Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0241981 (loss of balance)
452 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A study was made to determine if chickens dying from sudden death syndrome (SDS) showed any unusual behavioral characteristics during the final 12 h preceding death. Continuous video recordings were made of floor pens of 50 to 120 individually marked male broiler chickens between 3 and 10 wk of age. Behavioral data were obtained from video tapes played back following death of chickens from SDS. Analysis of the video tapes revealed no significant differences between 10 SDS chickens and their matched controls in the frequencies or proportions of time spent in each of 19 different behavioral activities. All SDS chickens exhibited a sudden attack prior to death lasting an average of 53 s and characterized by loss of balance, violent flapping, and strong muscular contractions. There was no evidence that death was preceded by a particular environmental or behavioral event. It was concluded that there were no consistent behavioral symptoms which could be used to identify SDS chickens prior to death.
Poult Sci 1987 Sep
PMID:Behavior of chickens prior to death from sudden death syndrome. 368 69

The development of home orientation was evaluated in 2-14-day-old kittens nursing from mothers fed a protein-restricted or control diet during late gestation and lactation. Although restricted kittens remained in the home when placed in it, their ability to return to the home was delayed when they were removed from it. Restricted kittens also exhibited aberrant locomotor development and an increased frequency of loss of balance (upsets) en route to the home. During postnatal Week 1, vocalization frequency, an index of kitten disturbance when outside the home, was increased in restricted kittens tested in the home, and in adjacent and diagonal corners. Restricted kittens persisted in vocalizing more frequently than controls in home and adjacent corner tests during Week 2. Taken together, these data suggest that maternal protein restriction during late gestation and lactation disrupts the development of home orientation behavior by impairing locomotor function and increasing emotional responsiveness.
Dev Psychobiol 1984 Sep
PMID:Development of home orientation in offspring of protein-restricted cats. 647 49

A 27-year-old female with no history of trauma, surgery, infection, or neoplastic process was evaluated for the spontaneous onset of vomiting, headache, and loss of balance. Initial studies demonstrated extensive pneumocephalus. CT revealed a lytic, expansile defect of the right petrous bone, while intrathecal contrast images demonstrated flow of CSF that implied coincidental perforation of the tympanic membrane. MR imaging demonstrated a continuity of CSF signal. The patient underwent surgery to repair the CSF leak and a dural patch was applied. No symptoms of pneumocephalus were seen after surgery and the patient's condition improved.
Acta Radiol 1994 Sep
PMID:Spontaneous CSF communication to the middle ear and external auditory canal. A case report. 808 63

Seven hundred and four women aged between 65 and 99 years (mean age 74.6 years), who were randomly selected from the community, took part in a study to determine whether health and lifestyle factors were associated with falls. In the 12 months before the survey, 66.1 per cent of the subjects experienced no falls, 19.7 per cent fell once and 14.2 per cent fell on two or more occasions. The proportion of women who fell outside the home decreased with age, with a corresponding increase in the proportion who fell inside the home on a level surface. The most common causes of falls reported were trips, slips and loss of balance. Some (27 per cent) suffered injuries as a result of a fall, and the proportion suffering injuries increased with age. Those who rated their health and balance as impaired, those with a limitation in activities of daily living, those receiving community services, those taking psychoactive drugs, and those taking four or more drugs had significantly more falls. On the other hand, those taking part in planned exercise and those active for seven or more hours per week had fewer falls. Smoking and alcohol consumption were not significantly associated with falls. Stepwise logistic regression analysis revealed poor vision, inactivity and subjective fall risk as variables that were independently and significantly associated with falling. These findings highlight possible intervention strategies for reducing falls risk in older people.
Aust J Public Health 1993 Sep
PMID:An epidemiological study of falls in older community-dwelling women: the Randwick falls and fractures study. 820 30

The effects of three different visual inputs (eyes open, eyes closed, and inaccurate) while standing on an unstable surface (respectively, UEO, UEC, UI) were compared in a group of healthy elderly community dwellers (N = 239; mean age 76) and young (N = 34; mean age 34) adults. Subjects with medical factors known to affect balance were excluded. Body sway and loss of balance measured dynamic force platform (EquiTest, NeuroCom International). Visual and somatosensory inputs were rendered inaccurate through tilting of the standing surface and/or the visual surround proportional to the subject's angle of sway (sway-referencing). The elderly group had significantly more difficulty balancing during UEC and UI, and a larger proportion lost their balance during UI. These findings are compared to those of other dynamic posturography studies in which sensory inputs were controlled. Issues of age, frailty, screening, and test protocol are addressed in order to account for differences in results among studies.
J Gerontol 1993 Sep
PMID:Altered sensory function and balance in older persons. 840 44

This randomized, experimental-control group, multiple-observation study examined the ability of older adults to use center of pressure feedback to up-train the vertical loading response (LR) and the impact that such training had on changes in clinical tests of balance. Eleven community ambulators, aged at least 65 years, with no recent history of falls were recruited by convenience sampling. Each group received 6 baseline sessions and 6 control/training sessions, followed by 1 posttest session. All sessions included visual cueing about stance equilibrium followed by 30 randomly timed dynamic, toes-up perturbations (8 degrees, 66 degrees per second). Training consisted of verbal instructions with visual and auditory feedback of a 225 msec response window to shape an increase in total LR following perturbations. Subjects in the experimental group demonstrated a tendency to decrease vertical loading relative to baseline regardless of visual and verbal feedback encouraging strategies to increase it. Specifically, the T3 or 150-225 msec component of the response window showed a decline from session 7 to session 12. Up-training, however, appears to cause a faster rate of rise to the maintenance window, but this event probably occurs too late to correct for a loss of balance. No correlation was found between change in load values and change in performance on clinical balance tests.
Appl Psychophysiol Biofeedback 1999 Sep
PMID:Up-training loading responses in older adults. 1065 37

Hepatocyte growth factor/scatter factor (HGF/SF) is one of the most important humoral mediators of liver regeneration. It is potentially related to molecular mechanisms of hepatocarcinogenesis via a paracrine system involving its cellular receptor, c-met. In this study, the expression patterns of HGF and c-met were evidenced by multiplex RT-PCR in different specimens of human hepatic tissues (n = 71). A significant increase of c-met mRNA expression was detected in hepatitis (P = 0.001), cirrhosis (P = 0.006), and hepatocellular carcinoma (HCC) tissue (P = 0.003) compared with normal parenchyma and steatosis. HGF mRNA expression was significantly higher only in hepatitis (P = 0.01). Over-expression of c-met mRNA and under-expression of HGF mRNA were detected in the HCCs compared with the corresponding peri-tumoral tissues. Neither HGF nor c-met expression was related to age, sex, tumor size, grading, presence of pseudocapsula, and proliferative activity of the malignant hepatocytes. A significant inverse correlation was found between c-met mRNA expression level and survival (in months) of patients (P = 0.007), as previously shown for urokinase-type plasminogen activator (u-PA) mRNA (P = 0.027). In addition, c-met mRNA expression was strictly associated with u-PA mRNA level in HCC samples (P = 0.001). These data show that a loss of balance concerning HGF, c-met, and u-PA mRNA expression occurs during hepatocarcinogenesis. Particularly, up-regulation of c-met and u-PA mRNA transcription appears to be coordinately regulated, and their levels of expression are inversely correlated with survival; they must therefore play an important role in the development and progression of human HCC and may also be relevant prognostic markers.
Int J Cancer 2000 Sep 01
PMID:u-PA and c-MET mRNA expression is co-ordinately enhanced while hepatocyte growth factor mRNA is down-regulated in human hepatocellular carcinoma. 1092 56

CB1 receptor expression has been reported to be low in the brainstem compared with the forebrain, and low in the vestibular nucleus complex (VNC) compared with other regions in the brainstem. However, a frequent effect of cannabis is dizziness and loss of balance. This may be due to the activation of cannabinoid receptors in the central vestibular pathways. We used immunohistochemistry to study the distribution of CB1 receptor protein in the VNC, and Western blotting to measure CB1 receptor expression in the VNC following unilateral vestibular deafferentation (UVD); the hippocampal CA1, CA2/3 and dentate gyrus (DG) regions were also analysed for comparison. This study confirms a previous electrophysiological demonstration that CB1 receptors exist in significant densities in the VNC and are likely to contribute to the neurochemical control of the vestibular reflexes. Nonetheless, CB1 receptor expression did not change significantly in the VNC during vestibular compensation. In addition, despite some small but significant changes in CB1 receptor expression in the CA2/3 and the DG following UVD, in no case were these differences statistically significant in comparison to both control groups.
Brain Res 2004 Sep 24
PMID:Immunohistochemical characterisation and localisation of cannabinoid CB1 receptor protein in the rat vestibular nucleus complex and the effects of unilateral vestibular deafferentation. 1534 75

Evidence of long-term modification of behavior-in particular, gait alterations in response to repeated exposure to slips-within the locomotor-balance control system is limited. The purpose of this study was to examine whether improvements in fall-resisting behavior as reflected by improvements in gait stability could be retained on a long-term basis. Eight healthy young subjects were exposed to a block of repeated slip trials during a single acquisition session consisting of five repeated slip exposures; the same subjects were then re-tested using the same protocol at a minimum of 12 mo later. Pre- and postslip gait stability for all slip trials was measured at touchdown (slipping limb) and liftoff (contralateral limb) based on the center of mass state (i.e., its instantaneous position and velocity) relative to the base of support (BOS) and the predicted thresholds for backward loss of balance. In the acquisition session, subjects were able to increase pre- and postslip stability, which significantly correlated with a decrease in the incidence of balance loss from 100% (1st slip) to 0% (5th slip). All subjects exhibited a similar balance loss on the first slip of the follow-up session. Nonetheless, subjects were able to retain the acquired preslip stability with feedforward control on the first slip but not the postslip stability related to the reactive response. Also, the subjects demonstrated a faster re-acquisition, with only one balance loss on the second slip of the follow-up session, as compared with seven balance losses on the acquisition session. Such rapid improvements were achieved by the significantly greater increase in post- compared with preslip stability; this increase was for the most part, a consequence of reductions in slip intensity (i.e., the peak BOS velocity). We concluded that a single acquisition session could only produce limited long-term retainable effects within the locomotor-balance control system. It appeared, however, that the CNS was still primed to more rapidly update its internal representation of gait stability during re-acquisition.
J Neurophysiol 2005 Sep
PMID:Long-term retention of gait stability improvements. 1592 59

The Pogo (pogo/pogo) mouse is a naturally occurring neurological mutant from a Korean wild-type mouse characterized by loss of balance and motor coordination due to dysfunction of the cerebellum. The Pogo mutation is believed to be an allele of P/Q-type calcium channel mutants such as tottering, leaner, and rolling mouse Nagoya. These mutants have been served as mouse models for a group of neurodegenerative diseases. The overall aim of this minireview is to summarize our current understanding of the ataxic Pogo mouse. To address this issue, we first describe the discovery of Pogo mouse and its morphological and behavioral defects. Then, we focus on the abnormal expression of several molecules in the Pogo cerebellum, including tyrosine hydroxylase, glutamate, corticotrophin-releasing factor, and 5-hydroxytryptamine. Much of this review is concerned with the functional implications of these ectopic molecules in the Pogo cerebellum.
Cerebellum 2009 Sep
PMID:Pogo: a novel spontaneous ataxic mutant mouse. 1922 8


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