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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (
asymmetrical
)
12,197
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
is reported in a 16-year-old girl with a 2 1/2-year history of right-sided simple partial sensory and motor seizures. The seizures were verified with video-electroencephalographic monitoring, showing left frontal epileptic activity. After an initial response to antiepileptic medication, her seizures became intractable, and mild, right-hemisphere signs developed. Magnetic resonance imaging showed an extensive right-hemisphere infiltrative lesion, thought to be a neoplasm. Cortical brain biopsy raised the possibility of
subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
, and this was confirmed serologically. The case highlights the importance of considering
subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
in the differential diagnosis of intractable seizures and demonstrates that strikingly
asymmetrical
magnetic resonance imaging abnormalities are not inconsistent with this diagnosis.
...
PMID:Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis presenting as simple partial seizures. 204 31
Long survival in
subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
(SSPE), including total disappearance of clinical signs, is rare. Two cases are reported. They concern a girl and a boy who, at age 13 and 15, developed SSPE and are still in remission 6 and 5 years later. After a typical onset and course over periods of 12 and 18 months, clinical improvement was observed and periodic EEG complexes disappeared. However, the electrophoretic oligoclonal pattern of CSF proteins and the elevated measles titers persisted (in one case specific CSF IgM were still increased 6 years after the onset). MRI showed
asymmetrical
areas of high-intensity signal in both white and gray matter, predominant in the temporal, parietal and occipital regions. The age at which SSPE begins and the interval between measles and SSPE onset are not prognostic factors. On the other hand, in reported cases with lasting remission SSPE did not progress beyond Jabbour's stage II. The second typical feature of these long-term improvements is disappearance of EEG periodic complexes and emergence of a normal basic background activity. No other prognostic factor has been reported.
...
PMID:[Prolonged remission in subacute sclerosing panencephalitis: 2 cases]. 218 84
Thirsty rats were trained to press a lever for either a sucrose solution or saline before performance was tested in extinction while the animals were either hungry alone or experiencing both hunger and a sodium appetite. Reinforcer-specific motivational control was observed in that the animals trained with the sucrose solution pressed more than those trained with the saline when they were tested hungry, but not when they were tested under combined hunger and sodium appetite. In order to assess the role of a Pavlovian incentive process in this effect, thirsty animals received non-contingent pairings of one stimulus with the sucrose solution and another with saline in the second experiment. In an extinction test the sucrose stimulus augmented lever pressing relative to the saline stimulus when the animals were hungry, but not when they were thirsty. In the subsequent experiments the contribution of the Pavlovian process was equated by giving concurrent training with both incentives. Lever pressing and chain pulling were reinforced concurrently, one with the sucrose solution and the other with saline, while the animals were thirsty. Once again, the animals pressed more in extinction if this action had been trained with the sucrose solution rather than the saline, but only if they were hungry rather than thirsty. Thus, instrumental performance across a thirst-to-hunger shift can also be controlled by an instrumental incentive process. The direct engagement of the instrumental process by this motivational shift contrasts to the absence of such control following a hunger-to-thirst transition (Dickinson &
Dawson
, 1987a), a fact attributed to the
asymmetrical
motivational interactions produced by water and food deprivation.
...
PMID:Motivational control of instrumental performance following a shift from thirst to hunger. 228 40
Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was performed on 36 children and two adults (with clinical presentation during childhood) with white-matter disease of the central nervous system. Abnormalities were readily demonstrated in patients with multiple sclerosis, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, leucodystrophies and
subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
: MRI demonstrated the extent and distribution of abnormalities more clearly than computed tomography for all these disorders. The abnormalities tended to be
asymmetrical
and multifocal in multiple sclerosis and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, and more confluent and symmetrical in the leucodystrophies. Children with clinically isolated optic neuritis had a significantly lower frequency of MRI brain-lesions than adults with the same disorder. MRI should be regarded as the radiological investigation of choice when white-matter disease is suspected in children.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging of inflammatory and demyelinating white-matter diseases of childhood. 233 83
The authors have studied 51 cases of
SSPE
, mainly focusing their attention upon clinical and EEG signs of the onset of the illness. Clinical disorders have been classified in the 3 following categories: psychic prevailing, neurologic prevailing, and visual disorders prevailing. These 3 categories do not have the same evolution and may not have the same prognosis. Concerning EEG disorders, the typical periodic complex topography allows to recognize 3 groups: bilateral and symmetrical complexes, bilateral but
asymmetrical
complexes, and unilateral complexes. These 3 groups may be further analysed, according to an anterior or posterior prevalence of the periodic complex. The authors think that this distinction may be of interest for diagnostic precision.
...
PMID:[Different clinical and electroencephalographic aspects of subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE). Apropos of 51 cases]. 667 92
Thirty-eight cases of
subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
(SSPE) were reviewed. Deterioration in school performance, personality changes, and seizures were common early symptoms. Initial examination frequently showed myoclonus, spasticity, and extrapyramidal dysfunction, and in two-thirds of patients these findings were
asymmetrical
or focal. Retinitis or papilledema was present on initial examination in 50% of the patients. At last follow-up 24 children had died, with a mean survival of 42 months. Most patients reached a state of severe neurological impairment within 13 months. Subsequent evidence of improvement was noted in 10 children and was sustained in 4. Fifteen patients received antiviral treatment. Ten treated patients died from 5 to 133 months (mean, 58) from onset of their illness, while 15 untreated patients survived a mean of 33 months. Duration of survival appeared to be affected most by treatment with amantadine. Three patients treated with the drug were alive 97 to 139 months after onset of SSPE, and 5 died with a mean survival of 78 months. Five of 6 individuals treated with rifampin died after a mean survival of 27 months. Prolonged remissions occurred only in patients treated with amantadine. Although the number of treated individuals was small, our data suggest that amantadine may affect the natural course of SSPE.
...
PMID:Review of 38 cases of subacute sclerosing panencephalitis: effect of amantadine on the natural course of the disease. 743 85
On the basis of current knowledge of neuroanatomy and our previous research with cardiac vagal tone, we have proposed the vagal circuit of emotion regulation. The vagal circuit of emotion regulation incorporates lateral brain function with the regulation of the peripheral autonomic nervous system in the expression of emotion. The vagus and the vagal circuit do not function independently of other neurophysiological and neuroendocrine systems. Research on brain activity (see
Dawson
, in this volume; Fox, in this volume) and research on adrenocortical activity (see Stansbury & Gunnar, in this volume) demonstrate that EEG and cortisol are related to emotion states and to individual differences similar to those that we have investigated. The vagal circuit emphasizes not only the vagus but also the lateralization of specific brain structures in emotion regulation. The emphasis of the vagal circuit on right-brain-stem structures stimulates several testable hypotheses regarding the function of specific structures in the right brain in emotion regulation. These speculations are consistent with other reports (see
Dawson
, in this volume; Fox, in this volume) describing
asymmetrical
EEG activity during expressed emotions. Moreover, the vagal circuit does not exist independently of the brain structures and peptide systems regulating cortisol (see Stansbury & Gunnar, in this volume). Areas in the brain stem regulating vagal activity are also sensitive to the peptides that regulate cortisol (e.g., vasopressin and corticotropin-releasing hormone). In this essay, we have provided information regarding the relation between vagal tone and emotion regulation. A review of research indicates that baseline levels of cardiac vagal tone and vagal tone reactivity abilities are associated with behavioral measures of reactivity, the expression of emotion, and self-regulation skills. Thus, we propose that cardiac vagal tone can serve as an index of emotion regulation. Historically, the vagus and other components of the parasympathetic nervous system have not been incorporated in theories of emotion. Recent developments in methodology have enabled us to define and accurately quantify cardiac vagal tone. Theories relating the parasympathetic nervous system to the expression and regulation of emotion are now being tested in several laboratories.
...
PMID:Vagal tone and the physiological regulation of emotion. 798 59
Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE)
is a progressive, slow virus infection of the brain, caused by the measles virus, attacking children and young adults. We investigated 15 patients with SSPE by MRI, with 5 normal and 10 pathological results. In the early period, lesions were in the grey matter and subcortical white matter. They were
asymmetrical
and had a predilection for the posterior parts of the hemispheres. Later, high-signal changes in deep white matter and severe cerebral atrophy were observed. Parenchymal lesions significantly correlated with the duration of disease. A significant relationship between MRI findings and clinical stage was observed in the 1st year of the disease.
...
PMID:MRI in subacute sclerosing panencephalitis. 891 18
We report a 14-year-old boy who presented with loss of consciousness and gait instability. The electroencephalogram (EEG) showed generalized slowing with irregular activity and cerebral magnetic imaging revealed
asymmetrical
nonspecific signals on basal ganglia. His second electroencephalogram revealed periodical generalized high-voltage slow wave complexes which did not disappear with diazepam induction.
Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE)
was considered and the diagnosis was confirmed with the identification of measles antibodies in cerebrospinal fluid. Our findings show that SSPE should be in mind in the differential diagnosis of meningoencephalitis and acute disseminated encephalomyelitis and highlight the significance of EEG in the diagnosis of unidentified cases.
...
PMID:Atypical clinical course subacute sclerosing panencephalitis presenting as acute Encephalitis. 2324 91