Results 281 to 290 of about 2,886,262 (322)

Life‐Threatening Bradycardia in Anti‐NMDA‐Receptor Encephalitis and a Novel Use for Permanent Pacing

open access: yesAnnals of Clinical and Translational Neurology, EarlyView.
ABSTRACT Background Pediatric anti‐NMDA receptor encephalitis (pNMDARE) is an autoantibody‐mediated disorder that can cause severe autonomic dysfunction, including symptomatic bradycardia and asystole. Dysautonomia can last for years, making it very challenging to manage.
Sarah Tucker   +9 more
wiley   +1 more source
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Degenerative Brain Disease

Veterinary Clinics of North America: Small Animal Practice, 1996
Inherited degenerative diseases of the brain are chronically progressive and often lead to severe debilitation. The cerebellum is particularly susceptible to degenerative processes. For lysosomal storage disorders, the metabolic defect is often known and diagnostic tests are available. For other abiotrophies, the inborn error of metabolism is not known
openaire   +2 more sources

Lung Disease and Brain Development

Neonatology, 2006
With the technical progress made in fetal and neonatal intensive care, perinatal mortality has decreased by 25% over the last decade and has expanded the surviving premature population. Prematurity drastically changes the environment of the developing organism.
Hüppi, Petra Susan   +2 more
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RHEUMATIC BRAIN DISEASE

The Journal of Nervous and Mental Disease, 1976
In many cases of patients who had rheumatic fever--at times undiagnosed--there is a chronic involvement of the brain as a result of disseminated recurrent obliterating arteritis or emboli in the small blood vessels, especially in the brain membranes or the cortex.
U, Halbreich   +3 more
openaire   +2 more sources

Neurodegenerative disease: Brain windfall

Nature, 2014
Diseases such as Alzheimer's and Parkinson's are rising up the research agenda, partly because of ageing populations.
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Brain cytokines and disease

Acta Neuropsychiatrica, 2002
Cytokines (e.g. various interleukins and subfamily members, tumor necrosis factors, interferons, chemokines and growth factors) act in the brain as immunoregulators and neuromodulators. Over a decade ago, the integrative article ‘Immunoregulators in the Nervous System’ (Neurosci Biobehav Rev1991; 15: 185–215) provided a comprehensive framework of ...
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