621,219 research outputs found
Alterations in electrodermal activity and cardiac parasympathetic tone during hypnosis
Exploring autonomic nervous system (ANS) changes during hypnosis is critical for understanding the nature and extent of the hypnotic phenomenon and for identifying the mechanisms underlying the effects of hypnosis in different medical conditions. To assess ANS changes during hypnosis, electrodermal activity and pulse rate variability (PRV) were measured in 121 young adults. Participants either received hypnotic induction (hypnosis condition) or listened to music (control condition), and both groups were exposed to test suggestions. Blocks of silence and experimental sound stimuli were presented at baseline, after induction, and after de-induction. Skin conductance level (SCL) and high frequency (HF) power of PRV measured at each phase were compared between groups. Hypnosis decreased SCL compared to the control condition; however, there were no group differences in HF power. Furthermore, hypnotic suggestibility did not moderate ANS changes in the hypnosis group. These findings indicate that hypnosis reduces tonic sympathetic nervous system activity, which might explain why hypnosis is effective in the treatment of disorders with strong sympathetic nervous system involvement, such as rheumatoid arthritis, hot flashes, hypertension, and chronic pain. Further studies with different control conditions are required to examine the specificity of the sympathetic effects of hypnosis
Prophylaxis and treatment of seasickness
Depending upon the dominant type of symptoms, seasickness is divided into three forms: nervous, gastro-intestinal, and cardiovascular. Various medications are recommended appropriate to these forms. The first goal is normalization of impaired system functions as well as metabolism and the electrolyte and acid-base condition of the organism. Dietary recommendations are made and specific suggestions on the use of physical exercise, including prophylatic vestibular training exercises
Neonatal abstinence syndrome: Pharmacologic strategies for the mother and infant.
Opioid use in pregnancy has increased dramatically over the past decade. Since prenatal opioid use is associated with numerous obstetrical and neonatal complications, this now has become a major public health problem. In particular, in utero opioid exposure can result in neonatal abstinence syndrome (NAS) which is a serious condition characterized by central nervous system hyperirritability and autonomic nervous system dysfunction. The present review seeks to define current practices regarding the approach to the pregnant mother and neonate with prenatal opiate exposure. Although the cornerstone of prenatal management of opioid dependence is opioid maintenance therapy, the ideal agent has yet to be definitively established. Pharmacologic management of NAS is also highly variable and may include an opioid, barbiturate, and/or α-agonist. Genetic factors appear to be associated with the incidence and severity of NAS. Establishing pharmacogenetic risk factors for the development of NAS has the potential for creating opportunities for personalized genomic medicine and novel, individualized therapeutic interventions
Macrophage Activation Syndrome as Onset of Systemic Lupus Erythematosus: A Case Report and a Review of the Literature
Macrophage activation syndrome (MAS) is a potentially fatal
condition. It is a rare complication of several autoimmune
disorders, including systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) and
systemic juvenile idiopathic arthritis (sJIA). The incidence of
MAS associated with SLE is about 0.9–4.6% [1]. MAS is a
multifarious disease, presenting with several signs and symptoms, including high fever, hepatomegaly, splenomegaly,
hemorrhagic manifestations (e.g., purpura), and dysfunction
of the central nervous system, like lethargy. Furthermore,
MAS is characterized by several alterations in laboratory tests,
including pancytopenia, hypofibrinogenemia, hypertriglyceridemia, and hyperferritinemia.
MAS is classified among the group of hemophagocytic
lymphohistiocytosis (HLH), which includes familial HLH
and secondary HLH. Secondary HLH is triggered by several causes, including infection, drugs, malignancy, and
rheumatic disorder [2].
We report a rare case of MAS that occurred as first
manifestation of SLE treated with high dose intravenous
methylprednisolone and oral cyclosporine
Relapsing-remitting multiple sclerosis: advances in disease-modifying therapies
Multiple sclerosis is a demyelinating disease affecting the central nervous system. It is the most prevalent disabling neurological condition among young adults, with onset typically between 20 and 40 years of age. Infiltrating immune cells and microglia activations are associated with inflammatory and neurodegenerative mechanisms. Current available disease modifying therapies suppress or modulate the immune system. These pharmaceuticals differ with respect to administration route and frequency, adverse effects, and efficacy. This paper provides a thorough manuscript illustrating the major prescribing factors, efficacy profiles, adverse events, and contraindications that patients and clinicians should consider while choosing a treatment. Despite the advancements made over the past 20 years, patients with progressive multiple sclerosis have few therapeutic options. Additionally, this paper assesses emerging therapies and disease targets on the pharmaceutical horizon, which have shown promise for all disease phenotypes
The nature of nervous conditions in Tsitsi Dangarembga's Nervous conditions
Tsitsi Dangarembga's Nervous Conditions is, primarily, a novel about nervous conditions. It's about many other things, too. It's about power. It's about women. About men and poverty and riches. It's about education and missions and colonial Zimbabwe. It's about black and white. But at the end of all of these themes lies the nervous conditions of the novel's characters and how they formed, how they are rooted, and how they express themselves. In this paper, I will examine the nervous conditions of three characters in particular: Babamukuru, Nyasha, and Tambu. By identifying each of their conditions and examining them closely, I hope to identify the causes of their condition, both the stimuli and the character's reactions to them. By comparing the way that each character develops their condition, I will discuss the complexity that Dangarembga allows her characters and the actual humanity that they are meant to reflect
Sensory supplementation system based on electrotactile tongue biofeedback of head position for balance control
The present study aimed at investigating the effects of an artificial head
position-based tongue-placed electrotactile biofeedback on postural control
during quiet standing under different somatosensory conditions from the support
surface. Eight young healthy adults were asked to stand as immobile as possible
with their eyes closed on two Firm and Foam support surface conditions executed
in two conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. In the Foam condition, a
6-cm thick foam support surface was placed under the subjects' feet to alter
the quality and/or quantity of somatosensory information at the plantar sole
and the ankle. The underlying principle of the biofeedback consisted of
providing supplementary information about the head orientation with respect to
gravitational vertical through electrical stimulation of the tongue. Centre of
foot pressure (CoP) displacements were recorded using a force platform. Larger
CoP displacements were observed in the Foam than Firm conditions in the two
conditions of No-biofeedback and Biofeedback. Interestingly, this destabilizing
effect was less accentuated in the Biofeedback than No-biofeedback condition.
In accordance with the sensory re-weighting hypothesis for balance control, the
present findings evidence that the availability of the central nervous system
to integrate an artificial head orientation information delivered through
electrical stimulation of the tongue to limit the postural perturbation induced
by alteration of somatosensory input from the support surface
English medical experts and the claims for shock occasioned by railway collisions in the 1860`s. Issues of law, ethics, and medicine
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Family Game Show-style Didactic for Teaching Nervous System Disorders during Emergency Medicine Training
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