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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The author reports eight cases of the
Rett syndrome
, or dementia-
ataxia
-autism, in girls. The cases satisfy the following criteria: Normal development in the first mos of life. Profound deterioration of the mental status over a period of several mos. Behavioral pseudoautistic abnormalities. Presence of neurological signs such as
ataxia
, myoclonus and hyperreflexia. Normal head circumference at birth, but subsequent subnormal growth. EEG abnormalities. Slow progression of the disease after the period of rapid deterioration. The constellation of the signs and symptoms, and the occurrence only in girls, make this clinical picture quite distinct. There is no definitely known biochemical or chromosomal abnormality. The psychological profile, though homogeneous in all the patients, is not pathognomonic, and a very similar behavioral pattern can be observed in other organic brain syndromes.
...
PMID:Rett syndrome: report of eight cases. 406 60
This is a case report of the
Rett syndrome
in a girl with normal general and psychomotor development during the first 12 mos. Afterwards developmental stagnation and retrogression appeared which led within one yr to dementia, autism, loss of purposeful hand use, truncal
ataxia
and apraxia of gait. Characteristic stereotypic movements of the hands occurred, and, furthermore, rhythmic truncal balancing and episodic hyperpnea. At 2 yrs, neurological examination showed slight hypertonia and hyperreflexia of the legs without extensor plantar signs, there was relative microcephaly, and visceral examination was normal. The diagnosis was made on the basis of clinical signs: all laboratory investigations were negative except EEG which showed unspecific modifications. We didn't find hyperammonemia. No progression of the symptoms appeared in the 15 mos following the diagnosis.
...
PMID:A case of the Rett syndrome. 406 64
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.
...
PMID:[Rett syndrome. Review of the literature and presentation of 2 clinical cases]. 408 13
A 12-year-old girl with
Rett's syndrome
is presented. This syndrome, exclusively reported in girls, is characterized by a normal psychomotor development up to the age of 6 to 18 months, followed by developmental stagnation and then rapid progressive dementia, loss of purposeful use of the hands replaced by stereotypic hand movements, truncal
ataxia
, spasticity, seizures and microcephaly. The syndrome is not rare; prevalence has been reported as 0.65/10 000 girls.
...
PMID:[The Rett syndrome]. 409 98
Thirty-five patients, exclusively girls, from three countries had a uniform and striking progressive encephalopathy. After normal general and psychomotor development up to the age of 7 to 18 months, developmental stagnation occurred, followed by rapid deterioration of higher brain functions. Within one-and-a-half years this deterioration led to severe dementia, autism, loss of purposeful use of the hands, jerky truncal
ataxia
, and acquired microcephaly. The destructive stage was followed by apparent stability lasting through decades. Additional insidious neurological abnormalities supervened, mainly spastic parapareses, vasomotor disturbances of the lower limbs, and epilepsy. Prior extensive laboratory investigations have not revealed the cause. The condition is similar to a virtually overlooked syndrome described by
Rett
in the German literature. The exclusive involvement of females, correlated with findings in family data analyses, suggests a dominant mutation on one X chromosome that results in affected girls and nonviable male hemizygous conceptuses.
...
PMID:A progressive syndrome of autism, dementia, ataxia, and loss of purposeful hand use in girls: Rett's syndrome: report of 35 cases. 663 58
Rett syndrome
(RS), which affects approximately 1 in 10,000 young females, is characterized by cognitive deterioration,
ataxia
, apraxia, rigidity, and stereotyped hand movements. Neuropathological features include reduction in brain size and hypopigmentation of neurons of the substantia nigra pars compacta (SNpc). Neurochemical and imaging studies support nigrostriatal involvement. The results of our preliminary studies show abnormalities in neurons of the substantia nigra (SN), including decreased numbers of neurons, ubiquitin-stained neuronal inclusion bodies, decreased immunostaining for transmitter markers, and evidence of cell death using terminal deoxynucleotidyl transferase (TDT)-mediated dUTP-biotin nick end labeling (TUNEL), which labels fragmented intranucleosomal DNA. These preliminary data represent the first evidence for cell death in RS.
...
PMID:Preliminary evidence for neurodegenerative changes in the substantia nigra of Rett syndrome. 756 48
Rett syndrome
(RS) is a progressive neurological disorder of females, characterized by the early onset of autistic behavior,
ataxia
, and "handwringing" movements. The present magnetic resonance imaging study was undertaken with the purpose of investigating whether structural brain abnormalities of RS patients are similar to those recently reported in autism. The subject population consisted of eight patients and an equal number of age- and sex-matched controls. Area and shape measurements were taken at selected anatomical levels for the following structures: brain hemisphere, corpus callosum, midbrain, pons, lobules I-V and VI-VII of the cerebellum, and head of the caudate. Results revealed significant differences in area for the whole brain hemisphere (p < 0.05) and in both right and left caudate (p < 0.04). These morphological findings are different from those recently reported in autism and emphasize the involvement of the striatal system in RS.
...
PMID:Quantitative magnetic resonance imaging in Rett syndrome. 758 Jan 76
This study was designed to assess auditory function in subjects with
Rett syndrome
, a rare neurologic disorder that is characterized by progressive symptoms of dementia,
ataxia
, respiratory disorder, and communication disorder. Auditory evoked potentials, including the auditory brainstem response (ABR), middle latency response (MLR), and late vertex response (LVR), were recorded in 36 subjects with
Rett syndrome
. Results showed a systematic decline in auditory function from the peripheral to the central auditory system, with normal ABR in all subjects, normal MLR in 50 percent of subjects, and normal LVR in 36 percent of subjects. Results suggest that hearing sensitivity and the functional integrity of eighth nerve and auditory brainstem pathways are not affected in subjects with
Rett syndrome
. However, abnormality of both the MLR and LVR suggest the presence of central auditory disorder.
...
PMID:Auditory evoked potentials in Rett syndrome. 807 19
Rett syndrome
(RS) is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by almost exclusive occurrence in females, autistic behavior, dementia, gait
ataxia
, loss of purposeful use of the hands with stereotypic hand movement. Initially RS was considered to be very rare; however, recent reports suggest that the prevalence is considerably higher and occurrence is world-wide. There are as yet no pathognomonic laboratory markers and its pathogenesis and etiology are unknown. We report a 4-year-old girl who fulfilled the clinical criteria of classic
Rett syndrome
.
...
PMID:Rett syndrome: a case report. 870 2
Rett syndrome
(RS) is one of the most frequent causes of mental retardation in females. As there are no known biochemical, genetic, or morphological markers, diagnosis is based on clinical phenotype including severe dementia, autism, truncal
ataxia
/apraxia, loss of purposeful hand movements, breathing abnormalities, stereotypies, seizures, and extrapyramidal signs. Myoclonus, although reported in some series, has never been characterized. We studied 10 RS patients, age 3 to 20 years, and observed myoclonus in 9. Severity of myoclonus did not correlate with that of the other symptoms or with age. Multifocal, arrhythmic, and asynchronous jerks mainly involved distal limbs. Electromyographic bursts lasted 48 +/- 12 msec. Burst-locked electroencephalographic averaging generated a contralateral centroparietal premyoclonus transient preceding the burst by 34 +/- 7.2 msec. Motor evoked potentials showed normal latencies, indicating integrity of the corticospinal pathway. Somatosensory evoked potentials were enlarged. The C-reflex was hyperexcitable and markedly prolonged (62 +/- 4.3 msec), mainly due to increase in cortical relay time (28.4 +/- 4.5 msec). We conclude that RS patients show a distinctive pattern of cortical reflex myoclonus with prolonged intracortical delay of the long-loop reflex.
...
PMID:Cortical reflex myoclonus in Rett syndrome. 954 28
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