Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.5.1.4 (
deaminase
)
5,113
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This is the first large series, comprising 50 patients who suffered a total of 164 episodes, of pseudomigraine with temporary neurological symptoms and lymphocytic pleocytosis (PMP syndrome). Onset of PMP was between the ages of 14 and 39 years and was most frequent in males (68%). Eight males (24%) and five females (31%) had a personal history of migraine. One-quarter had had a viral-like illness up to 3 weeks prior to the onset of the syndrome. The clinical picture consisted of one to 12 episodes of changing variable neurological deficits accompanied by moderate-to-severe headache and occasionally fever. The headaches were described as predominantly throbbing and bilateral with variable duration (mean, 19 h). The mean duration of the transient neurological deficits was 5 h. Sensory symptoms were most common (78% of episodes), followed by aphasic (66%) and motor (56%) symptoms. Visual symptoms appeared in only 12% of episodes. The most frequent combinations were motor aphasia plus sensory and motor right hemibody symptoms (19% of episodes), motor aphasia plus right sensory symptoms (10%) and isolated right (9%) or left (9%) sensory symptoms. All patients were asymptomatic between episodes and following the symptomatic period (maximum duration 49 days). Lymphocytic pleocytosis ranged from 10 to 760 lymphocytic cells/mm3 CSF (mean, 199). In CSF, protein was increased in 96% of patients, IgG was normal in 80% of cases and oligoclonal bands were not found. Adensoine
deaminase
values were slightly above normal in two out of 16 patients tested. Extensive microbiological determinations, including viral HIV and borrelia serologies, were negative. Brain CT and
MRI
were always within normal limits, while EEG frequently showed focal slowing. Conventional cranial angiography was performed on 12 patients. In only one were there abnormalities suggestive of localized vascular inflammation, coincident with the focal neurological symptoms. Two patients developed PMP symptoms immediately after angiography. SPECT, performed on only three patients in the symptomatic period, revealed focal areas of decreased uptake consistent with the clinical symptoms. PMP aetiology remains a mystery; chronic arachnoiditis, viral meningoencephalitis or migraine are not plausible aetiological explanations. Because a number of patients had had a prodromic viral-like illness, we hypothesize here that such a viral infection could activate the immune system, thereby producing antibodies that would induce an aseptic inflammation of the leptomeningeal vasculature, possibly accounting for this clinical picture.
...
PMID:Pseudomigraine with temporary neurological symptoms and lymphocytic pleocytosis. A report of 50 cases. 1672 88
A 49-year-old male with tuberculous meningitis was reported. When admitted to our hospital with mild right hemiparesis, he was alert but he developed disorientation 7 days later. A diagnosis of tuberculous meningitis was reached because of elevated levels of adenosine-
deaminase
at 19.6U/liter in the cerebrospinal fluid.
MRI
showed a marked enhancement in the basal cisterns and an enhanced intraparenchymal lesion in the brainstem. Chronological changes of
MRI
findings did not closely correlate with the clinical course. Slight meningeal enhancement on
MRI
seems to remain for a long time without active tuberculous meningitis, and absence of the meningeal enhancement on
MRI
is not necessarily appropriate as a marker of cure of tuberculous meningitis.
...
PMID:[Treatment of tuberculous meningitis: marker of cure]. 955 55
Acute intermittent porphyria (AIP) is an autosomal-dominant disease caused by a deficiency of porphobilinogen (PBG)
deaminase
. Patients with AIP present with neurological syndromes such as autonomic neuropathy, peripheral axonal neuropathy or central nervous system dysfunction. We report serial
MRI
of a patient with AIP who had cortical and subcortical cerebral changes. A 29-year-old woman with a 6-month history of AIP had an attack with severe hyponatraemia and generalised convulsions, treated with haem arginate and supportive therapy.
MRI
showed central pontine and extrapontine myelinolysis and cortical laminar necrosis. These are not common in AIP, but are likely to have been caused by rapid correction of hyponatraemia and by vasospasm, which could be induced by AIP.
...
PMID:Acute intermittent porphyria with central pontine myelinolysis and cortical laminar necrosis. 1060 58