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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (
asymmetrical
)
12,197
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Lesions were placed in a number of brain stem and cerebellar structures to determine their importance to the control of posture and movement in rats. Lesions of the lateral vestibular nucleus, superior vestibular nucleus, or inferior olive produced severe disturbances of posture and movement. Rats with such lesions had pronounced tremor, abnormal head posture and
asymmetrical
trunk posture, and failed in a balance beam test. Lesions of the medial medullary reticular formation and medial vestibular nucleus had less overall effect on posture and movement, while animals with lesions of the deep cerebellar nuclei were relatively unimpaired. All lesion groups showed some
recovery of function
during the course of postoperative testing.
...
PMID:Brain stem and cerebellar lesions in female rats. I. Tests of posture and movement. 126 11
Asthmatic amyotrophy is becoming a well established clinical phenomenon. A polio-like syndrome, it is characterized by an
asymmetrical
lower motor neuron paralysis after an acute asthmatic episode. We are presenting three additional cases of this syndrome to add to the literature describing this phenomenon. Our cases are similar to the 18 previously reported cases showing an
asymmetrical
flaccid paralysis accompanied by normal sensation. The prognosis for full
recovery of function
is poor. Anterior horn cell damage is postulated because no sensory loss has been found in any patients.
...
PMID:Asthmatic amyotrophy. Three cases. 174 5
A study of eleven patients presenting with neurological complications following acute viral conjunctivitis, mostly haemorrhagic, is reported and the literature reviewed. A Guillain-Barre syndrome-like profile was seen in six patients while the remaining had features of radiculomyelitis. Besides
asymmetrical
neurological deficits, protein cell reaction and residual muscle wasting, the occurrence of dysautonomias was the striking feature noted in the patients with a Guillain-Barre syndrome-like profile. The dysautonomic features included fatal paroxysmal hypertensive and hypotensive crises in one patient and self limiting tachycardias, episodic profuse sweating, abnormal expiration-inspiration ratio and valsalva ratio in four patients. High antibody titers to EV-70 virus were seen in five patients. A follow up of one and a half year revealed poor neurologic recovery in patients with radiculomyelitis as compared to good
functional recovery
in others. The importance of early recognition and appropriate treatment of dysautonomias is emphasised. The probable aetiopathogenesis of the neurological complications including dysautonomias is discussed.
...
PMID:Neurological complications following acute viral conjunctivitis: a new profile. 375 Mar 88
Unilateral damage to the forelimb representation area of the sensorimotor cortex in adult rats increases dendritic arborization of layer V pyramidal neurons of the contralateral homotopic cortex. Arbor size was maximum at approximately 18 d postlesion, following which there was a partial elimination, or pruning, of dendritic processes. These neural changes were closely associated with behavioral events. The overgrowth of dendrites was related in time to disuse of the contralateral (to the lesion) forelimb and over-reliance on the ipsilateral forelimb for postural and exploratory movements. The pruning of dendrites was related to a return to more symmetrical use of the forelimbs. To investigate the possibility that lesion-induced asymmetries in motor behavior contributed to dendritic arborization changes, movements of the forelimb ipsilateral to the lesion were restricted during the period of dendritic overgrowth through the use of one-holed vests. This interfered with the increase in dendritic arborization. In contrast, animals that were allowed to use both forelimbs, or only the forelimb ipsilateral to the lesion, showed the expected increases. When sham-operated rats were forced to use only one forelimb, no significant increases in arborization were found. Therefore, neither a lesion nor
asymmetrical
limb use alone could account for the dendritic overgrowth--it depended on a lesion-behavior interaction. Furthermore, greater sensorimotor impairments were found when the dendritic growth was blocked, suggesting that the neural growth and/or associated limb-use behavior were related to
functional recovery
from the cortical damage. Finally, in a second experiment, immobilization of the impaired limb during the pruning period did not prevent the elimination of processes. Thus, the pruning of neural processes was not related simply to the recovery of more symmetrical forelimb use. There may be a period early after brain damage during which marked neural structural changes can occur in the presence of adequate behavioral demand.
...
PMID:Use-dependent growth of pyramidal neurons after neocortical damage. 815 62
Recently, we demonstrated amelioration of behavioral deficits associated with 6-hydroxydopamine-induced hemiparkinsonism by transplanting rat testis-derived Sertoli cells into adult male rat brains. In the present study, we used adult female hemiparkinsonian rats to investigate whether the beneficial effects of transplantation of Sertoli cells may be differentially affected by gender of the animal transplant recipient. At 1 month posttransplantation, animals transplanted with Sertoli cells showed
functional recovery
as revealed by significant reductions in apomorphine-induced rotational behavior and
asymmetrical
elevated body swing behavior. Control animals that received medium alone did not display any visible behavioral recovery. These results suggest that transplantation of Sertoli cells is not male hormone-dependent and further support the use of these cells as a graft source for Parkinson's disease and other neurological disorders.
...
PMID:Intracerebral transplantation of testis-derived sertoli cells promotes functional recovery in female rats with 6-hydroxydopamine-induced hemiparkinsonism. 939 81
The anatomical and functional correlates of the hand sensorimotor areas was investigated in a stroke patient with a malacic lesion in the left fronto-parieto-temporal cortex. The patient presented hemiplegia and motor aphasia 12 months earlier, followed by an excellent motor recovery. Transcranial magnetic stimulation mapping, functional magnetic resonance and magnetoencephalography were used as methods of functional imaging and all yielded consistent results. In particular, an
asymmetrical
enlargement and posterior shift of the sensorimotor areas localized in the affected hemisphere were found with all three techniques. Aspects related to brain 'plasticity' for
functional recovery
are discussed.
...
PMID:Hand motor cortical area reorganization in stroke: a study with fMRI, MEG and TCS maps. 967 9
We recently reported behavioral improvements following intrastriatal transplantation of cryopreserved cultured human neuroteratocarcinoma-derived cells (hNT neurons) in rats with cerebral ischemia induced by occlusion of the middle cerebral artery. In the present study, the viability and survival of hNT neurons were evaluated immediately prior to the transplantation surgery and at 3 months post-transplantation in ischemic rats. Cryopreserved hNT neurons were routinely thawed, and trypan blue exclusion viability counts revealed 52-95% viable hNT neurons before transplantation. Monthly behavioral tests, starting at 1 month and extending to 3 months post-transplantation, revealed that ischemic animals that were intrastriatally transplanted with hNT neurons (approximately 40000) and treated with an immunosuppressive drug displayed normalization of
asymmetrical
motor behavior compared with ischemic animals that received medium alone. Within-subject comparisons of cell viability and subsequent behavioral changes revealed that a high cell viability just prior to transplantation surgery correlated highly with a robust and sustained functional improvement in the transplant recipient. Furthermore, histological analysis of grafted brains revealed a positive correlation between number of surviving hNT neurons and degree of
functional recovery
. In concert with similar reports on fetal tissue transplantation, we conclude that high cell viability is an important criterion for successful transplantation of cryopreserved neurons derived from cell lines to enhance graft-induced functional effects.
...
PMID:Viability and survival of hNT neurons determine degree of functional recovery in grafted ischemic rats. 976 Jan 30
The neuropeptide substance P is known to have mnemogenic and reinforcing actions and can exert neurotrophic and regenerative effects in vitro as well as in vivo. Furthermore, our previous work in the rat showed that either pre- or post-lesion treatment with substance P can promote
functional recovery
in cases of partial nigrostriatal dopamine lesions. Other work has provided evidence that the effects of substance P might be differentially encoded by its C- and N-terminal fragments. The C-terminal fragment was found to be reinforcing, whereas the mnemogenic as well as neurotrophic properties have been ascribed to the N-terminal sequences. Given these relations, we asked here whether pre-lesion treatment with either a C- or an N-terminal fragment of substance P might differentially affect the behavioral and neurochemical outcome of nigrostriatal dopamine lesions. Therefore, either substance P1-7 or substance P5-11 (37 nmol/kg each) was administered intraperitoneally daily for eight consecutive days before unilateral 6-hydroxy-dopamine lesions of the substantia nigra. Control rats received pre-lesion treatment with vehicle. Furthermore, we investigated the effects of pre-treatment with Boc-cholecystokinin-4 (0.91 nmol/kg), as we had found an increase in dopamine metabolism in animals that were pre-treated with cholecystokinin-8 in a former study. In accordance with our previous work, drug treatment effects were observed when excluding animals with most severe dopamine lesions: In animals with partial lesions (residual neostriatal dopamine levels of more than 10%), lesion-dependent asymmetries in turning behavior were observed in animals that were pre-treated with vehicle-, substance P1-7, or Boc-cholecysto-kinin-4, whereas turning after pre-treatment with substance P5-11 was not significantly
asymmetrical
. Furthermore, the ipsi- and contra-lateral neostriatal dopamine levels did not differ significantly in this group. Moreover, pre-treatment with substance P5-11 affected dopamine metabolism in the neostriatum and in the ventral striatum, as indicated by increased ratios of dihydroxyphenyllic acid to dopamine. The data provide the first evidence that the promotive effects of substance-P treatment in the unilateral dopamine lesion model might be mediated by its C-terminal and might depend on actions on residual dopamine mechanisms.
...
PMID:Pretreatment with fragments of substance-P or with cholecystokinin differentially affects recovery from sub-total nigrostriatal 6-hydroxydopamine lesion. 1071 62
Delta enkephalin analogue [D-Ala(2),D-Leu(5)]enkephalin (DADLE) has been shown to protect dopamine transporters from methamphetamine-induced neurotoxicity. In the present study, we demonstrate that exposure of embryonic ventral mesencephalic cells to DADLE (0.01 g/ml), prior to intrastriatal transplantation, enhanced
functional recovery
and graft survival in 6-hydroxydopamine-induced hemiparkinsonian rats. At 6 and 8 weeks posttransplantation, animals that received DADLE-treated cell grafts exhibited significantly higher (near normal) spontaneous locomotor behaviors, as well as trends of greater reversal of motor
asymmetrical
behaviors compared with animals that received nontreated cell grafts. Histological examination revealed that animals transplanted with DADLE-treated cell grafts exhibited about twice the number of surviving tyrosine hydroxylase-immunoreactive grafted neurons compared with those animals that received nontreated cell grafts. These results suggest that DADLE should be considered as an adjunctive agent for neural transplantation therapy in Parkinson's disease.
...
PMID:Delta opioid peptide augments functional effects and intrastriatal graft survival of rat fetal ventral mesencephalic cells. 1129 72
Chronic impairment of forelimb and digit movement is a common problem after stroke that is resistant to therapy. Although in the last years some studies have been performed to increase the efficacy of rehabilitative experience and training, the pharmacological approaches in this context remain poorly developed. We decided to study the effect of a chronic treatment with CDP-choline, a safe and well-tolerated drug that is known to stabilize membranes, on functional outcome and neuromorphological changes after stroke. To assess the
functional recovery
we have performed the staircase reaching test and the elevated body swing test (EBST), for studying sensorimotor integration and
asymmetrical
motor function respectively. The treatment with CDP-choline, initiated 24 h after the middle cerebral artery occlusion (MCAO) and maintained during 28 days, improved the functional outcome in both the staircase test (MCAO+CDP=87.0+/-6.6% pellets eaten vs. MCAO+SAL=40.0+/-4.5%; p<0.05) and the EBST (MCAO+CDP=70.0+/-6.8% vs. MCAO+SAL=88.0+/-5.4%; contralateral swing p<0.05). In addition, to study potential neuronal substrates of the improved function, we examined the dendritic morphology of layer V pyramidal cells in the undamaged motor cortex using a Golgi-Cox procedure. The animals treated with CDP-choline showed enhanced dendritic complexity and spine density compared with saline group. Our results suggest that a chronic treatment with CDP-choline initiated 24 h after the insult is able to increase the neuronal plasticity within noninjured and functionally connected brain regions as well as to promote
functional recovery
.
...
PMID:A chronic treatment with CDP-choline improves functional recovery and increases neuronal plasticity after experimental stroke. 1723 23
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