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Panuveitis in association with pseudotumor cerebri [Case Report]
Margalit, Eyal; Sung, Jennifer U; Do, Diana V; Yohay, Kaleb; Nguyen, Quan Dong
We report a case of an 11-year-old girl with bilateral panuveitis in association with pseudotumor cerebri. The patient underwent complete ophthalmologic, neurologic, and laboratory evaluations and was treated with therapy for pseudotumor cerebri. The patient met the diagnostic criteria for pseudotumor cerebri and also had panuveitis. Symptoms and findings of pseudotumor cerebri and panuveitis improved significantly after combination therapy of oral acetazolamide and weight reduction. The index case illustrates that pseudotumor cerebri can be associated with panuveitis. Therapy for pseudotumor cerebri might also help with the resolution of uveitis.
PMID: 15832615
ISSN: 0883-0738
CID: 1273112
Practice parameter: evaluation of the child with global developmental delay [Letter]
Crawford, T O; Comi, A; Freeman, J M; Kossoff, E H; Singer, H; Vining, E P G; Yohay, K
PMID: 14666931
ISSN: 0028-3878
CID: 1273132
The life span of new neurons in a song control nucleus of the adult canary brain depends on time of year when these cells are born
Nottebohm, F; O'Loughlin, B; Gould, K; Yohay, K; Alvarez-Buylla, A
The number of high vocal center (HVC) neurons labeled in adult male canaries by systemic injections of [3H]thymidine depended on season and survival time. This was true for HVC neurons projecting to the robust nucleus of the archistriatum and for other HVC neurons that could not be retrogradely filled from the robust nucleus of the archistriatum. Birds injected in October and killed 40 days later had twice as many labeled HVC neurons as birds injected in May and killed 40 days later. However, this difference became much larger (5 times) when the birds were allowed to survive for 4 months. Whereas more than half of the spring-born neurons disappeared between 40 days and 4 months, there was no reduction in the number of fall-born neurons present at the 4-month survival point. We infer that seasonal variables affect the life span of HVC neurons born in adulthood.
PMCID:44501
PMID: 8058722
ISSN: 0027-8424
CID: 1273142
Offense produced by chemical stimulation of the anterior hypothalamus of the rat
Adams, D B; Boudreau, W; Cowan, C W; Kokonowski, C; Oberteuffer, K; Yohay, K
Offense behavior, including bite-and-kick attack, was obtained by microinjections of picrotoxin into the anterior hypothalamus of the rat. This is the first time that it has been possible to obtain offense by chemical stimulation of the brain, and the localization is more precise than that obtained with electrical stimulation. Mounting behavior and mounting by the opponent were also obtained from the anterior hypothalamus, the former corresponding to results obtained by previous studies using electrical stimulation. Other behaviors obtained from the hypothalamus included locomotion and circling, social and self-grooming, upright posture and boxing, digging, feeding, and leaping.
PMID: 8394023
ISSN: 0031-9384
CID: 1273152
Song-selective auditory input to a forebrain vocal control nucleus in the zebra finch
Vicario, D S; Yohay, K H
Neurons in nuclei on the motor pathway for vocalizations in songbirds are known to respond to sound stimuli. The auditory responses in one such nucleus, robustus archistriatalis (RA), were characterized by making multi-unit recordings in awake and anesthetized adult male zebra finches and in birds that had received lesions of the input to RA from the lateral part of the magnocellular nucleus of the anterior neostriatum (LMAN) or the Higher Vocal Center (HVC). In awake birds, RA neurons have a high level of spontaneous activity and vigorous auditory responses to song stimuli. Significantly greater responses are seen to the bird's own song (BOS) than to BOS played in reverse (REV) or to the songs of conspecifics (CON). Under ketamine-xylazine anesthesia, spontaneous activity is reduced, response latency increases and responses to BOS, REV and CON are indistinguishable. Responses obtained under urethane anesthesia are similar to those seen in awake birds. Thus, the pattern and selectivity of auditory responses in RA depend on the animal's state. Auditory responses in RA are qualitatively unchanged following lesion of the input to RA from LMAN, indicating that this pathway is not required for the sensory processing that underlies the preference for BOS on the vocal production pathway. Our results show that an input other than that from LMAN must be primarily responsible for auditory responses in RA. The direct projection from HVC is the most likely pathway by which song selective auditory information arrives in RA, since lesioning HVC abolished auditory responses in RA.
PMID: 8515252
ISSN: 0022-3034
CID: 1273162