Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Methyl n-butyl ketone (MBK) is known to produce a giant axonal neuropathy in man and experimental animals characterized pathologically by a gradual increase in the number of neurofilaments which become associated with focal areas of axonal swelling and thinning of the myelin sheath. Fast axoplasmic transport was studied in rats exposed to MBK. In 10 severely paralyzed rats exposed to MBK there was a significant impediment of fast axoplasmic transport following dorsal root ganglion injections (x +/- S.D. = 283.2 +/- 20.34 mm/day) compared to normal controls (417.6 +/- 23.78 mm/day). In rats undergoing injections into the ventral horn of the spinal cord there was a gradual impairment of the mean down flow rate for transport of [3H]leucine which correlated with the severity of the MBK induced neuropathy. Quantitative morphological determinations showed that the total number of neurotubules per unit cross-sectional myelin area and the number of neurotubules associated with mitochondria in swollen axons was unchanged from normal. The total number of mitochondria in randomly sampled axons varied significantly from controls but the absolute number of mitochondria associated with neurotubules was unchanged from normal. The results of these studies suggest that the impediment of fast axoplasmic transport may be related to the increased neurofilaments producing focal areas of axonal blockage.
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PMID:Alterations of fast axoplasmic transport in experimental methyl n-butyl ketone neuropathy. 7 Nov 85

A study of the sequential morphological changes in the peripheral nerve induced by experimental inhalation exposure of methyl n-butyl ketone (MBK) revealed that the earliest change was an increase in the number of neurofilaments in the large myelinated nerve fibers. This change occurred prior to axonal swelling or myelin thinning. As the duration of exposure lengthened the number of neurofilaments gradually increased and ultimately produced axonal swelling with secondary thinning of the myelin sheath. This appears to be the pathogenesis of the "giant axonal" neuropathy. Another change observed early in this neuropathy was the presence of inpouchings of the myelin sheath, which also increased in number in parallel to the duration of exposure. A careful study of the sequential changes in the entire motor unit did not show a predilection for early morphological changes at the axon terminal. Abnormalities at the neuromuscular junction occurred only after a full spectrum of changes were seen in the main nerve trunk, nerve roots and intramuscular nerves. An important observation was the marked potentiation of peripheral neurotoxicity observed when animals were exposed to MBK in combination with methyl ethyl ketone (MEK) at a ratio of 1:5, MBK:MEK. The latter solvent showed no neurotoxic effect alone. This might help explain a recent outbreak of a polyneuropathy affecting many workers. One further observation was that the sural nerve of a patient with prolonged exposure to MBK showed changes similar to those induced experimentally.
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PMID:Peripheral nerve changes induced by methyl n-butyl ketone and potentiation by methyl ethyl ketone. 17 32

Seven men aged 17 to 22 years developed severe distal symmetrical predominately motor polyneuropathy after repeated inhalation of a commercially available brand of lacquer thinner. Motor nerve conduction velocities were markedly slowed. Fascicular biopsy specimens of sural nerve showed a striking loss of myelinated nerve fibers. Prominent neurofilamentous masses resulted insegmental paranodal distention of axons with secondary thinning and retraction of myelin from the node of Ranvier. Autopsy material from one case revealed central chromatolysis of anterior horn cells in the lumbosacral enlargement and axonal swellings in the fasciculus gracilis. One or more volatile hydrocarbons contained in the lacquer thinner involved may be neurotoxic if inhaled to excess any many cause a neuropathy with characteristic pathological features.
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PMID:Pathology of lacquer thinner induced neuropathy. 18 61

Although industrial exposure to n-hexane is known to cause neuropathy, it is less well recognized that inhalation of n-hexane present in the vapors of some commercial contact cements is also neurotoxic to peripheral nerves. A young man with a long history of addictive glue-sniffing developed severe distal symmetrical polyneuropathy several months after switching to a cement containing n-hexane and gradually improved several months after switching to another cement containing no n-hexane. Fascicular biopsy of radial cutaneous nerve showed striking segmental distention of axons by neurofilamentous masses with secondary thinning of myelin sheath, paranodal myelin retraction, and widening velocities were correspondingly slow. We conclude that n-hexane used as a solvent in some contact cements may be neurotoxic when inhaled to excess and, further, that the neuropathy has characteristic electrophysiological and pathological features.
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PMID:Glue-sniffing neuropathy. 111 59

Localized hypertrophic mononeuropathy (LHM) is a rare foccal neuropathy associated with perineurial cell proliferation due to an undefined stimulus. We report a case of LHM involving the proximal ulnar nerve in a 13-year-old boy. Serial clinical and electrophysiological observations were done, including intraoperative recordings directly from the nerve on two occasions. The evolution of abnormalities, as documented by electrophysiological and immunohistochemical studies, is compatible with a process of progressive thinning of myelin sheaths, culminating in axonal degeneration in later stages. Intraoperative recording of nerve action potentials was used to guide surgical management of the lesion. Ultimately, there was a good clinical and electrophysiological response to resection of the lesion and sural nerve fascicular grafting.
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PMID:Electrophysiological findings in localized hypertrophic mononeuropathy. 185 Dec 47

While compression neuropathy is a common clinical problem, the opportunity to study human nerve material is rare. A histological assessment of the superficial radial nerve of four human cases with entrapment syndrome is reported. Changes in the perineurium and the endoneurial microvessels as well as the presence of Renaut bodies were the earliest histological abnormalities noted. Connective tissue changes included epineurial and perineurial fibrosis. Nerve fibre pathology varied from fascicle to fascicle. The myelinated and unmyelinated fibre populations responded differently to this compression. In the myelinated fibre population, marked thinning of the myelin was noted. In the unmyelinated fibre population, a shift in the fibre histogram due to a new population of very small fibres was observed suggesting degeneration with subsequent regeneration of this fibre population.
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PMID:Chronic human nerve compression--a histological assessment. 356 91

A 3-year-old horse presented with intermittent generalized seizures of 2-month duration. During interictal periods, the horse appeared normal and a cause for the seizures could not be identified. Necropsy revealed opacity of the leptomeninges, covering most of one cerebral hemisphere along with thinning and collapse of the cortex in the ipsilateral pyriform lobe. Histopathology demonstrated leptomeningeal vascular proliferation and meningothelial hyperplasia. Prominent tortuous vessels of the gyri and sulci extended into some regions of the subjacent cortex, where there was neuronal loss, ectopia, and disorganization. Clusters of prominent arterioles were found in the sclerotic choroid plexus of the lateral and fourth ventricles. Milder vascular lesions were present in the leptomeninges of the ventral brain stem, right cerebrum, spinal cord, and in the eye. The left trigeminal nerve was distorted by swollen fasicles containing onion bulb-like structures. Most bulbs contained central axons surrounded by myelin sheaths of variable thickness. Electron microscopy demonstrated concentrically arranged cells with continuous basal laminae and rare pinocytotic vesicles. S-100 immunohistochemistry showed strong positive staining in these cells. This is an unusual combination of lesions to which analogies can be drawn with the human neuroectodermal dysplasias, specifically Sturge-Weber disease. The relationship of the neuropathy to the leptomeningeal hemangiomatosis is unclear, but a compound anomaly in embryological development resulting in dysplasia and neoplasia may be involved.
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PMID:Meningocerebral hemangiomatosis resembling Sturge-Weber disease in a horse. 368 94

This report describes the neuropathology of progressive axonopathy (PA), an autosomal recessive inherited neuropathy of Boxer dogs, which affects CNS and PNS. The nerve roots contain numerous myelin bubbles and proximal paranodal axonal swellings containing vesicles, vesiculo-tubular profiles and disorganized neurofilaments. The myelin sheath overlying such swellings is often attenuated. As the disease develops there are progressive changes in the myelin sheath with thinning at paranodal and internodal locations, loss of myelin from lengths of axon and the formation of short internodes with disproportionately thin sheaths. The abnormalities show a very definite selectivity for nerve roots and proximal nerves. Conversely, the frequency of degeneration and regeneration is greater distally except in the cervical ventral roots which contain numerous regenerating clusters. In the CNS numerous axonal spheroids are found in the lateral and ventral columns of the spinal cord and in various brain stem nuclei, particularly the superior olives, accessory cuneate nuclei and lateral lemniscus and its nucleus. Axonal degeneration which occurs mainly in the cord shows no obvious tract or proximal/distal selectivity. The optic pathways are also involved, predominantly adjacent to the chiasma. The autonomic nervous system is affected and distal limb muscles show varying, but usually minor, degrees of neurogenic atrophy. The condition, which has no obvious direct parallel in human or veterinary medicine, shows gross disturbances of axon-glial inter-relationships in both CNS and PNS.
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PMID:Progressive axonopathy: an inherited neuropathy of boxer dogs. 2. The nature and distribution of the pathological changes. 409 48

An experimental study of neuropathy due to 2,5-hexanedione (2,5-HDione) was performed in rats by using simultaneously both electrophysiological and histopathological methods. Seven rats were given subcutaneously five days a week 200 mg/kg of 2,5-HDione for first 3 weeks and then 300 mg/kg for the next 5 weeks. Nerve conduction velocities in the tail were measured every week and after the respective measurement times one animals was sacrificed for histological study. At the 2nd week of the experiment, 2,5-HDione-treated rat showed a slight morphological changes with swollen axons in the posterior spinal root fiber and tail nerve. A slowing of motor and sensory conduction velocity (MCV and SCV) in the tail was observed in the treated group at the 4th week. Weakness of hindlimbs was apparently seen at the 5th week. At the 6th and 7th week, histological changes including giant axonal swelling, fiber loss, thinning of myelin and demyelination, were prominent in the various regions of the peripheral nervous system. Additionally, degenerative changes of the spermatogenic cells, especially the formation of multinucleated giant spermatids, were markedly observed in the treated rats at the 6th and 7th week.
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PMID:[An experimental study on electrophysiological and histopathological changes in 2,5-hexanedione-intoxicated rats]. 630 13

Forty patients with neuromuscular disorders of the gastrointestinal tract were evaluated histologically and radiologically. Eighteen patients with progressive systemic sclerosis had predominant circular muscle thinning and fibrosis. Visceral myopathy (11 patients) was characterized by vacuolar degeneration of the smooth muscle cells with thinning and fibrosis typically affecting the longitudinal layers. Visceral neuropathy (five patients) had degeneration of myenteric plexus neurons with various patients having intranuclear inclusions, Schwann cell proliferation, or inflammatory cell infiltration. Radiologically, these syndromes had diffuse abnormalities of gastrointestinal motor function manifested by small and large intestinal dilatation, esophageal hypomotility (progressive systemic sclerosis and visceral myopathy), or disordered hypercontractility (visceral neuropathy). Marked duodenal enlargement typified visceral myopathy, and although all types may have dilated small intestine, only progressive systemic sclerosis has packing of valvulae. Colonic sacculations were found in progressive systemic sclerosis, lack of haustrations and increased colonic caliber in visceral myopathy, and hypercontractility in visceral neuropathy. Complete barium contrast examination will assist in differentiation of true obstruction from pseudoobstruction, will define the diffuse nature of the syndrome, and will help establish an accurate diagnosis by identifying features specific for these entities.
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PMID:Radiologic and histologic differentiation of neuromuscular disorders of the gastrointestinal tract: visceral myopathies, visceral neuropathies, and progressive systemic sclerosis. 633 63


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