During 1990-1991 263 low-vision aids were prescribed to visually impaired elderly people. 22% of them did not use their magnifying systems. With the help of a low-vision trainer, who taught them how ...to use their magnifying system correctly, the failure rate could be remarkably reduced. In 1992, low-vision aids were prescribed to 121 of 158 patients; 110 of these patients had low-vision training. Only 3% of them failed to use the magnifying system.
Coronal slices of rat brain were incubated in Krebs bicarbonate medium containing kainate (300 microM), or N-methyl-D-aspartate (500 microM). Degeneration of striatal neurons by both these toxins was ...apparent after 40 min incubation, and was accompanied by a 33% (kainate) and 21% (N-methyl-D-aspartate) reduction in striatal glutamine synthetase activity. Pre-incubation of the slices with 500 microM L-methionine sulfoximine, an inhibitor of glutamine synthetase, for 20 min prior to the exposure to either kainate or N-methyl-D-aspartate, again showed extensive degeneration of striatal neurons, and a supra-additive reduction in glutamine synthetase activity in the tissue. The activity of the neuronal marker enzyme, neuron-specific enolase, was also reduced by pre-incubation of the slices with L-methionine sulfoximine before the addition of kainate or N-methyl-D-aspartate, but to a much lesser extent than glutamine synthetase. The results are discussed in terms of a possible mechanism of interaction between either kainate or N-methyl-D-aspartate, and glial cell metabolism.
Immediate diagnostic clarification is required in patients who develop acute or subacute symptoms suggestive of an intraspinal lesion. In case of symptoms indicating a monoradicular lesion a spinal ...CT investigation is mostly sufficient. Since polyradicular syndromes are often due to inflammation, examination of the cerebrospinal fluid is the most important diagnostic measure. However, in case of symptoms suggestive of intramedullary lesions, spinal MRT is by far the most effective diagnostic procedure. In patients with symptoms suggestive of a lesion of the cauda equina spinal CT is sufficient in most cases as a first measure, particularly if the lesion can be precisely localized by clinical examination. The decision as to which diagnostic method should be performed first is relevant mainly because of the limited availability of MRT examinations within the daily clinical routine. MRT should thus be used selectively in patients with lesions that cannot be identified by alternative diagnostic methods.
Coronal brain slices allow the study of neurotoxicity and "neuroprotection" under conditions where the differentiation-state and interrelationships of the neurones and glial cells are closer to those ...occurring in the intact tissue than is the case for co-cultured cell systems. The involvement of glial cells in the excitotoxicity of kainate and the potentiation of this toxicity by inhibition of glutamine synthase can be demonstrated. Longer-term toxicity of kainate may also be compounded by depletion of glutathione levels resulting from inhibition of gamma-glutamylcysteine synthase. The involvement of nitric oxide formation in the toxicity of N-methyl-D-aspartate can also be shown. The neurotoxicity of 1-methyl-4-phenylpyridinium can be readily demonstrated in coronal slice preparations. Taurine affords protection against this neurotoxicity. The possible mechanisms of these effects are considered in terms of the cyclic interrelationships between the different events which can lead to cell death.
A 15 year old girl experienced Horner's syndrome on the right side, paraesthesia of the right arm and meningitis. CT and MRI showed a cystic lesion on the right side of the cervical spine at C3/C4 ...which descended with an extraspinal portion down to C6. Histology revealed a complex neurenteric cyst. The ipsilateral vertebral artery showed an atypical course. This abnormal artery besides a partial fusion of the vertebrae C2/C3/C4 suggest a complex malformation at the site of the cyst. Disturbed developmental relationships in this case indicate that pathological blood vessels may represent a risk factor in the surgical treatment of neurenteric cysts.
We analyze hadrochemical freeze-out in central Pb+Pb collisions at CERN SPS energies, employing the hybrid version of the Ultrarelativistic Quantum Molecular Dynamics model, which describes the ...transition from a hydrodynamic stage to hadrons by the Cooper-Frye mechanism, and matches to a final hadron-resonance cascade. We fit the results both before and after the cascade stage using the Statistical Model, to assess the effect of the cascade phase. We observe a strong effect on antibaryon yields except anti-Omega, resulting in a shift in T and mu_B of the freeze-out curve. We discuss indications of a similar effect in SPS and RHIC data, and propose a method to recover the bulk hadron freeze-out conditions.
To visualise and quantify dopamine D2 receptor binding in the corpus striatum of patients with neurological Wilson's disease (WD) 123I-Iodobenzamide (IBZM) binding was measured using single photon ...emission computer tomography (SPECT). Ratios of striatal to frontal countrates were calculated in 8 patients and in 21 healthy control subjects. We found reduced IBZM binding ratios in all patients with WD in comparison to those in controls (1.48 +/- 0.13 vs. 1.73 +/- 0.09). The reduction in IBZM binding was correlated with the overall severity of neurological deficits and the severity of dysarthria (correlation coefficients -0.86 p < 0.01 and -0.79 p < 0.01, respectively). When patients of three different subgroups of neurological WD were compared no differences in IBZM binding were found. We conclude that assessing basal ganglia function in vivo using IBZM-SPECT is a valuable diagnostic tool in WD.
This retrospective investigation of neurological deficits in 95 consecutive patients (77 men, mean age 35 years; 18 women, mean age 28 years) infected by the human immunodeficiency virus showed that ...61% of the female and 47% of the male patients exhibited neurological deficits. In 18% of the total population neurological deficits were the initial sign of acquired immunodeficiency. In addition, we found that a history of headaches and the clinical finding of mental impairment as well as internistic symptoms were significantly correlated with neurological deficits. Patients suffering from cerebral toxoplasmosis developed mental impairment significantly more often than patients with central nervous symptoms of other etiogenesis. Furthermore, it was found that HIV-infected women manifested peripheral neuropathies more often than HIV-infected men. The overall mortality rate over the investigation period of 30 months was 28%. The results of our retrospective investigation indicate that HIV-infected patients have a high risk of developing lesions of the central and peripheral nervous system during the course of the disease. Various reasons might be responsible for these findings: neurotropy and metamorphosis of the human immunodeficiency virus, opportunistic infections and tumors, vitamin deficiencies, and a variety of diseases prior to HIV-infection.
Collisions between prolate uranium nuclei are used to study how particle production and azimuthal anisotropies depend on initial geometry in heavy-ion collisions. We report the two- and four-particle ...cumulants, \(v_2\{2\}\) and \(v_2\{4\}\), for charged hadrons from U+U collisions at \(\sqrt{s_{\rm NN}}\) = 193 GeV and Au+Au collisions at \(\sqrt{s_{\rm NN}}\) = 200 GeV. Nearly fully overlapping collisions are selected based on the amount of energy deposited by spectators in the STAR Zero Degree Calorimeters (ZDCs). Within this sample, the observed dependence of \(v_2\{2\}\) on multiplicity demonstrates that ZDC information combined with multiplicity can preferentially select different overlap configurations in U+U collisions. An initial-state model with gluon saturation describes the slope of \(v_2\{2\}\) as a function of multiplicity in central collisions better than one based on Glauber with a two-component multiplicity model.