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Query: UMLS:C1762617 (
weakness
)
37,932
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Weakness
or stiffness of key posture muscles can cause much of the disability seen in elderly patients. Too much tension and too little exercise greatly increase the natural loss of muscular fitness with age. A systematic program of exercise, stressing relaxation and stretching of tight muscles and strenghthening of weak muscles, can improve physical fitness. The program must be tailored to the patient, starting with relaxation and gentle limbering exercises and proceeding ultimately to vigorous muscle-stretching exercises. Muscle aches and pain from tension and muscle imbalance are to be expected. Relaxation relieves tension pain, and strengthening weak muscles and stretching tight muscles will correct muscle imbalance. To prevent acute muscle spasm, the patient should avoid excessive exertion and increase exercise intensity gradually.
...
PMID:Reconditioning aging muscles. 14 91
A loss of functional motor axons in the median and ulnar nerves occurred in half of thirty-three patients with rheumatoid arthritis.
Weakness
of small hand muscles may predispose to the development of ulnar deviation of the fingers in patients with joint disease at the radio-ulnar and metacarpophalangeal joints. There is no evidence that spasm of small hand muscles is a significant cause of ulnar deviation of the fingers in rheumatoid arthritis. Ulnar deviation of the fingers in rheumatoid arthritis is not due to selective impairment of the ulnar nerve or the deep palmar branch of the ulnar nerve even though ulnar deviation of the fingers can occur in association with such lesions and in the absence of joint disease.
...
PMID:Ulnar neuropathies in rheumatoid arthritis. 21 53
Decamethrin is a synthetic pyrethroid insecticide that has been under investigation by the World Health Organization for use in some vector control programs. Decamethrin proved to be a highly toxic pyrethroid ester. The acute LD50 for adult female rats was 31 mg/kg by the oral route and 4 mg/kg by the intravenous route of administration. The LD50 was observed to be sex and age dependent, with higher values recorded for weanlings and males. Initial signs of decamethrin poisoning include profuse salivation and convulsive movements.
Weakness
, dyspnea, anorexia and staining of the fur were observed beyond the first day following compound administration. Absorption of decamethrin was rapid by the inhalation route and minimal by the dermal route of administration. No evidence of teratogenic activity was found in rats or mice at dose levels that produced marked maternal toxicity, and no persistent toxicity was observed in neonatal rats that received perinatal exposure to decamethrin. No mutagenic activity was detected in three different in vitro assays, with or without metabolic activation.
...
PMID:Toxicity studies with decamethrin, a synthetic pyrethroid insecticide. 37 Mar 25
Comparative analysis of functional characteristics of connection between the fields CA3 and CA1 (Schaffer's collaterals) was performed in experiments in vivo (unanaesthetized rabbits) and in vitro (hippocampal slices of guinea-pigs) with extracellular recording of the unitary activity in the field CA1.
Weakness
of postexcitatory inhibition, absence of responses of the form of suppression of spontaneous activity, higher effectiveness of low-frequency stimulation of Schaffer's collaterals were observed in experiments in vitro. Posttetanic effects were more frequently observed and lasted longer in vitro than in vivo. The dominating effect in vivo was posttetanic depression and in vitro--posttetanic potentiation. The possible reasons for these differences are discussed.
...
PMID:[Functional characteristics of connections: Schaffer's collaterals to the CA1 field of the hippocampus in experiments in vivo and in vitro]. 46 Apr 92
Four school children, aged 6 to 9 years, had acute postinfectious myositis. The prodromal illness usually involved the upper respiratory tract, but gastrointestinal symptoms were also seen. Fever and nonspecific malaise were characteristic. After cessation of the illness, myalgia involved the calves and thighs. Arm and neck muscles were less frequently affected.
Weakness
was less marked than muscle pain. Serum creatine phosphokinase (CPK) was markedly increased in all cases. Myalgia and CPK levels subsided in less than a week, although one child was not back to normal for 4 weeks. Two children had electromyography, and patchy myopathic changes were found. Viral studies were not helpful in any of the cases.
...
PMID:Benign acute childhood myositis. 57 38
The effect of head position on conjugate horizontal gaze was studied in healthy adults, in patients with multiple sclerosis without eye movement signs, and in patients with downbeat nystagmus indicative of low brain stem lesions. Displacements of gaze from primary position to 30 degrees left and right were recorded using the electro-oculogram, with the head in the primary position, and turned voluntarily to the left and right (in yaw). The quality of eye movements was noted and peak velocities of saccades were measured. The head turning test trebled the incidence of abnormal eye movements found in the multiple sclerosis patients and increased it by tenfold in the patients with downbeat nystagmus. Disorders of eye movement were also found in approximately 20--30% of healthy subjects tested.
Weakness
of abduction was the most common eye movement defect and appeared to be posterior internuclear ophthalmoplegia. A hypothesis is made which unifies the theoretical explanations of anterior and posterior internuclear ophthalmoplegia. The most likely cause of the disorders of eye movement observed is vertebrobasilar ischaemia induced by stretching and compression of the vertebral arteries during eccentric head posture.
...
PMID:Eccentric head positions reveal disorders of conjugate eye movement. 59 79
Gross and microscopic study of twelve human anencephalics revealed existence of the forebrain with variable growth in all specimens, meaning thereby closure of the neural tube at its cephalic extremity. This is supported by the findings of choroid plexus, pineal tissue and rudimentary pallium within the anterosuperior margin of a median dorsal opening situated behind the forebrain mass. The opening bears an intimate relation to the undue dorsal convexity of the sphenooccipital junction, and leads cranially to a cavity representing the third and lateral ventricles. This opening is situated in the posterior part of the roof of diencephalon, and seems to be the primary site of disturbance causing anencephaly.
Weakness
of the diencephalic roof is indicated by its epithelial nature and its ballooning in cyclopia and cebocephaly. A corresponding potential
weakness
in the overlying tissues is evidenced by the sagittal fontanelle of early fetal life and by congenital scalp and skull defects of the parietooccipital region.
...
PMID:Forebrain in human anencephaly. 60 12
Two foals with a history of normalcy at birth developed a lack of exercise tolerance and
weakness
in the first few days of life.
Weakness
, inability to rise, and reluctance to suckle were common complaints. Physical examination of both foals revealed a cardiovascular abnormality, with a loud systolic murmur audible over both thoracic walls. Additional diagnostic techniques were blood gas analysis, radiography, cardiovascular catheterization, and necropsy. Necropsy findings were ventricular septal defect, atrial septal defect, patent ductus arteriosus, and congenital absence of the aortic arch. Additionally, 1 foal had anomalous drainage of the cranial vena cava into the left atrium.
...
PMID:Interruption of aortic arch in two foals. 62 Nov 82
Four methods of surgical treatment of chondromalacia patellae have been evaluated after periods ranging from two to thirty years (average seven years), to discover the success rate, complications and indications for each. A total of 140 operations had been performed in 98 patients. Overall, satisfactory results were achieved in 25 per cent after forty shavings of the patellar cartilage, 35 per cent after twenty cartilage excisions and drilling of the subchondral bone, 60 per cent after twenty medial transfers of the patellar tendon and 77 per cent after sixty patellectomies. Thirty-four primary patellectomies gave 82 per cent satisfactory results compared with 62 per cent after twenty-six patellectomies performed after a previously unsuccessful operation. The results were worst in patients below twenty years of age especially women and in those with Grade IV changes in the patellar cartilage.
Weakness
of the quadriceps after any procedure predisposed to an unsatisfactory result. Extensive late radiological degenerative changes in the knee were not seen. On the basis of the results in this report, patellar tendon transfer is recommended in adolescents and athletes with Grade I, II or III changes in the patellar cartilage. In adults over twenty years of age with Grade I and II changes cartilage excision and drilling is satisfactory. In adults with Grade III and adults or adolescents with Grade IV changes patellectomy is the treatment of choice.
...
PMID:The surgical treatment of chondromalacia patellae. 62 83
Duration of a tachistoscopically presented dark dot was estimated by schizophrenics and alcoholics. The dot was preceded by the auditory warning signal of viariable duration of up to 9 seconds. The duration of the warning signal constituted foreperiod duration. Estimation was a monotonically increasing function of foreperiod duration for both schizophrenics and alcoholics when the probability distribution of foreperiods was constant. However, this monotonicity was eliminated when changes in foreperiod duration became infrequent. When intrusion of extraneous stimulus accompanied such infrequent changes, the effect of foreperiod duration on estimation of stimulus duration became curvilinear, with the maximum estimation at the mid-range. For alcoholics, the monotonically increasing effect of foreperiod duration was independent of relative frequency of foreperiod changes and intrusion of extraneous stimulus.
Weakness
and instability of time expectancy as characteristics unique to schizophrenia were demonstrated.
...
PMID:Weakness and instability of time expectancy in schizophrenia. 64 Nov 79
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