RESUMO
The author presents 83 cases of "a frigore" peripheral facial palsy, occurred in the mountain city of Petropolis which has characteristics such as a tropical climate without any traces of a dry season and an average temperature of 50 degrees F to 73.5 degrees F. The author relates them with virus infections which appear within a year period. Fifty six patients belong to his clinic and have a follow up, while other 25 patients proceed from another clinics and from them he only has reports on sex, age, side of palsy and the beginning of illness. He shows that the largest number of cases occurred along the months of May, August, September and October. Season distribution for southern hemisphere is analysed. He also considers etiology, incidence, prevalence, treatment and results on patients studied.
Assuntos
Paralisia Facial/epidemiologia , Adolescente , Adulto , Idoso , Brasil/epidemiologia , Criança , Clima Frio/efeitos adversos , Paralisia Facial/etiologia , Paralisia Facial/terapia , Feminino , Humanos , Incidência , Masculino , Pessoa de Meia-Idade , Estações do AnoRESUMO
The immediate posttraining intracerebroventricular injection of histamine (1 or 10 ng/rat) facilitated memory both of a stepdown inhibitory avoidance task, and of the habituation of rearing responses to an open field. As previously shown for the avoidance task, the combination of cimetidine (1,000 ng/rat) plus prometazine (1,000 ng/rat), but not each drug on its own, blocked the effect of histamine in the habituation task. The effect of histamine was not shared by the intracerebroventricular administration of the mast cell histamine releaser, 48/80 (0.1 to 100 micrograms/rat). The present findings indicate that the memory facilitatory action of histamine might be general across tasks, and that 48/80-releasable, presumably mast cell, endogenous histamine is probably not involved in memory regulation.