Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0003635 (apraxia)
2,817 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The nervous system involvement of 8 patients with end-stage liver disease was evaluated by means of clinical neurological, neuropsychological, neurophysiological and neuroradiological investigation before and 6-12 months after a successful liver transplantation. Preoperatively, all subjects (7 women, 1 man; mean age 40 years, range 30-54 years) exhibited decreased muscle strength and 2 patients manifested clinical signs of polyneuropathy. In neuropsychological tests, slight visuoconstructive apraxia, and disturbances of verbal memory and cognitive function were observed. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed cerebral lesions in two patients. After transplantation, muscle strength reverted to normal in all patients, polyneuropathy improved and in all but 2 patients recovery of neuropsychological functioning was observed. Clinical signs of encephalopathy had disappeared. All patients were emotionally better adjusted after transplantation. Four subjects showed new, albeit mild changes in neurophysiological and neuropsychological tests postoperatively. We conclude that the majority of neurological impairment disappeared after liver transplantation. We want to stress that evaluation of neurological sequelae of liver transplantation needs to be based on assessments both before and after liver transplantation.
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PMID:Encephalopathy and neuropathy in end-stage liver disease before and after liver transplantation. 133 12

A 57-year-old man on long-term renal dialysis presented with speech dyspraxia, a symptom characteristic of early aluminium encephalopathy. Once fully developed, this condition has a poor prognosis despite deferoxamine (DFO) treatment.
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PMID:[Speech apraxia in dialysis-associated aluminum encephalopathy]. 174 54

A 32 year-old diabetic woman presented with an acute coma followed by epileptic seizures, aphasia and constructive apraxia. No ischemic lesion was demonstrated by CT scan and carotid angiograms. The other investigations showed sensorineural hearing loss, retinal degeneration, calcifications of the basal ganglia and lactic acidosis. The follow-up was marked by pseudo-dementia with personality disorders, memory deficits, behavioural changes, migrainous and epileptic features. Although there was no sign of muscular deficiency, a muscular biopsy showed characteristic ragged-red fibers and mitochondrial abnormalities at electron microscopy. The muscular biopsy enables us to classify this case as a mitochondrial encephalopathy similar to the MELAS syndrome. The stroke-like episodes are probably caused by a specific angiopathy involving the mitochondria of brain vessels.
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PMID:[Mitochondrial encephalopathy affecting only the central nervous system]. 196 61

Rett syndrome consists of a progressive encephalopathy and psychomotor deterioration in young females who have appeared clinically normal until between six and eighteen months of age. The syndrome has incidence similar to that of phenylketonuria and autism in females. It has been widely recognised only since 1983. After six months of age head growth decelerates associated eventually with severe dementia, and autism, apraxia, stereotypic "hand washing" movements and loss of previously acquired skills occurs. Supportive symptoms may include breathing dysfunction, seizures, EEG abnormalities, and growth retardation. Occurrence indicates sporadic new mutations as a cause. The case histories of two patients diagnosed in New Zealand are described.
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PMID:Rett syndrome: case reports and review. 218 54

Two young males in their thirties are reported with a clinical history and examination indistinguishable from typical females with the Rett syndrome. Both had normal early development. The first patient had a regression by the end of the second year. He was late in walking, had prominent hand-wringing from the age of 4 years, and non-progressive dystonia from the age of 14 years. He is still ambulatory. Seizures which started at the age of 18 months have been easily controlled. The second patient has had a severe seizure disorder since the age of 7 months. In his early teens, he lost ambulation and his height and weight fell below the 2nd percentile. He has severe foot dystonia without spasticity. Both patients have a normal head size and no evidence of atrophy on a CT scan of the brain. Both had kyphoscoliosis in their teens. It is difficult to evaluate the incidence of such cases. Little attention being paid to the normal early development, they hide behind vague diagnoses such as cerebral palsy, static encephalopathy, and behavior disorder. Dystonia is often confused with spasticity, the lack of paralysis is not appreciated, apraxia and hand wringing are assumed to be self-stimulatory behaviors.
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PMID:The Rett syndrome in males. 234 22

The hemiplegic patients, hospitalized for focal vascular encephalopathy, have been examined and subjected to a neurorehabilitation, in order that we could estimate the possible correlations between their response to the therapy, the presence of the deficits of superior cortical functions and the anatomic lesions which gave rise to the motor deficit. The presence of aphasia, apraxia and disorder of body image give an unfavorable influence on the response to the rehabilitative therapy, similarly as what we have observed in the patients who presented symptoms of a spread neuropsychologic compromission, correlable at CT scan with a positive result of ischemic-atrophia. The younger patients, probably better adduced reasons for the treatment and with less incidence of plurifocal lesions, show a better clinical progress.
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PMID:[Neurorehabilitation of the hemiplegic. Short-term clinical study]. 242 68

Key manifestations helpful in diagnosing Rett syndrome include progressive loss of previously acquired psychomotor skills, apraxia with loss of use of hands and legs, and "handwashing" automatisms. Four types of clinical presentation can be described: a neurodegenerative disorder, an autistic syndrome, a Lennox-Gastaut syndrome, and a chronic encephalopathy. Carbamazepine currently appears to be the anticonvulsant of choice. The mild lactic and pyruvic acidosis along with the ultrastructural abnormalities of mitochondria in brain and liver biopsies point to a generalized disorder of energy metabolism.
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PMID:Clinical recognition of Rett syndrome. 308 71

Pure sensory stroke (PSS) is typically caused by a lacunar infarct located in the ventral-posterior (VP) thalamic nucleus contralateral to the paresthetic symptoms. The lesion is usually so small that it cannot be seen on computerized tomography (CT), as illustrated by our case. In our moderately hypertensive, 72-year-old patient with PSS, CT scanning and conventional nuclear magnetic resonance imaging (NMRI) scanning using a 7-mm-thick slice on a 1.5 Tesla instrument all failed to visualize the thalamic infarct. Using the high-resolution mode with 2-mm slice thickness it was, however, clearly seen. In addition, NMRI unexpectedly showed diffuse periventricular demyelinization as well as three other lacunar infarcts, i.e., findings characteristic of subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy (SAE). This prompted psychometric testing, which revealed signs of mild (subclinical) dementia, in particular involving visiospatial apraxia; this pointed to decreased function of the right parietal cortex, which was structurally intact on CT and NMRI. Single photon emission computerized tomography by Xenon-133 injection and by hexamethyl-propyleneamine-oxim labeled with Technetium-99m showed asymmetric distribution of cerebral blood flow (CBF), with an 18% lower value in the right parietal cortex compared to the left side; this indicated asymmetric disconnection of the cortex by the SAE. Thus, the tomograms of the functional parameter, CBF, correlated better with the deficits revealed by neuropsychological testing than by CT or NMRI.
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PMID:High-resolution nuclear magnetic resonance imaging and single photon emission computerized tomography--cerebral blood flow in a case of pure sensory stroke and mild dementia owing to subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy (Binswanger's disease). 350 32

We report a case of a rapidly progressive central nervous system disorder, in which the outstanding clinical features were ocular motor apraxia and a pallidal posture. The etiology remains unknown except for the possibility of post-influenza immunization encephalopathy.
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PMID:A case of a rapidly progressive central nervous system disorder manifesting as a pallidal posture and ocular motor apraxia. 406 85

In this paper we report the cases of two girls affected by a progressive encephalopathy. Both stories are similar. After a normal development in the first year of life, neurological regression occurred since the beginning of the second year. This progressive syndrome led within a few months to a loss of any verbal acquisition, loss of purposeful use of the hands, dementia, autism. Other neurological alterations occurred in the following years: piramidal signs at lower limbs, generalized and partial seizures, ataxia, gait apraxia. All laboratory findings were normal in both girls. The EEG was abnormal in both patients and the patterns were quite the same in following records of both girls. The disease occurred in our patients is quite certainly the same described by Rett for the first time in 1966.
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PMID:[Rett syndrome. Review of the literature and presentation of 2 clinical cases]. 408 13


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