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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Mannosidosis, an inherited
lysosomal storage disease
, was diagnosed in two purebred Angus calves in the United States. Calf 1 was 5 months old and calf 2 was 7 months old when they were necropsied. Both calves had a history of progressive incoordination and
ataxia
. Gross postmortem findings included moderate hydrocephalus. Histologic examination revealed intracytoplasmic vacuolation of neurons throughout spinal cord and brain as well as in exocrine pancreatic cells, reticuloendothelial cells of the liver, and medullary sinusoids of lymph nodes. Biochemical study of 61 blood samples from the first calf's herd revealed bimodal distribution of enzyme activity for mannosidase. Two populations could be distinguished in that herd, those with normal mannosidase activity and those heterozygous for the disease.
...
PMID:Mannosidosis of Angus calves. 50 Apr 78
Sheep affected with ovine GM1 gangliosidosis are normal at birth and develop clinical signs, initially
ataxia
, commencing at approximately 5 months of age, which progresses rapidly to recumbency. Superovulation and embryo transfer techniques were applied to a flock of carrier sheep of ovine GM1 gangliosidosis to increase the numbers of carrier and affected animals. A recipient ewe with 3 at-risk fetuses died at 4 months of gestation (normal ovine gestation is 5 months), and spectrofluorimetric assay of cerebral lysosomal beta-galactosidase of the fetuses showed that 2 were carriers and one was an affected fetus. The affected fetus had marked cytoplasmic enlargement and vacuolization of central and peripheral nervous system neuronal soma and of hepatocytes and renal epithelial cells. Lectin histochemistry indicated abnormal storage of complex carbohydrates, with terminal saccharide moieties consisting of beta-galactose, N-acetylneuraminic acid, and N-acetylgalactosamine. This case underlines the need for prenatal initiation of therapy and also demonstrates that vacuolization alone is not the cause of clinical signs in this
lysosomal storage disease
in that clinical signs do not commence until at least 5 months after vacuolization is histologically apparent.
...
PMID:Prenatal lesions in an ovine fetus with GM1 gangliosidosis. 190 4
Prospective and retrospective genetic studies were performed on sheep with a recently described inherited
lysosomal storage disease
that involves a profound deficiency of beta-galactosidase and an associated deficiency of alpha-neuraminidase. Retrospective studies of the flock of sheep in which four affected lambs were born indicated little inbreeding but the presence of a common ram in both the maternal and paternal sides of the pedigrees. When unrelated rams were used in the flock in subsequent years, no affected lambs were born. The affected lambs' parents were phenotypically normal, so the disease was investigated as a putative autosomal recessive condition in prospective breedings of related sheep over two breeding seasons. For the third breeding season, heterozygous ewes were superovulated and bred to a heterozygous ram, and the resultant embryos were transferred to recipient ewes. Later in the same breeding season, the heterozygous ewes were re-bred naturally to the heterozygous ram. Lambs were identified as affected by the development of signs of
ataxia
, levels of beta-galactosidase that were less than 7% of the levels in controls by spectrofluorometric assay, or the histopathologic demonstration of vacuolization of neurons. Heterozygous sheep were identified by the production of affected offspring and/or by levels of beta-galactosidase in fibroblast cultures that were approximately 50% of control levels. The phenotypic ratio of affected sheep to normal sheep and the genotypic ratio of affected to heterozygous to normal sheep were consistent, by chi-square analysis, with an autosomal recessive trait. It was concluded that this ovine
lysosomal storage disease
is an autosomal recessive disease.
...
PMID:Inheritance of an ovine lysosomal storage disease associated with deficiencies of beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase. 212 14
A
lysosomal storage disease
was diagnosed in 2 Australian Cattle Dog siblings, using light and electron microscopic evaluation. Both dogs developed clinical signs of disease at about 1 year of age. Vision and motor function deteriorated over several months; by 2 years of age, the dogs were blind and had progressive
ataxia
. Cytoplasmic inclusions with ultrastructural patterns characteristic of ceroid lipofuscin were observed in most neurons examined and in the cells of several other parenchymatous tissues. Biochemical studies, including determination of lysosomal enzyme activities, excluded several other lysosomal storage diseases. In these dogs, the clinical and pathologic features of the disease were similar to those of the juvenile subtype of ceroid lipofuscinosis (Batten disease) in human beings.
...
PMID:Clinical and pathologic features of ceroid lipofuscinosis in two Australian cattle dogs. 239 Dec 73
Salla disease is an autosomal recessive
lysosomal storage disease
relatively common in the Finnish population. The main manifestations of more than 70 patients detected to date are severe psychomotor retardation and
ataxia
of early onset. Intracellular free N-acetylneuraminic acid (sialic acid) is increased 10-20-fold and localized in the lysosomes. Four pregnancies at risk were monitored by quantitation of free and total sialic acid in amniocytes and supernatant amniotic fluid by high-performance liquid chromatography. In 3 children results were normal. Free sialic acid content of the amniocytes from one affected child was 2.6 nmol/mg protein, which was approximately 5 times higher than that of the 3 unaffected children (0.3 to 0.8) and 14 control samples (0.3 to 0.9). The ratio of free/total sialic acid of the amniocytes also clearly distinguished the affected pregnancy (13.8%) from the unaffected (2.3-4.8%) and control individuals (1.8-5.3%). This represents the first successful prenatal identification of a patient with Salla disease and indicates that both free sialic acid and free/total sialic acid ratio should be monitored in pregnancies at risk for the disease.
...
PMID:Prenatal detection of Salla disease based upon increased free sialic acid in amniocytes. 342 17
In a 5-year-old boy, an early onset psychomotor retardation with non-progressive
ataxia
and without dysmorphic features, associated with
lysosomal storage disease
found on ultrastructural examination of the conjunctiva, led to the diagnosis of Salla disease. This was supported by a tenfold excretion of urinary free sialic acid, without abnormal oligosacchariduria or anomaly in lysosomal enzymes. This boy is a native of Southern France. Screening of urinary sialic acid has to be introduced in aetiological investigations of patients with apparently non-progressive psychomotor retardation associated with
ataxia
or dystonic movements.
...
PMID:Salla disease in one non-Finnish patient. 377 5
This paper describes the clinical, morphological and biochemical features of three cats with a progressive neurological disorder. Clinical features were
ataxia
and progressive tremor. The morphological characteristics were those of
lysosomal storage disease
affecting neurones of the central nervous system and autonomic ganglia; membranous cytoplasmic bodies were demonstrated by electron microscopy in cerebral neurones. Chemical analysis of brain from two of the cats revealed an increased content of total gangliosides, sialic acid and a specific increase in GMI ganglioside. Enzyme analysis of homogenates of leucocytes, spleen and brain showed less than 5% or normal 4-methylumbelliferyl-beta galactosidase (4MU-beta gal) activity. In liver, activity was markedly reduced at pH values below 4.2, but there was considerable activity above this value. The properties of 4MU-beta gal in normal and diseased feline livers were investigated. Sephadex gel filtration of diseased liver homogenates showed an absence of two thermolabile "acid' components, and reduced activity of a third thermostable "neutral' component. The biochemical abnormalities found in the diseased cats are similar to those found in human juvenile GMI gangliosidosis (type 2).
...
PMID:Hepatic beta galactosidase and feline GMI gangliosidosis. 679 49
Ovine GM-1 gangliosidosis is an inherited
lysosomal storage disease
. Nine lambs affected with the disease were studied to characterize clinical signs and to determine if there were any pathognomonic clinicopathologic abnormalities. Evaluation included physical, ophthalmic, and neurologic examinations, complete blood counts, serum enzyme and electrolyte analyses, urinalyses, cerebrospinal fluid analyses, blood gas analyses, roentgenograms, electromyograms, and electrocardiograms. Two affected lambs had clinicopathologic tests performed before and after the onset of clinical signs. The only consistent abnormalities recognized were nonspecific signs referable to the central nervous system; predominantly
ataxia
, conscious proprioceptive deficit most severe in the hind limbs, blindness, and recumbency. Lambs continued to eat and drink, though at diminished levels and with loss of body condition. It was concluded that there are no pathognomonic clinicopathologic abnormalities associated with ovine GM-1 gangliosidosis, and antemortem diagnosis requires enzyme assay of leukocytes or cultured fibroblasts, or lectin histochemistry of tissues obtained by biopsy. Lysosomal storage diseases should be considered among the differential diagnoses in young animals presenting with early neonatal death or with nonspecific neurological signs, in concert with an absence of diagnostic clinicopathologic findings.
...
PMID:Clinical and clinicopathologic characteristics of ovine GM-1 gangliosidosis. 806 59
Arylsulfatase A (ASA)-deficient (-/-) mice and ASA(+/+) controls were constructed as a transgenic model for the
lysosomal storage disease
, metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD). One-year-old ASA(-/-) mice showed impaired rotarod performance and altered walking pattern characterized by a shorter pace, later evolving into more severe
ataxia
with tremor in 2-year-old mice. Examination of cerebellar histology showed that 2-year-old ASA(-/-) mice have lost most of the calbindin immunoreactivity from their Purkinje cell dendrites and show simplified dendritic architecture. Additionally, ASA-deficient mice lost a substantial proportion of their Purkinje cells. Recordings of unitary potentials and stimulation of climbing fibers on cerebellar slices from 2-year-old mice indicated that, although the main cerebellar synapses seem to be present and functioning physiologically, the climbing fibers of ASA-deficient mice may have enhanced effects on Purkinje cell activity. It is concluded that ambulatory dysfunctions in ASA(-/-) mice might be explained by an imbalance in the consequences of climbing fiber signals upon Purkinje cell activity due to selective neurodegeneration within the cerebellum.
...
PMID:Neuromotor alterations and cerebellar deficits in aged arylsulfatase A-deficient transgenic mice. 1050 24
Galactosialidosis is a
lysosomal storage disease
associated with a combined deficiency of beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase, caused by a defect of another lysosomal protein, the protective protein. Three subtypes are recognized: the early infantile form, the late infantile form and the juvenile/adult form. We saw a patient with galactosialidosis of the juvenile/adult form, a 51-year-old Japanese man with angiokeratomas on both elbows and knees, myoclonus,
ataxia
, mental retardation and macular cherry-red spots. An electron-microscopic study of a skin biopsy showed membrane-limited vacuoles in the cytoplasm of the endothelial cells, pericytes and fibroblasts. Assays of enzymatic activity in cultured fibroblasts showed a marked decrease in both beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase (sialidase). The substance contained in the cytoplasmic vacuoles appears to be glycoproteins with sialic acid, which is a terminal glycosyl residue, because the cytoplasm of the endothelial cells of the vessels and pericytes are stained by the Limax flavus agglutinin, a lectin that binds specifically with sialic acid. This technology may be useful for easy investigation of the distribution of the accumulation of such substances in the central nervous system.
...
PMID:A case of galactosialidosis. 1293 52
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