed 13% or less from the morphine-saccharin solution. The C57BL/6J strain consistently consumed mean daily doses of morphine sulfate in excess of 200 mg/kg, which was sufficient to induce an easily discernable withdrawal syndrome upon removal of the morphine solution, either with or without naloxone challenge. Hypothermia, tremor, wet dog shakes, jumping, and diarrhea were prominent withdrawal signs. In separate experiments, the saccharin was removed from the morphine-containing bottle, yet the C57BL/6J mice continued to prefer the morphine solution over tap water. In complete contrast to the above, mice of the DBA/2J strain rejected the morphine-saccharin solution at the lowest concentration employed, and at no time did their mean daily morphine dose exceed 20 mg/kg. Thus, morphine-saccharin preference is strongly genetically determined, and a high degree of physical dependence can result in the morphine-preferring strain. Palatability differences appear not to be the predominant explanation for these differences in morphine-saccharin consumption.
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PMID:Physical dependence induced by the voluntary consumption of morphine in inbred mice. 232 Jun 38

The effects of serotonergic substances on the locomotor pattern and cutaneous reflexes were studied in 3 adult chronic spinal cats trained for 1-3 months to walk with their hindlimbs on a treadmill. The 5-hydroxytryptamine (5-HT) precursor, 5-hydroxytryptophan (5-HTP), and two 5-HT agonists, 5-methoxy-N,N-dimethyltryptamine and quipazine, were found to generally increase the step length and augment the amplitude of hindlimb extensors and flexors as well as axial muscles. Correspondingly, the excursion of the hip, the knee and the ankle joints was increased, mainly in the flexion direction. Cyproheptadine, a 5-HT antagonist, partially or completely antagonised these effects. The threshold current needed to elicit a flexion reflex by stimulating the dorsum of the paw through implanted wires, was lower after the injection of 5-HT agonists than in the immediately preceding control period. Fast paw shaking initiated by dipping the paw in water was unchanged after quipazine and was not abolished by cyproheptadine. In accordance with others, our results suggest that serotonergic drugs may increase the excitability of several types of spinal neurones, including motoneurones, and consequently influence the locomotor pattern as well as the reflex responsiveness. The changes observed with serotonergic agonists were different in many respects from those obtained with noradrenergic agonists and these differences are discussed. This may indicate specific roles for these classes of substances on locomotor function and reflex activity and also provide a basis for further clinical investigations.
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PMID:The effects of serotonergic drugs on the locomotor pattern and on cutaneous reflexes of the adult chronic spinal cat. 235 31

Freely-moving, posthatch chicks were individually presented 2 concentrations each of quinine, citric acid, fructose, sucrose, sodium saccharin, and distilled water and their behavioral reactions were videotaped and analyzed. Already during the first posthatch day distinct rejection responses to quinine and citric acid could be recognized. Prolonged head shaking and beak clapping episodes were the most dominant features of these reactions. While responses to water and sweet stimuli could be interpreted as acceptance behaviors, the resolution was generally not fine enough to discriminate between reactions to the 2 different sweet concentrations of these stimuli or between them and water. When only water or sugar solutions were presented to other hatchlings in a single session, there was a suggestion of more definite acceptance behavior to some sweet stimuli as compared to water. It is concluded that the systems mediating aversive gustatory responses are present and functioning in posthatching chicks while acceptance responses, though present, are less discriminative among stimuli.
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PMID:Behavioral reactions to gustatory stimuli in young chicks (Gallus gallus domesticus). 236 34

By shaking a dilute suspension of egg yolk with chloroform followed by low speed centrifugation (1500 g for 30 min) the water soluble proteins which include chicken IgG (IgY) separate from the emulsion of chloroform and lipophilic substances. The IgY may then be separated from the associated water soluble proteins by precipitation with 12% polyethylene glycol Mr 6000. The method called the chloroform - polyethylene glycol procedure was compared with the polyethylene glycol procedure which is currently being used. It was found that the chloroform - polyethylene glycol method yielded 2.57 times more IgY than the conventional polyethylene glycol method. The ratio of titres of IgY anti Jasus lalandii haemocyanin antibody purified by the two procedures was very nearly 2.57 indicating that the chloroform had no adverse effect on the antibody activity.
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PMID:Isolation of IgY from the yolks of eggs by a chloroform polyethylene glycol procedure. 236 27

A method was developed for extraction of weathered residues of atrazine and metolachlor from field soils; soils had last been treated with commercial formulations of the herbicides 8-15 months prior to sample collection. Maximum yields were obtained by batch extraction at 75 degrees C for 2-16 h with methanol-water (80 + 20) in a sealed vial. Hydrolysis or other decomposition reactions were minor or negligible, depending on the extraction time. This method is an improvement over published methods that are validated by spike recoveries; the proposed method gives 1.7-1.8 times higher yields compared to shaking for 2 h at room temperature, and 1.3-1.8 times higher yields compared to Soxhiet extraction. The reproducibility of the method was better than 12%. The results underscore the impact of nonequilibrium sorption of organic compounds on analytical methodology and emphasize the need to validate extraction methods with field samples.
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PMID:Improved extraction of atrazine and metolachlor in field soil samples. 237 50

When human polymorphonuclear basophils, a type of white blood cell with antibodies of the immunoglobulin E (IgE) type on its surface, are exposed to anti-IgE antibodies, they release histamine from their intracellular granules and change their staining properties. The latter can be demonstrated at dilutions of anti-IgE that range from 1 x 10(2) to 1 x 10(120); over that range, there are successive peaks of degranulation from 40 to 60% of the basophils, despite the calculated absence of any anti-IgE molecules at the highest dilutions. Since dilutions need to be accompanied by vigorous shaking for the effects to be observed, transmission of the biological information could be related to the molecular organization of water.
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PMID:Human basophil degranulation triggered by very dilute antiserum against IgE. 245 31

Hepatocytes from isolated rat livers were hypothermically incubated (5 degrees C) in an oxygenated environment with continuous shaking (to simulate organ perfusion preservation). The incubation solution was either a tissue culture medium (L-15), an organ preservation perfusate (UW gluconate), or a simple cold-storage solution used for organ preservation (UW lactobionate). Hepatocyte viability was assessed from the release of lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) into the incubation medium. Cell swelling (due to the uptake of water) was also measured. Within 24 hr, hepatocytes hypothermically stored in each of the three incubation solutions became swollen (30 to 40% water gain) and lost a significant amount of LDH (as much as 60%). The addition of polyethylene glycol (PEG; relative molecular mass 8000; 5 g%) to the solutions suppressed cell swelling and allowed the incubated hepatocytes to remain relatively well preserved (30% LDH release) for as long as 120 hr. Adding either dextran (relative molecular mass 10,000 to 78,000; 5 g%) or saccharides (100 mmol/liter) instead of PEG neither prevented cell swelling nor prevented the cells from dying. The results of this study suggest (i) there is a direct correlation (r = 0.873) between hypothermia-induced cell swelling and cell death (i.e., the suppression of cell swelling prevents cell death); (ii) the mechanism by which PEG prevents cell swelling (and thus maintains cell viability) is not related to the osmotic or oncotic properties of the molecule but instead is apparently related to some unknown interaction between PEG and the cell, an interaction that provides stability during hypothermic incubation; and (iii) hypothermia-induced cell swelling must be prevented if isolated hepatocytes are to be used as a model for studying the mechanism by which cell damage occurs during hypothermic organ preservation. By eliminating cell death due to cell swelling, the biochemical mechanisms of cell death can be studied.
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PMID:Hypothermic preservation of hepatocytes. I. Role of cell swelling. 248 Aug 65

Minimum bactericidal concentrations (MBC) of penicillin-G were determined for 94 isolates of beta-hemolytic streptococci: 37 group A; 40 group B; 6 group C; and 11 group G. Our experiments focused on the influence of technical variable factors on the outcome of the MBC test such as inoculum preparation, manner of inoculation, technique of sampling for survivors, growth phase of inoculum, final concentration of inoculum, and time of incubation. The results were summarized as follows: 1. The mean MBC, ranged from 0.0145 microgram/ml (group A) to 0.084 microgram/ml (group B). The MBC/MIC ratio ranged from 1- to 4-fold (3 strains: 2 group A, 1 group C), showing no penicillin-G tolerance. 2. Logarithmic-phase inocula used were prepared by incubating 10 ml Mueller-Hinton broth (MHB) in water bath at 37 degrees C for 4 to 5 h after adding 0.01 ml of 24 h-incubated cultures. 3. 0.1 ml of logarithmic-phase inocula were released on the surface of penicillin-containing MHB (1 ml) without shaking or splashing. 4. It was important to resuspend the organisms by vortexing 4 h before tubes were sampled so that any organisms contaminating glassware above the meniscus were exposed to antibiotic. 5. No carry-over effect was observed with 0.01 ml samples. 6. Effect of bacterial growth phase on outcome of MBC test was not confirmed. 7. All tests used final volumes of 1.1 ml of MHB containing 10(5) cells/ml and 24-h incubation time.
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PMID:[Studies on determination of minimum bactericidal concentrations of penicillin-G for beta-hemolytic streptococci]. 250 1


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