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Drug
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An account is given of a form of hereditary, cerebellar ataxia and photomyoclonus. Eight cases from 5 generations were affected. The disease seemed to be transmitted as an autosomal dominant trait. The age at onset usually varied between 35 to 40 years. The symptoms and signs consisted of a cerebellar ataxia, dysarthria and intention tremor. There was no nystagmus. All patients exhibited photomyoclonus and were extremely sensitive to photic stimuli. Other signs were dementia, kyphosis, pes cavus and
lipoma
localized in the nape of the neck, shoulders and back. Two patients had a partial syndrome with photonyoclonus and skeletal deformities. None of the patients suffered from epilepsy, In one case, histopathological examination revealed atrophy within the cerebellar cortex, dentate nucleus and the posterior columns of the spinal cord. It is concluded that this syndrome belongs to a groups of hereditary ataxias and myoclonus, and differs from myoclonic cerebellar dyssynergia (Ramsay Hunt) and alos from a variety of familial myoclonus and
ataxia
(Gilbert et al. 1963);
...
PMID:Hereditary ataxia, photomyoclonus, skeletal deformities and lipoma. 113 Jan 71
The Chiari malformation is a condition characterized by herniation of the posterior fossa contents below the level of the foramen magnum, and is categorized into three types based on the degree of herniation. The authors review their surgical experience between 1975 and 1985 with 50 patients afflicted with symptomatic Chiari malformations. Any patient with associated myelomeningocele, tethered spinal cord,
lipoma
, or diastematomyelia was excluded from this series. Forty-one patients had Chiari I malformations, seven were classified as having Chiari II, and two as having Chiari III. The presentation of pediatric and adult patients was identical. Treatment was directed at the posterior fossa pathology. Seven patients with accompanying ventral bone compression underwent transoral decompression of the cervicomedullary junction, 42 had posterior decompressive procedures, and six received ventriculoperitoneal shunts. The posterior decompression included opening the outlet foramina of the fourth ventricle, occluding any communication between the spinal cord central canal and the obex, shunting the fourth ventricle, and placing a dural graft. Postoperatively, 20% of the patients are asymptomatic, 66% improved, and 8% stabilized; in 6% the disease has progressed in spite of multiple procedures. Preoperative signs that are predictive of a less favorable outcome include muscle atrophy, symptoms lasting longer than 24 months,
ataxia
, nystagmus, trigeminal hypesthesia, and dorsal column dysfunction (p less than 0.05, chi-square test). A model based on the presence or absence of atrophy,
ataxia
, and scoliosis at the time of the preoperative examination has been generated that allows prediction of long-term outcome at the 95% confidence level.
...
PMID:Symptomatic Chiari malformations. An analysis of presentation, management, and long-term outcome. 274 41
Among 100 childhood brain tumors treated at Kobe Children's Hospital from May 1970 to June 1985, 18 of the children presented with symptoms during the first year of life. This paper analyzes these 18 cases. Supratentorial tumors (78%) were more common than infratentorial ones, and 67% of all the tumors were located in the central neural axis. Initial symptoms were cranial enlargement (56%), vomiting (17%), cranial deformity (11%), blepharoptosis, respiratory distress, and
ataxia
. Histological diagnosis of the tumors was as follows: teratoma (3 cases), medulloblastoma (3), glioblastoma (2), astrocytoma (2), ependymoma (2), craniopharyngioma (1), choroid plexus papilloma (1), hamartoma (1),
lipoma
(1), melanotic progonoma (1), and an undetermined type, probably medulloblastoma (1). Seventeen of the patients underwent craniotomy for tumor resection (4 total, 4 subtotal and 7 partial removal, and 2 biopsies). Additional therapeutic methods used separately and in various combinations included ventriculoperitoneal shunt, subduralperitoneal shunt, ventricular drainage, radiotherapy and chemotherapy. Nine patients died (average 98 days) after surgery. Of the 9 survivors, 6 are still alive after more than 5 years. Five of the 6 are mentally retarded and 4 are physically handicapped to some degree.
...
PMID:Intracranial tumors in the first year of life. 377 67
We report an unusual case of encephalo-entero-myopathy associated with the A8344G mutation in the tRNA(Lys) gene of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). This patient had mitochondrial myopathy, multiple lipomatosis, mild hearing loss, stroke-like episodes, and paralytic ileus, but she lacked the canonical clinical features of MERRF, myoclonus, epilepsy, or
ataxia
. We conducted genetic, biochemical, histochemical, and immunohistochemical studies in skeletal muscle, brain, intestine, and
lipoma
tissue. The mutation was abundant in all tissues, and cytochrome c oxidase (COX) activity was selectively decreased in brain and small intestine. COX deficiency was also documented histochemically and immunohistochemically in the small intestine, suggesting that mitochondrial dysfunction played a role in the pathogenesis of paralytic ileus. This case illustrates an unusual and dramatic clinical phenotype of the A8344G mutation, characterized by stroke-like episodes and acute ileus.
...
PMID:The A8344G mutation in mitochondrial DNA associated with stroke-like episodes and gastrointestinal dysfunction. 1247 64
We describe a 10-year-old boy with an intracranial
lipoma
in the posterior fossa. The patient had a subcutaneous tumor of the posterior neck at birth, which was gradually growing and subsequently accompanied by gait disturbance and
ataxia
. MR imaging revealed the intracranial
lipoma
in the posterior fossa extending into the cervical spinal canal and subcutaneous space via a cranium bifidum. A surgical operation was performed, but the
lipoma
could not be removed completely. He had had prominent obesity that might have caused not only enlargement of the intracranial
lipoma
but also neurological complications. Although intracranial lipomas are usually benign and asymptomatic, early detection of them is quite critical, and body weight control may help to prevent their progression.
...
PMID:A posterior fossa lipoma extending into the cervical spine and subcutaneous space via a cranium bifidum. 1837 16