Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: EC:4.1.2.13 (aldolase)
3,461 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A new type of hereditary muscle disease, characterized by weakness and painful spasms during effort, without electrical activity in the shortened muscles, is described. These phenomena are limited principally to the upper limbs. In addition we found electromyographical signs of a generalized myotonic syndrome. The histological and histochemical investigations reveal only minimal non-specific signs of myopathy. The activities of CPK and aldolase in the blood serum are increased at times. A normal elevation of venous lactate was observed during ischemic work. The biochemical studies of muscular tissue exhibit normal activities of the analyzed enzymes, especially as regards phosphorylase. An increased concentration of calcium ions in blood serum may be related to the contraction during strenuous work; it is known that calcium ions are an important factor in the contraction-relaxation cycle of striated muscle. The age of manifestation varied from 4 to 33 years in 4 cases of the relatives observed. The disease shows no signs of aggravation as to the severity and extent of the disorders. The nature of the underlying metabolic defect is still unknown.
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PMID:[Myopathia myotonica. A new type of hereditary muscle disease (author's transl)]. 5 Oct 68

In the differential diagnosis of intermittent claudication some rare myopathies have to be considered. The most frequent is phosphorylase deficiency (McArdle's disease). Exercise-induced muscular pain, weakness, contractures and occasionally myoglobinuria are the most prominent clinical signs. Serum creatine phosphokinase, aldolase and lactic dehydrogenase may be elevated after exertion. In the ischemic forearm test there is no rise of serum lactic acid. The enzyme deficiency can be demonstrated by histochemical and biochemical examination of a muscle specimen. Further, but more infrequent, enzymatic disturbances of glycolysis are phosphofructokinase deficiency and phosphohexoisomerase inhibitor, which also yield an abnormal ischemic forearm test and must be demonstrated histochemically and biochemically. Apart from muscular signs, myopathy with lactic acidosis is associated with palpitation, dyspnea and exhaustion, and a disproportionate rise in serum lactic acid level after exertion. Histochemically and electronmicroscopically demonstrable fat accumulation in the muscle can be a sign of a disturbance in lipid metabolism. This type of exercise-induced myopathy has been reported only in a few cases with carnitine-pylmityltransferase deficiency, which has to be demonstrated biochemically. Muscular contractures also exercise-induced but painless and reversible within seconds may be due to deficient uptake of sarcoplasmic calcium in the tubular system. Dyskalemic paralysis causes painless paresis within minutes of hours after exertion, which disappears within hours to a few days. Myopathy with tubular aggregates can be differentiated from other exercise-induced myopathies by morphology. Myotonia combined with painful contractures characterizes myopathia myotonica.
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PMID:[Exercise-induced muscular weakness, myalgia and contractures. I. A clinical review]. 13 80

A Caucasian male developed florid dermatomyositis documented by serum enzyme elevation, electromyography, and histology of skin and muscle. Serum enzymes, including creatine phosphokinase (CPK), aldolase, glutamic oxaloacetic transaminase (SGOT), and lactic dehydrogenase (LDH), decreased initially during high dose systemic corticosteroid therapy, although profound muscle weakness persisted. Subsequent elevation of serum LDH and SGOT levels during treatment provided a clue to underlying neoplasia. Primary hepatoma with widespread metastases was found at necropsy.
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PMID:Aberrant serum enzyme patterns in dermatomyositis associated with hepatoma. 18 84

Although a neuromuscular syndrome has been induced experimentally by vitamin E deficiency, a human syndrome has not yet been documented. This report describes a 7-year-old boy with severe malabsorption since birth who presented with progressive external ophthalmoplegia, proximal muscle weakness, peripheral neuropathy, hyporeflexia, and bilateral Babinski signs. Abnormalities on neurologic examination included elevated creatine phosphokinase and aldolase, slowed distal sensory latencies, type II muscle fiber atrophy, and a plasma vitamin E level of 8 microgram per deciliter (normal, 550-1500 microgram per deciliter). Treatment with oral water-solubilized vitamin E (400 IU daily; greater than 50 times the normal daily intake) was begun, with repeat laboratory studies at 3-month intervals. Over a 16-month period, plasma vitamin E content gradually increased to 350 microgram per deciliter, associated with declining sarcoplasmic enzyme activities and clinical improvement.
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PMID:Reversibility of human myopathy caused by vitamin E deficiency. 57 10

A case of Rocky Mountain spotted fever in a 10-year-old boy accompanied by an unusually high degree of myalgia and muscle weakness was presented. On admission to the hospital, his creatine phosphokinase, SGOT, SGPT, and aldolase values were all abnormally high. Rash did not appear until the fourth hospital day. On the same day results of a proteus OX-19 titer of blood were reported as positive (titer 1:320) and intravenous therapy with chloramphenicol was started. The child's condition gradually improved and five months later he had no detectable muscle weakness.
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PMID:Skeletal muscle involvement in Rocky Mountain spotted fever. 72 40

A 16-year-old boy with a two-year history of recurrent attacks of myalgia, muscle cramps without weakness, and myoglobinuria was shown to have a deficiency in muscle carnitine palmityltransferase. Serum concentrations of creatinine phosphokinase, serum glutamic oxalacetic transaminase, and aldolase were elevated. An electromyogram was consistent with a nonspecific myopathy as were microscopic and ultrastructural examinations of biopsied muscle. Venous lactic acid response to ischemic exercise was compatible with paroxysmal idiopathic myoglobinuria. Activities of muscle phosphorylase A and B, phosphofructokinase, muscle palmityl CoA synthetase, carnitine, and serum carnitine were normal as was the glycogen content. Activity of muscle carnitine palmityltransferase (2.7 microM/minute/mg protein), as measured by a spectrophotometric method and by radioactive assay, was significantly reduced when compared to normal control subjects (14.5 microM/minute/mg protein) and ischemic control subjects (13.8 microM/minute/mg protein). Muscle carnitine acetyltransferase (13.4 microM/minute/mg protein) was approximately 50% of normal control values (25.5 microM/minute/mg protein). This is the third reported case of myoglobinuria in a patient associated with a deficiency of muscle carnitine palmityltransferase activity.
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PMID:Recurrent myoglobinuria and muscle carnitine palmityltransferase deficiency. 87 82

In eight women with polymyositis (three patients), systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) (three patients), rheumatoid arthritis (one patient) and shoulder-hand syndrome (one patient), weakness developed during high dose prednisone therapy. These women were studied using serial functional and manual muscle tests, determination of serum glutamic oxaloacetic transminase (SGOT), creatine phosphokinase (CPK) and serum aldolase levels, and urinary excretion of creatine. Insidious onset of weakness was characteristic. Myalgias were seen in five patients and unusual sudden weakness in two. Weakness was always most severe in the pelvic girdle muscles; there was a lesser involvement of shoulder girdle and distal muscles. Serum muscle enzyme levels were normal in all cases, but urinary creatine excretion was invariably increased and proved to be the most sensitive laboratory indicator for clinical diagnosis and for monitoring patient improvement. Serial urinary creatine excretion and serum enzyme studies were of value in differenting steroid myopathy from a flare of myositis in patients with connective tissue disease. Diagnosis and effective management were achieved by the use of readily available laboratory and clinical procedures without resorting to muscle biopsy.
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PMID:Steroid myopathy in connective tissue disease. 97 43

The post-polio syndrome refers to new neuromuscular symptoms developed by some patients many years after recovery from acute poliomyelitis. Several groups were separated: musculo-skeletal symptoms (different from a new spinal cord disease), infraclinical signs (EMG), post-polio muscular atrophy (new lower motor neuron objective signs) with several subgroups: cramps and fasciculations, benign focal weakness and atrophy (in previously affected muscles or in unaffected muscles), progressive spinal muscular atrophy. The following examination were performed in some cases, but not all, in this retrospective study: muscle CT scan, conventional electromyography (EMG), quantifying-EMG, macro-EMG and single-fiber EMG. The serum titers of neutralising antibodies to polio virus type 1, type 2 and type 3 were negative. No oligoclonal bands were found in the CSF from 6 patients screened by electrophoresis immunoelectrophoresis. Serum creatine kinase or aldolase was high in 6 patients. The same unusual features in this syndrome were observed on muscle biopsies: muscular hypertrophy and interstitial eosinophils; two patients had rimmed vacuoles in the muscle fibers.
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PMID:[Post-poliomyelitis syndrome: 29 cases]. 144 50

A case of dermatomyositis (DM) associated with thymic cyst with lymphoid follicle formations has been reported. A 57-year-old man developed polyarthralgia, muscle weakness, heliotrope rash and Gottron's sign. Laboratory findings showed elevated values of creatine-phosphokinase, aldolase and transaminase. He was diagnosed as DM and was treated with prednisolone 50 mg/day. Muscle weakness was improved immediately, although rash persisted unchangeably. He was examined for coexistence of malignant tumor which had been reported frequently as associated with DM. Enlargement of thymus was found by computer tomography and then thymectomy was performed. In his thymus, lymphoid follicle formations, which are as often encountered in other autoimmune diseases, were found. So far, the beneficial effect of thymectomy on the improvement of immunological abnormalities not only in patients with myasthenia gravis but also in patients with other autoimmune diseases has been recognized. In this case, intractable rash in DM improved after thymectomy. Further study needs to clarify the relationships between DM and thymic abnormalities.
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PMID:[A case of dermatomyositis associated with thymic abnormalities]. 159 6

We reported a 40-year-old male with adult-onset nemaline myopathy (adult-onset rod disease) showing muscular hypertrophy of distal limbs. At the age of 25, he noticed thinness of his thighs. Difficulty in climbing stairs slowly progressed from the age of 35. On admission neurological examination revealed muscular weakness and atrophy of proximal limbs and hypertrophy of distal flexors. Normal laboratory tests included serum creatine kinase, myoglobin, aldolase and pyruvate. Electromyography revealed severe neurogenic changes in the right biceps brachial muscle and the right quadriceps muscle, and moderate changes in the right gastrocnemius. Biopsy specimen of the deltoid muscle demonstrated type 1 fiber predominance and type 1 fiber atrophy, and there was small group atrophy and type grouping. Abundant nemaline rods were found mainly in type 1 fibers (81.5%). In order to evaluate hypertrophy of calf muscles, T1-weighted MRI of lower extremity was performed. While transaxial images through mid thigh showed moderate fatty replacement, increased volume and little fatty replacement were found in the mid calf. Therefore, hypertrophy of the calf muscle seemed to be compensative hypertrophy. But in this case neurogenic factors were indicated electromyographically and histologically. These findings may advocate the notion that neurogenic factors involved not only congenital but adult-onset rod disease.
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PMID:[A case of adult-onset nemaline myopathy (adult-onset rod disease) with distal muscular hypertrophy]. 165 78


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