Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
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Drug
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0003635 (
apraxia
)
2,817
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
This work is to study the ultrastructure of the neuronal lipofuscin that occurred in the brain and the spinal cord of an autopsy case of familial Alzheimer's disease and to compare with those in several other diseases. The patient was a 46-year-old male, whose father and elder brother were diagnosed as Alzheimer's disease and died at the age of 42, respectively. He became afflicted with forgetfulness and disorientation at the age of 36. He developed a
grand mal seizure
at the age of 39 and thereafter, his clinical course was characterized by pyramidal signs, dysarthria and the symptoms of Gerstmann's syndrome, visuo-spatial agnosia,
apraxia
for dressing and constructive
apraxia
. He became bedridden at 45 years old and died of general prostration. The brain weighed 1,250 g, and the cerebral cortex showed mild atrophy. The neuronal loss, senile plaques and Alzheimer's neurofibrillary tangles were found throughout the cerebral cortex. The senile plaques were also found in the basal ganglia, the cerebellar medulla and cortex. There was severe amyloid angiopathy in the occipital and cerebellar cortices. The specimens for electron microscopy were taken from the cerebral cortex, the basal ganglia, the thalamus, the midbrain, the medulla oblongata, the cerebellum and the spinal cord. The ultrastructural study revealed three different types of the neuronal lipofuscin, though different stainability between these lipofuscin granules could not be manifested by several histochemical methods. Their morphological differences seemed to be based on the sites of the central nervous system.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Ultrastructural study of the neuronal lipofuscin--an autopsy case of familial Alzheimer's disease]. 648 35
A 44-year-old man with a documented 12-year history of progressive sensorineural hearing loss developed a generalized
tonic-clonic seizure
followed by a visual field deficit and
apraxia
. Six months later he developed a peripheral neuropathy and muscle fatigue followed by a slowly progressive aphasia and cortical blindness as well as increased seizure activity. A computed tomography scan showed bilateral basal ganglion calcification. The serum lactate level was elevated at 3.4 mEq/dL. A muscle biopsy enabled the diagnosis of mitochondrial myopathy. This disorder is presented as an unusual cause of progressive sensorineural hearing loss in adults.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy: a rare genetic cause of sensorineural hearing loss. 757 56
There are only a few reports of patients developing cerebral venous sinus thrombosis (CVST) after androgen therapy. We present a young man who developed cortical venous thrombosis after using androgens to increase muscle mass. He was hospitalised for parasthesia and
dyspraxia
in the left hand followed by a generalised
tonic-clonic seizure
. At admission, he was drowsy, not fully orientated, had sensory inattention, pronation drift and a positive extensor response, all on the left side. The patient had been using anabolic steroids (dainabol 20 mg/day) for the last month for bodybuilding. CT angiography showed a right cortical venous thrombosis. Anticoagulation therapy was started with intravenous heparin for 11 days and oral anticoagulation (warfarin) thereafter. A control CT angiography 4 months later showed resolution of the thrombosis. He recovered fully.
...
PMID:Cortical venous thrombosis following exogenous androgen use for bodybuilding. 2338 26
A 78-year-old man was admitted in the intensive care unit for epilepsy seizure (
tonic-clonic seizure
). Since three months, his wife reports motor dysfunction (weakness) and since two weeks, rapidly progressive changes in cognition (
apraxia
, akinetic mutism). The diagnosis of probable sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob on the basis of clinical, EEG and MRI lesions was made. Refining diagnostic criteria is probably needed, including the usefulness of repeated MRI with FLAIR and diffusion-weighted imaging.
...
PMID:[Differential diagnosis of status epilepticus in intensive care: about one case of sporadic Creutzfeldt-Jakob]. 2470 99
A 78-year-old Caucasian man was admitted in the Department of Neurology for visual disturbances, started two days before. The next day the patient experienced headache, fever and gait disturbances. He had hypertension, diabetes mellitus, an ischemic stroke 13 years ago, longstanding seronegative rheumatoid arthritis (17 years), polynodular goiter, right ischio-pubian fracture and right femoral vein thrombosis a year ago due to a car accident, since he is treated with oral anticoagulants associated to antiaggregant, hypotensors, statin and oral antidiabetics. The neurologic examination had evidenced nuchal rigidity, left homonymous hemianopsia, left central facial palsy, ataxia of the inferior limbs with wide-based gait, achilean reflexes abolished bilaterally, bilaterally abolished plantar reflexes, ideomotor
apraxia
, dysarthria, hypoprosexia, and preserved consciousness patient. A non-contrast cerebral CT scan had shown right temporal and parieto-occipital intraparenchymatous hemorrhages, a right frontal sequelar lesion, multiple old lacunar infarets, cortical atrophy. Laboratory findings included an inflammatory syndrome, absence of rheumatoid arthritis positive serology, normal coagulogram, an elevated proteinuria. The cerebral IRM performed on the seventh day of hospitalisation was suggestive for subacute right parietal hemorrhage, old cerebral infarction in the right anterior cerebral artery area, old lacunar infarcts and cerebral atrophy. The anticoagulant and antiaggregant treatment was stopped after a generalized
tonic-clonic seizure
occurred. Antiedematous, hypotensor, anticonvulsivant, beta-blocker, and symptomatic treatment was started, while the antidiabetic treatment was continued. All symptoms remitted. Arguments for amyloid angiopathy in our patient are previous non-cardioembolic ischemic stroke and a chronic inflammatory disease- rheumatoid arthritis in his personal medical history.
...
PMID:Multiple Intracerebral Hemorrhages in an Old Patient with Rheumatoid Arthritis. 2693 15