Journal of the neurological sciences
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A suspension of kaolin was injected into the cisterna magna of 44 rats at 2 weeks of age. Animals killed at intervals from 5--19 weeks of age showed varying degrees of hydrocephalus. Light microscopy, scanning and transmission electron microscopy revealed stretching and flattening of the ependymal cells but no significant loss of cilia. ⋯ The greatest proliferation was in the dorsal and lateral walls of the ventricles which were the regions most severely stretched by the ventricular dilatation. There is evidence that subependymal cells differentiate into astrocytes and microglia so that proliferation of these cells may be interpreted as a response to continuing and progressive brain damage in chronic hydrocephalus. Such progressive tissue damage could adversely affect the developing brain.
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The Australian scrub-tick Ixodes holocyclus causes a series of significant toxic effects in its victims. The most important feature of tick envenomation is neuromuscular paralysis. Children poisoned by ticks may manifest only local motoneural effects, usually facial paralysis. ⋯ The specific neurological features of tick-bite are discussed in the light of a series of 6 children who all showed signs of tick paralysis. Tick venom is known to slow nerve conduction, and may have a botulinum-like effect at the neuromuscular junction. The literature on the neurological effects of tick-envenomation is reviewed.
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Case Reports
Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease associated with "essential tremor": Report of 7 cases and a review of the literature.
A study of 7 cases of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease associated with a dyskinesia resembling benign essential tremor is presented. In 4 patients, the family history strongly suggested an autosomal mode of transmission, 2 cases were sporadic without an established genetic pattern and 1 was probably recessive. The distal parts of the upper and lower limbs showed imparied muscle strength with slight or no atrophy in 4 patients and conspicuous weakness and wasting in another 2. ⋯ Stress is laid upon the fact that Friedreich's ataxia and Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease share many clinical features. It is suggested that when Friedreich's ataxia and Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease seem to be present in the same individual and/or alternate in different members of the same family, the process is likely to be one of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. The value of the type of inheritance, natural history, clinical examination and electrophysiological data in differentiating Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (with or without essential tremor) from other degenerative disorders is analyzed.
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Spinal cord blood flow (SCBF) was measured in dogs before and following acute injury with 300 or 500 g-cm force (GCF). In addition, the responses to high and low PaCO2 and low PaO2 levels were studied. The hydrogen clearance technique was used and 0.3 mm platinum electrodes were placed in grey matter, central white matter or peripheral white matter of the L2 segment. ⋯ The results show that following injury the central areas of the cord become rapidly and progressively ischaemic. The peripheral white matter does retain a reasonably normal flow depending on the magnitude of the impact force. However, the vessels in all these areas lose their ability to respond to normal physiological stimuli.