neurotoxicity$52482$ - перевод на голландский
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neurotoxicity$52482$ - перевод на голландский

NMDA RECEPTOR ANTAGONIST NEUROTOXICITY
Olney's Lesions; NMDA Antagonist Neurotoxicity; NMDA Receptor Antagonist Neurotoxicity; NMDAR Antagonist Neurotoxicity; Olney's lesion; Olney lesion; Olney lesions; NAN (disease)
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neurotoxicity      
n. neurotoxiteit, zenuwvergiftiging
lead poisoning         
  • 1QNV}})
  • Jacketed ammunition (left), bare lead (right)
  • An infographic explaining lead poisoning
  • alt=A large tan bird of prey with dark brown neck feathers and a bare red head sits on a dead cow in a desert with dead grass and scrub
  • alt=a block with two dull, dark gray metal spouts coming from the top. The spouts are chipped and very old-looking.
  • alt=Eight MRI views of a brain in black and white, with yellow, orange, and red areas overlaid in spots mainly toward the front.
  • alt=an ancient Greek black-and-white woodcut print of a middle aged bearded man. His left hand rests on a book and in his right he holds a plant.
  • As lead safety standards become more stringent, fewer children in the US are found to have elevated lead levels.
  • alt=a closeup of a red gasoline pump with a warning label that reads, "for use as a motor fuel only" (in larger writing) "contains lead" (in smaller writing) "(tetraethyl)"
  • alt=Two black-and-white photos; one shows dark, fairly regular rings on a lighter background, and the other shows irregular, smaller, and not as dark clusters.
  • alt=dozens of pink circular bodies with white centers on a white background. Arrows point to three of the cells; two are speckled with dark purple dots, and the third has an irregular outer border
  • alt=A box of cigarette-like white cylinders on the left, in the middle a white cylinder with a pink tip, on the right a paper with four circles, two blank and two pink
  • Lead wheel weight eroding on road
  • alt=a chemical diagram of [CH2N(CH2CO2-)2]2 (shown in black) with the four O- tails binding a metal ion (shown in red).
  •  doi = 10.1503/cmaj.060790 }}</ref> This worker ladles molten lead into billets in a lead-acid battery recovery facility.
  • Symptoms of lead poisoning
  • alt=Two chemical diagrams of tetra-ethyl lead, or (CH3CH2)4Pb. On the left one, carbon and hydrogen are labeled, on the right they are shown as lines only.
POISONING BY LEAD IN THE BODY, ESPECIALLY AFFECTS THE BRAIN
Plumbism; Saturnism; Lead Poisoning; Painter's colic; Lead neuropathy; Lead poisoning, nervous system; Chronic lead exposure; Lead toxicity; Lead intoxication; Lead neurotoxicity; Lead and brain damage; Lead pollution; Azarcon; Lead contamination; Poisoning from lead; Lead exposure; Saturnine neuropathy; Lead in food; Lead palsy
loodvergiftiging

Определение

neurotoxin
[?nj??r??'t?ks?n]
¦ noun a poison which acts on the nervous system.
Derivatives
neurotoxic adjective
neurotoxicity noun

Википедия

Olney's lesions

Olney's lesions, also known as NMDA receptor antagonist neurotoxicity (NAN), are a form of potential brain damage due to drugs that have been studied experimentally and have produced neuronal damage, yet are administered by doctors to humans in the settings of pharmacotherapy and of anesthesia. They are named after John Olney, who conducted a study in 1989 to investigate neurotoxicity caused by PCP and related drugs.

They are important for two reasons. Firstly, NMDA receptor antagonists are physician-prescribed drugs for therapeutic treatment of human diseases such as memantine for Alzheimer's disease and amantadine for Parkinson's disease, and also occur as street drugs that are taken recreationally. Secondly, in the field of anesthesiology, the dissociative anesthesia of many general anesthetics is due to NMDA receptor antagonist properties. Because the neuronal vacuolation of Olney's lesions evolves into neuronal necrosis or death of neurons, it is important to determine whether Olney's lesions occur in humans, not only in experimental animals. The essential question is whether an NMDA receptor antagonist drug is to be considered a human neurotoxin or not. The patient safety implications for pharmacotherapy and for anesthesia would each be profound, if the answer is affirmative.