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Query: UMLS:C0002736 (
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
)
19,048
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A consensus meeting was held to determine the best use and interpretation of electrophysiological data in the diagnosis of
ALS
. The utility of needle EMG and nerve conduction studies was affirmed. It is recommended that electrophysiological evidence for chronic neurogenic change should be taken as equivalent to clinical information in the recognition of involvement of individual muscles in a limb. In addition, in the context of a suspected clinical diagnosis of
ALS
,
fasciculation
potentials should be taken as equivalent to fibrillation potentials and positive sharp waves in recognising denervation. The importance of searching for instability in
fasciculation
potentials and in motor unit potentials in
ALS
is stressed. These changes in the interpretation of electrophysiological data render obsolete the category Probable Laboratory-Supported
ALS
in the modified El Escorial diagnostic criteria for
ALS
. Methods for detection of upper motor neuron abnormality appear sensitive but require further study, particularly regarding their value when clinical signs of upper motor neuron lesion are uncertain.
...
PMID:Electrodiagnostic criteria for diagnosis of ALS. 1845 May 7
We describe a 52-year-old man with body weight loss and bulbar palsy, who exhibited muscle atrophy and weakness with
fasciculation
especially in the respiratory muscles 4 years prior to death, necessitating respiratory support for 4 years, but who was able to walk until the end-stage. He had no significant family history. Neuropathological examination revealed severe loss of motor neurons in the spinal cord and brainstem, and ubiquitin-positive skein-like inclusions and Bunina bodies in the remaining neurons. In addition, prominent degeneration of the anterolateral funiculus and severe loss of neurons in the intermediate zone of the spinal cord were evident, without marked alteration of the corticospinal tracts. Degeneration of the subthalamic nucleus, increased iron deposition in the substantia nigra, and axonal swelling, residual nodules and acidophilic granules in the spinal ganglia were found. The patient's condition was considered to have been a forme fruste or incipient form of widespread-type
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(
ALS
) or motor neuron disease (MND) with pallido-nigro-luysian atrophy (PNLA). The neuropathological features of the present case appear to be important for understanding the nature of widespread-type
ALS
and MND with PNLA.
...
PMID:Forme fruste or incipient form of widespread-type amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, or motor neuron disease with pallido-nigro-luysian atrophy? An autopsy case report. 1817 5
Fasciculations
are a nearly universal feature in people with
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(
ALS
). The prognostic value of fasciculations remains uncertain. Twenty-four patients with
ALS
were evaluated for the effects of atrophy, limb weakness, disease duration, and physical activity on
fasciculation
frequency (as measured by surface electromyography and clinical counting). Variables were compared by multiple linear regression. As strength of the limb deteriorated, the number of fasciculations in the same limb increased, as long as physical activity was maintained or increased.
Fasciculation
frequency was not associated with the duration of
ALS
(r = 0.22; p = 0.30) and was independent of the degree of limb weakness (p>0.05) and limb atrophy (p>0.05). No prediction of disease duration could be made based on
fasciculation
frequency alone.
Fasciculations
therefore appear to have diagnostic, but not prognostic, utility in the care of people with
ALS
.
...
PMID:Strength, physical activity, and fasciculations in patients with ALS. 1842 4
A variety of immunological abnormalities have been reported in some patients with
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(
ALS
). It has been postulated that a disturbance of immunoregulation may play a role in the degeneration of motor neurons in
ALS
. We describe a 62-year-old man with a 9-month history of slowly progressive muscular weakness and atrophy of the upper and lower extremities and dysarthria. Neurological examinations revealed weakness and atrophy with
fasciculation
in the skeletal muscles including the face and tongue. In the limbs, distal muscles were affected predominantly. Electromyography showed chronic neurogenic changes with denervation potentials. Serum antibody testing demonstrated an increased titer of anti-N-acetylgalactosaminyl GD1a (GalNAc-GD1a) antibodies (IgGx160; normal, less than x40). The patient was treated with intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIg) therapy which was repeated two times at an interval of 2 months. However, the response to IVIg was negligible. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first report on
ALS
, in which the patient had anti-GalNAc-GD1a IgG antibody.
...
PMID:Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis associated with IgG anti-GalNAc-GD1a antibodies. 1845 Mar 70
In 38
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(
ALS
) patients and 28 controls, we performed motor unit potential (MUP) analysis in the C-6 and T-5 paraspinal and biceps muscles. In
ALS
cases, we found similar abnormalities in MUPs in paraspinal and limb muscles.
Fasciculation
potentials (FPs) were more frequent in biceps than in paraspinal muscles, but fibrillation potentials and positive sharp waves (fibs-sw) were equally frequent in all three muscles. These results confirm the value of paraspinal MUP analysis in the diagnosis of
ALS
.
...
PMID:Motor unit changes in thoracic paraspinal muscles in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. 1908 64
Needle electromyography (EMG) of the tongue is traditionally used as a key to the diagnosis of
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(
ALS
), although relaxation of the tongue is often difficult to achieve. Recently, frequent abnormalities in the EMGs of the sternocleidomastoid (SCM) and upper trapezius muscles in
ALS
have been reported. To elucidate the diagnostic utility of these muscles we performed a multicenter prospective study to examine EMGs of the tongue (genioglossus), SCM, and trapezius in 104
ALS
or suspected
ALS
patients. We also examined EMGs of the SCM and trapezius in 32 cervical spondylosis (CS) patients. We mainly evaluated fibrillation potentials/positive sharp waves (Fib/PSWs) and
fasciculation
potentials. Complete relaxation was achieved in 85% of
ALS
patients in the trapezius, but in only 6% of patients in the tongue. Fib/PSWs were observed in 8%, 13%, and 45% of
ALS
patients in the tongue, SCM, and trapezius, respectively, whereas
fasciculation
potentials were observed in 1%, 7%, and 39%, respectively. Abnormal spontaneous activity of any type was found in 9%, 17%, and 63% of patients, respectively. The high frequency of abnormal spontaneous activity in the trapezius was similar among the different diagnostic categories, and even 72% of clinically suspected
ALS
(progressive muscular atrophy) patients showed them in their trapezius. We did not observe Fib/PSWs or
fasciculation
potentials in any of our CS patients, thus these findings have excellent specificity. Tongue EMG added little utility over the clinical sign of tongue atrophy. Abnormal spontaneous activity in the trapezius would be more useful for the early diagnosis of
ALS
.
...
PMID:Utility of trapezius EMG for diagnosis of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. 1908 78
This report describes the clinicopathological findings of a case of sporadic
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
(
ALS
) resembling primary lateral sclerosis (PLS). A Japanese man developed muscle weakness in the distal part of the right upper extremity at age 59. At age 60 he presented with bradycinesia and rigidity. A neurological examination revealed
fasciculation
and increased deep tendon reflexes in the extremities. He developed decubitus and vesicorectal disturbance 2 months before his death at age 61. The neuropathological examination revealed not only prom-inent degeneration of the pyramidal tracts, evident in the internal capsule, but also loss of Betz's cells in the motor cortex. There was relative preservation of the neurons in the hypoglossal nuclei and anterior horns of the cervical and lumbar cord. In the anterior horn of the first sacral cord, there were small aggregates of lipofuscin-laden macrophages in locations from which large cells had presumably been lost. Bunina bodies and ubiquitin-immunoreactive neuronal inclusions were present in the anterior horn cells of the spinal cord. On the basis of these clinicopathological findings, we concluded that this case was one of sporadic
ALS
with predominant involvement of the upper motor neuron system and exhibiting features of PLS.
...
PMID:Sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis resembling primary lateral sclerosis: report of an autopsy case and a review of the literature. 1951 50
Involuntary electromyographic (EMG) activity has only been analyzed in the paralyzed thenar muscles of spinal cord injured (SCI) subjects for several minutes. It is unknown if this motor unit activity is ongoing. Longer duration EMG recordings can investigate the biological significance of this activity. Since no software is currently capable of classifying 24h of EMG data at a single motor unit level, the goal of this research was to devise an algorithm that would automatically classify motor unit potentials by tracking the firing behavior of motor units over 24h. Two channels of thenar muscle surface EMG were recorded over 24h from seven SCI subjects with a chronic cervical level injury using a custom data logging device with custom software. The automatic motor unit classification algorithm developed here employed multiple passes through these 24-h EMG recordings to segment, cluster, form global templates and classify motor unit potentials, including superimposed potentials. The classification algorithm was able to track an average of 19 global classes in seven 24-h recordings with a mean (+/-SE) accuracy of 89.9% (+/-0.98%) and classify potentials from these individual motor units with a mean accuracy of 90.3% (+/-0.97%). The algorithm could analyze 24h of data in 2-3 weeks with minimal input from a person, while a human operator was estimated to take more than 2 years. This automatic method could be applied clinically to investigate the
fasciculation
potentials often found in motoneuron disorders such as
amyotrophic lateral sclerosis
.
...
PMID:Automatic classification of motor unit potentials in surface EMG recorded from thenar muscles paralyzed by spinal cord injury. 1976 94
We reported the two cases with bulbar-onset
ALS
showing isolated agraphia without overt dementia and aphasia. Patient 1 was a 69-year-old man and patient 2 was an 81-year-old woman, and both were right-handed. Each patient developed dysarthria as an initial symptom followed by dysphagia, and neurological examinations showed atrophy and
fasciculation
of the tongue with upper and lower motor-neuron involvement of the extremities. These characteristic features with electromyographic evidence including widespread acute and chronic denervation led to a diagnosis of bulbar-onset
ALS
. Around 1 year after the onset of
ALS
, dysarthria was mild enough to allow oral communication enabling the determination that aphasia was absent with well preserved confrontation naming, repetition, reading and comprehension. The patients were polite without abnormal behavior or character change, and their general intelligence was also well preserved with excellent scores on the Mini Mental State Examination (30 and 27 points for patients 1 and 2, respectively) and Frontal Assessment Battery (16 points for each patient). However, spontaneous writing and dictation revealed abundant writing errors characterized by omission of kana letters and paragraphia of kana and kanji letters in both patients. Some syntactic errors were also observed in writing but in spoken language. A letter-number effect on writing errors was observed in patient 1. Copying of letters or words was intact and structure and orientation of written letters was well preserved, indicating the absence of constructional, apraxic or spatial feature of agraphia. Single photon emission computed tomography demonstrated reduced uptake in the bilateral frontotemporal lobes, predominantly in the left hemisphere, with less evident alternation in magnetic resonance imaging. Our results suggest that patients with bulbar-onset
ALS
may develop isolated agraphia as a single-domain cognitive impairment, preceding the clinical manifestation of aphasia or dementia. We speculate that the main responsible region might be the posterior part of the middle and inferior frontal gyri including Exner's writing center and Broca's area beyond the primary motor cortex.
...
PMID:[Bulbar-onset amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) with isolated agraphia]. 2019 88
An 80-year-old man (patient 1) was admitted to our hospital with numbness of the right leg and weakness of the lower extremities, predominantly in the right leg, for 1 year previously. Neurological examination revealed moderate weakness without atrophy, and
fasciculation
in the bilateral lower extremities. No hyperreflexia was noted, and the plantar response was flexor. Neither bulbar palsy nor sensory disturbance was observed. Electromyography (EMG) showed a chronic neurogenic pattern, including giant motor unit potentials and reduced interference in all four limb muscles. MRI images of the cervical and lumbar spines showed severe age-related spondylosis. The clinical and laboratory findings led to a diagnosis of spinal progressive muscular atrophy. Motor paralysis progressed slowly for the following four years, culminating in respiratory failure. A 79-year-man, the younger brother of patient 1 (patient 2), suffered from gait disturbance for 3 years before the admission to our hospital. During the following 3 years, bilateral leg weakness developed, causing difficulty walking. Neurological examination revealed a diffuse mild weakness with atrophy and
fasciculation
in the bilateral lower extremities; the right deltoid muscle was also mildly weak. Mild hyperreflexia was also noted on the left side, and the plantar response was extensor on the left. EMG showed acute and chronic neurogenic patterns in the four limb muscles. Because the missense mutation c.377 T > C; p.L126S was found on exon 5 of the superoxide dismutase (SOD) 1 gene in this patient, a diagnosis of familial
ALS
was made. Eight patients reported as familial
ALS
with the SOD1L126S mutation, including the present cases, all developed an onset of weakness in the lower extremities, but showed few upper motor neuron signs. It is important to consider the possibility of this type of familial
ALS
in a case of spinal progressive muscular atrophy with late-onset and mild progression, if family history is positive.
...
PMID:[Two cases of familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis with a SOD1L126S mutation showing high age at onset and slow progression]. 2023 85
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