Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0241981 (
loss of balance
)
452
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Genetic regulation of acute tolerance to ethanol may be associated with ethanol consumption and other ethanol-related behaviors in rodents. We have used lines of mice, selectively bred for high and low acute functional tolerance (HAFT and LAFT, respectively) to ethanol-induced
loss of balance
to test this hypothesis. Replicate HAFT and LAFT lines differ in AFT to ethanol-induced
loss of balance
by 4.4- and 5-fold, respectively. Frequency distributions and mean AFT scores for those lines, F(1), and backcrosses show a dominance for the HAFT phenotype. Time courses for acquisition and decay showed that AFT to ethanol-induced
loss of balance
developed rapidly, could be maintained up to 6 h with repeated doses, and decayed 6 h after peak tolerance and discontinuance of ethanol administration. The lines did not differ in initial sensitivity as measured by brain ethanol concentration at
loss of balance
, indicating that initial sensitivity and AFT to
loss of balance
were not coselected traits. Surprisingly, HAFT versus LAFT lines did not differ in development of AFT to loss of righting response, or
hypothermia
, indicating different mechanisms or neuronal systems mediate genetic influences on these measures. Voluntary ethanol consumption was low in both of the replicate lines, but HAFT lines consumed greater amounts of ethanol than LAFT lines. The HAFT and LAFT lines developed AFT to pentobarbital-induced
loss of balance
, however, there were no line differences in rates or extent of the AFT development. These results show that genetic regulation of AFT development is drug- as well as response-specific.
...
PMID:Selectively bred lines of mice show response and drug specificity for genetic regulation of acute functional tolerance to ethanol and pentobarbital. 1073 69
Because Venezuelan equine encephalitis viruses (VEEVs) are infectious by aerosol, they are considered to be a biological-weapons threat. Nonhuman-primate models are needed to evaluate the efficacy of candidate vaccines. In the present study, cynomolgus macaques, after aerosol exposure to either VEEV-IE or VEEV-IIIA, developed fever, viremia, and lymphopenia; the severity of the fever response, viremia, and lymphopenia correlated with the inhaled dose of VEEV. Of the 10 macaques in our study, 7 developed clinical signs indicative of encephalitis, including
loss of balance
and
hypothermia
. In the macaque, the enzootic strains used are infectious by aerosol and lead to disease, including clinical encephalitis.
...
PMID:Aerosol infection of cynomolgus macaques with enzootic strains of venezuelan equine encephalitis viruses. 1499 4