Available studies and information on the regulatory effect of the autonomic nervous system (ANS) in pregnancy are insufficient and contradictory due to a variety of research methods of ANS, the lack of a single standardized approach to the assessment of the functional tone of the ANS departments, and interpretation of the results. The aim of the study is investigation and predictive assessment of clinical and laboratory data in pregnant women with suprasegmental autonomic dysfunction with or without hypertension to determine the main directions of effective prevention of the nervous system damage. The material of the study included 206 pregnant women diagnosed with the syndrome of autonomic dysfunction in different variants.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: The cerebral palsy is highly actual issue of pediatrics, causing significant neurological disability. Though the great progress in the neuroscience has been recently achieved, the pathogenesis of cerebral palsy is still poorly understood.
Methods: In this work, we reviewed available experimental and clinical data concerning the role of immune cells in pathogenesis of cerebral palsy.