Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The orthopaedic surgeon is often the first consultant to whom a patient with syringomyelia is referred. The disease is not as rare as he may suppose, but its early presenting features are very variable; if he relies solely on such familiar features as pes cavus and scoliosis, he may well miss the diagnosis. The commonest presenting symptom is pain in the head, neck, trunk or limbs; headache or neckache made worse by straining is particularly significant. A history of birth injury also may suggest the possibility of syringomyelia, especially if any spasticity subsequently worsens. Neurological features which may be diagnostic include nystagmus, dissociated sensory loss, muscle wasting, spasticity of the lower limbs or Charcot's joints. Radiographic features include erosion of the bodies of cervical vertebrae and widening of the spinal canal; if, at C5, the size of the canal exceeds that of the body by 6 millimetres in the adult, pathological dilatation is present. The presence of basilar invagination or other abnormalities of the foramen magnum, of spina bifida occulta and of scoliosis are further pointers. Thermography is a useful way of showing asymmetrical sympathetic involvement in early cases. A greater awareness of the prevalence of syringomyelia may lead to earlier diagnosis and to early operation, which appears to hold out the best hope of arresting what is all too commonly a severely disabling and progressive condition.
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PMID:Orthopaedic features in the presentation of syringomyelia. 15 24

Spontaneous eye movements and responses to visual and vestibular stimuli were recorded in 30 patients with pontine angle tumors (26 neurinomas, 2 meningeomas, 1 chosteatoma, 1 angioma). Pre- and postoperative recordings in most cases showed a bilateral dimunition of horizontal optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) that prevailed towards the side contralateral to the tumor. This is explained by a homolateral floccular lesion and cannot be the consequence of spontaneous nystagmus or asymmetrical gaze nystagmus. The predominance of a homolateral OKN-diminution often described in the literature was found in advanced cases or post-operatively as a sign of pontine reticular formation damage. The neighbourhood of the flocculus to the VIIIth nerve and animal experiments with floccular lesions causing a contralateral OKN diminution support out explanation. Additional arguments for damage of cerebellar oculomotor functions are the predominance of cogwheeled smooth pursuit and the occasional observation of hypermetric saccades, both toward the side of the tumor. Patients with very large tumors finally develop a complete disruption of OKN toward the homolateral side together with concomitant gaze paralysis.
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PMID:[Oculomotor disturbances as cerebellar symptoms in pontine angle tumors. Contralateral diminution of optokinetic nystagmus as early sign of floccular lesions (author's transl)]. 30 Feb 37

Five hundred seventy-five children from low-income urban neighborhoods who were between 10 and 12 years of age were examined by pediatricians for certain neurological signs. Classroom teachers ranked each child according to types of behavior. Data on neurological signs found in more than 15 children and on types of classroom behavior clinically expected to be related to central nervous system defects were studied statistically. Significant positive associations were found between nystagmus and hyperactivity, mixed dominance and hyperactivity, and mixed dominance and variable day-to-day performance. Errors in moving parts of the body on verbal command were associated with distractibility and underachievement. Head circumference greater than the 90th percentile for age was associated with unvarying behavior and clumsiness; tactile agnosia with unvarying behavior; asymmetry of the eyes with hyperactivity; and asymmetrical position of the child's head with underachievement. A negative association was found between nystagmus and musical ability.
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PMID:Relationships between neurological findings and classroom behavior. 108 39

The clinical eye signs of 31 myasthenic patients are presented and those signs important for an early diagnosis are then discussed: lid symptoms caused by fatigue (Simpson-test), characteristic lid twitches as well as alternating asymmetrical eye muscle pareses. The importance of an investigation with the tangent scale in the course of which tensilon is injected is pointed out. False diagnosis and differential diagnostic signs are then considered (disseminated sclerosis, aneeurysm, encephalitis, pseudopulbarparalysis). - Our electronystagmographical investigations of saccadic eye movements showed hypometric, alternating saccades with occasional nystagmuslike jerks. After Tensilon injection hypermetric saccades (overshoots) were observed which depended on a disproportion of the supranuclear oculomotor centers and the eye muscles. The "muscleparetic" nystagmus is a pathologically increased endposition nystagmus. The hypometric nystagmuslike jerks during a saccadic eye movement are caused by insufficient phasic innervation.
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PMID:[Diagnosis of myasthenic eye signs. Clinical signs and electronystagmographical findings of saccadic eye movements (author's transl)]. 120 48

Nystagmus elicted by means of rotatory stimuli has been studied in 55 healthy subjects. In each case, 5 different end-velocities have been employed and each postrotatory nystagmus has been quantitatively evaluated by measuring various parameters of its quick phase. The mean values that could be considered as normal were searched for by means of a statistical study, but a great variability in the responses was found. Likewise, the responses of both labyrinths have often been rather asymmetrical. Therefore, such a functional asymmetry of the oculomotor responses, due to a variety of central factors, seems to be a serious diffculty for the practical use of postrotatory nystagmus as a clinical test. The particular meaning of the number of beats is discussed.
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PMID:Physiological Postrotatory Nystagmus. 123 15

In monocular vision, frogs display a unidirectional optokinetic nystagmus (OKN), reacting only to temporal-nasal (T-N) stimulation. The OKN N-T component is almost absent. However, prolonged monocular visual deprivation by unilateral eyelid suture provoked the appearance of the N-T component. The analysis of search coil recordings showed that the slow phase velocity gain of both T-N and N-T components became similar. Chronic administration of N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) antagonists for the duration of deprivation prevented the appearance of a symmetrical monocular OKN in frogs: following repeated intraperitoneal injections of either MK 801, CGS 19755 or intrapretectal microinjections of 2-amino-5-phosphonovalerate (APV), the N-T component did not appear, and OKN remained asymmetrical. Thus NMDA receptors appear to be involved in the control of the plasticity process which allows monocular OKN of adult lower vertebrates to become symmetrical.
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PMID:N-methyl-D-aspartate antagonists suppress the development of frog symmetric monocular optokynetic nystagmus observed after unilateral visual deprivation. 135 22

The frog horizontal monocular optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) is asymmetrical, the temporal-nasal (T-N) stimulation being the sole stimulation efficient to evoke the reflex, the nasal-temporal (N-T) component being almost absent. Coil recordings showed that, in adult animals, prolonged monocular visual deprivation by unilateral eyelid suture provoked the appearance of the N-T component. The OKN became symmetrical, reacting for both directions of stimulation. Microinjection of either gamma-aminobutyric acid (GABAA) agonist 4,5,6,7-tetrahydroisoxazolo (5,4-C) Pyridin-3-ol (THIP) or muscarinic cholinergic antagonist atropine into the nucleus lentiformis mesencephali, the pretectal mesencephalic structure involved in OKN, transiently abolished the presence of N-T component. This result suggests that the phenomenon of visual plasticity, occurring after a week of monocular deprivation, can be due, at least partially, to reduction in pretectal GABAergic inhibition, and to concomitant activation of cholinergic muscarinic receptors.
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PMID:Plasticity of the frog monocular OKN: involvement of pretectal GABAergic and cholinergic systems. 158 60

The role of the cerebellar uvula and nodulus in vertical optokinetic after-nystagmus (OKAN) was studied in 4 squirrel monkeys. Aspiration ablation of the uvula and nodulus resulted in no significant change in the initial or peak gain of vertical optokinetic nystagmus (OKN) during the 24-week post-operative observation. However, the asymmetry of vertical OKAN was significantly altered. Using a protracted upward OK stimulus, slow phase-down OKAN-II, which was not seen pre-operatively, was significantly increased. In contrast, a downward OK stimulus produced little change in slow phase-up OKAN-II. Thus, the asymmetric degree of vertical OKAN-II was decreased after uvulonodulectomy. In addition, there was a post-operative reduction in the vertical oculomotor stability. When slow-phase eye velocity of OKAN was plotted along the time scale, the amplitude and frequency of the sinusoidal pattern was increased. OKAN-III and OKAN-IV were found in 50% of the monkeys after uvulonodulectomy. It is therefore thought that inhibition and directional control from the uvula and nodulus influence the stability and asymmetrical behaviour of the leaky integrator in the second order output system.
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PMID:Effect of vestibulo-cerebellar lesions on asymmetry of vertical optokinetic functions in the squirrel monkey. 231 41

Flash visual evoked potentials (F. VEPs) and electroretinograms (ERGs) were recorded in a total of 20 young children with albinism (age range 5 months to 11 years, mean 4 years). All recordings were made without sedation. There were 13 oculocutaneous cases (one with Hermansky-Pudlak syndrome) and seven ocular albinos. Monocular flash stimulation commonly elicited an asymmetrical occipital VEP distribution with a well lateralised component at around 80 ms which was of opposite polarity in a comparison of VEPs from each eye. None of the normally pigmented matched controls or obligate female carriers showed this anomalous distribution. The albino electroretinogram, compared with controls, recorded under fully darkened conditions had a significantly larger a wave and significantly shorter latencies for both a and b waves. The accentuated ERG and asymmetrical VEP recorded in infants and young children with albinism permits distinction of these patients from those with congenital cone dysfunction and idiopathic nystagmus, with whom they may be confused by a clinical examination only.
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PMID:Albinism in childhood: a flash VEP and ERG study. 232 6

We compared the slow-phase eye velocity elicited by sudden cessation of prolonged, constant velocity, vertical z-axis rotation of the body or the visual surround in 10 healthy college-age and over-65 individuals. The step gain of vestibular post-rotary nystagmus did not differ across age groups, but the time constant of slow-phase velocity decay was longer and more asymmetrical in the older group. The slow-phase velocity of optokinetic nystagmus attained the same initial levels for both age groups; it declined significantly during 60 s of stimulation for the older but not the younger group. The decay rate of optokinetic afternystagmus was quicker for the older subjects. This pattern of results may be related to already identified structural changes in the vestibular system and suggests the existence of yet unidentified changes in central vestibular and visual processing.
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PMID:Age differences in oculomotor responses to step changes in body velocity and visual surround velocity. 233 24


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