Publications by authors named "Dentinger M"

We describe, for a single platinum complex bearing a dipeptide moiety, a solvent-driven interconversion from twisted to straight micrometric assembled structures with different chirality. The photophysical and morphological properties of the aggregates have been investigated as well as the role of the media and concentration. A real-time visualization of the solvent-driven interconversion processes has been achieved by confocal microscopy.

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In order to test for the specific therapeutic effects of thermal biofeedback (TBF) for hand warming on vascular headache (HA), 70 patients with chronic vascular HA were randomly assigned to TBF for hand warming, TBF for hand cooling, TBF for stabilization of hand temperature, or biofeedback to suppress alpha in the EEG. Patients in each condition initially had high levels of expectation of therapeutic benefit and found the treatment rationales highly credible. Participants in each condition received 12 treatment sessions on a twice-per-week basis.

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There are no peripheral diagnostic markers for Parkinson's disease (PD). However, recent studies of platelets in PD patients indicate that mitochondrial and monoamine oxidase function may be abnormal. This investigation examines platelets in PD from a morphological standpoint utilizing transmission electron microscopy (EM).

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Data are presented from a prospective clinical replication series of ten consecutive high-medication headache patients who presented for nondrug treatment of their headaches. For the first eight, an attempt was made to withdraw the patients from medication, with the assistance of relaxation training, prior to entering a comprehensive self-regulatory treatment program. For the last two, drug withdrawal accompanied the treatment.

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The role of regular home practice of hand warming was examined in the thermal biofeedback (TBF) treatment of vascular (migraine and mixed migraine and tension) headache (HA) by giving 12 sessions (over 6 weeks) of TBF to two groups of vascular HA patients (n = 23 per group). One group was asked to practice regularly at home with a home trainer between clinic sessions, whereas no mention of practice was made to the other group. A third group merely monitored HAs.

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It has been postulated that myelin degradation products may inhibit regrowth of mammalian central axons and that central nervous system (CNS) myelin and oligodendrocytes may constitute a "nonpermissive substrate" for axonal growth. To address these issues, we utilized an X-linked rat mutant, myelin-deficient or md. In the optic nerve of this mutant, 40 days and more postnatally, normal myelin is absent and oligodendrocytes are few (Dentinger et al.

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Seventy-six patients with vascular (migraine or mixed migraine and tension) headache (HA) participated in a controlled evaluation of a minimal-therapist-contact, largely home-based, treatment program which combined relaxation (R) training with thermal biofeedback (TBF). One group received TBF + R administered in 3 office visit over 8 weeks, supplemented by audio tapes and manuals. A second group received the TBF + R plus instruction in cognitive stress coping techniques, all of which was administered in 5 office visits over 8 weeks.

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A review of records was conducted to examine the utility of doing routine laboratory testing (EEG and skull X rays) versus testing at the discretion of the attending neurologist on patients presenting for the nonpharmacological treatment of chronic headache. A total of 278 patients underwent neurological evaluation as part of a routine assessment prior to beginning self-regulatory treatment for headache. The first 112 subjects received routine laboratory tests of EEG and skull X-ray films.

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The rubrospinal tract (RST) was cut unilaterally at C2-3 segment in 21 rats that were killed 3, 7, 10, 14, 28, 60, and 90 days later. Additionally, 14 rats, killed 14 or 28 days after lesioning, were treated postoperatively by daily intraperitoneal injections of GM1 ganglioside. Six unoperated, untreated rats served as controls.

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'Analgesic rebound headache' is identified by habituation of an individual to pain reducing medication, the exacerbation of headache pain a few hours after medication consumption and a marked increase in headache frequency and intensity for several weeks after medication is discontinued. We describe three studies undertaken to clarify the existence and characteristics of this proposed headache syndrome. In Study 1 we compared a group of headache sufferers who consume large amounts of analgesic medications to headache sufferers who did not consume excessive analgesics.

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Two studies on patients with Chronic, Daily, High Intensity Headache (CDHIHA) are presented. In the first, their response to various self-regulatory (biofeedback, relaxation) treatments was compared to that of case controls matched for age, duration and Ad Hoc Committee diagnoses who had 1-2 headache-free days per week (Group II) and 3-5 headache-free days per week (Group III). The CDHIHA patients had a significantly poorer response to treatment (12.

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Nemaline myopathy is not usually considered to involve cardiac muscle and rarely is associated with nocturnal hypoventilation. We report a boy, 5 1/2 years of age, with nemaline myopathy who presented with respiratory failure. Echocardiography demonstrated the septum to left ventricular posterior wall ratio to be increased which is consistent with a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.

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Brain tissue from five patients with superficial siderosis of the central nervous system was examined by immunocytochemistry for ferritin, glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), alpha 1-antitrypsin, and alpha 1-antichymotrypsin, and by lectin affinity cytochemistry with biotinylated Ricinus communis agglutinin-1 (RCA-1). The sections were pretreated with 2,2'-dipyridyl and sodium hydrosulfite to remove iron and to reveal the antigenic sites. In siderotic cerebellar cortex, ferritin reaction product occurred in the hemosiderin matrix, the cell bodies and processes of Bergmann glia, and in microglia.

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We present qualitative and quantitative ultrastructural observations on the changes induced in neuroglia and blood vessels of gray matter of cat brain by an experimental acceleration-deceleration injury which, when used alone, causes negligible morbidity and mortality, but, when combined with systemic hypoxia, leads to coma and delayed death in approximately 50% of experimental subjects. An increase in the proportion of neuropil occupied by astrocytic cytoplasm is detectable qualitatively in layer Vb of pericruciate cortex 20 min after injury without hypoxia, and is maximal (22%, as measured morphometrically, vs 11.4% in controls) 40 min afterward.

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Albino rats six weeks (wk) of age underwent transection of the spinal cord at the level of the seventh thoracic vertebra. They were killed ten wk later by several schedules of formaldehyde-glutaraldehyde, formaldehyde and formaldehyde-ethanol-acetic acid perfusion-fixation. Layer Vb of the sensorimotor cortex, the site of origin of corticospinal axons severed by the operation, was searched by light and electron microscopic methods for evidence of neuronal necrosis.

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The absence of normal myelin from the CNS of the dysmyelinative rat mutant, md, is associated with axonal abnormalities including organelle-poor and organelle-rich spheroids (OPS and ORS, respectively), wrinkling of the axolemma, persistence of glycogen aggregates and vacuoles in cerebellar mossy fiber terminals, and coalescence of synaptic vesicles in terminal boutons of the nucleus interpositus. OPS have a special predilection for medullary pyramid and the axons of Purkinje cells and further differ from ORS in their possession of nematosomes and in their lack of neurofilaments, microtubules, and degenerating mitochondria. Purkinje cells of md fail to increase in size after 30 days postnatal age and, unlike these neurons in normal neonatal rats, may have massed or dispersed granules of cytoplasmic glycogen which persist for at least 86 days postnatally.

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Brain-stem auditory evoked response (BAER) studies were performed one to 16 days after a vertebrobasilar transient ischemic attack (VB TIA) in eight patients and repeated two to 16 days later in six of them. Initially, all showed absence of waveforms, prolonged interpeak latencies, and/or amplitude reduction. Five of six patients showed reversal of BAER changes to normal; the remaining patient returned to near normal.

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A constellation of histologic abnormalities was demonstrated in the quadriceps femoris muscle of a 29-year-old man with Bassen-Kornzweig syndrome. The abnormalities consisted of fibers containing dense lipid inclusions ceroid and lipofuscin, a spectrum of fiber size, architectural changes, and an increase in central nuclei. A dramatic shift of fiber type predominance, from type I to type II, was demonstrated in the myosin ATPase reactions one year after vitamin E therapy.

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Rat retinal ganglion cell layer (GCL) was examined ultrastructurally 1-180 days after intraorbital crushing of one optic nerve. It was confirmed quantitatively that axotomized ganglion cells lost cisternal membranes of the rough endoplasmic reticulum (RER) and showed disintegration of Nissl bodies and ribosomal rosettes 3 days postoperatively. Between 60 and 180 days after neurotomy there was partial reversion of the RER towards normal.

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Three patients are described with muscular dystrophy and contractures. Although this disorder bears similarities to Emery-Dreifuss disease and variants previously described, absence of cardiomyopathy is a distinguishing feature. Electrodiagnostic testing and muscle biopsy are consistent with a myopathy.

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Development of glial cell lines and axons is reported for the optic nerve of the myelin deficient rat mutant, md, 3-46 days postnatally. In mutants, optic nerves do not increase in area after 16 days of age whereas, in normal rats, they enlarge through 46 days of postnatal life. The density of glial cells, determined in cross-sections, is similar in md and normal littermates through 19 days postnatally.

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Separate series of adult rats were subjected to unilateral high cervical and low thoracic section of the rubrospinal tract and sacrificed 1-30 (cervical series) and 3-100 days (thoracic series) later. Local cerebral glucose utilization ([14C]2-DG method of Sokoloff et al.) was determined in the red nucleus and in the inferior colliculus, nucleus interpositus and sensorimotor cortex of both sides in operates and controls.

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2',3'-Cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphodiesterase activity was examined in brains and spinal cords of normal and myelin-deficient Wistar rats. While the activity in normal brains increased from 0.2 mumol/min/mg protein (units) at 6-10 days to 3.

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