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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Nineteen adult patients underwent 21 orthotopic liver transplants at the Cleveland Clinic between November 1984, and August 1986. Eight of 19 (42%) patients developed seizures. One patient suffered a single seizure, and seven patients had multiple, generalized seizures. Two of these seven patients became comatose after several days of seizure activity. Over several weeks, both of these patients regained consciousness--however, they exhibited a cerebellar-type syndrome, manifested as severe
ataxia
, weakness, and dysarthria. Both patients have improved, but remain neurologically impaired. Laboratory evaluation included serum electrolytes, magnesium, osmolality, and cyclosporine levels. Neurologic testing consisted of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis, computed tomographic (CT) scanning, and electroencephalography (EEG). Although the CSF protein was mildly elevated in two patients, all cultures remained sterile. None of the CT scans demonstrated any abnormalities. In five patients, the EEG showed generalized slowing consistent with diffuse
encephalopathy
. Other factors associated with seizures in transplant patients were analyzed, including fluid retention, hypertension, high-dose steroids, hypomagnesemia, graft dysfunction, and demyelinization. Many of our patients had the first three of these factors, since all but one developed their seizures within the first ten postoperative days. Only one patient had mild hypomagnesemia. Trough cyclosporine levels (whole blood, HPLC) were not in the toxic range (greater than 500 ng/mL). The serum osmolality was elevated in all four patients in whom it was measured, ranging from 309 to 341 mOsm/kg. Only three patients exhibited graft dysfunction--two moderate and one severe. The cause of neurologic toxicity following transplantation is unclear. Although many factors have been implicated, no common denominator has emerged. Several reports have linked cyclosporine with seizures and other neurologic problems, such as the cerebellar-type syndrome exhibited in two of our patients. Future studies should include magnetic resonance (MR) imaging of the head and measuring osmolality and cyclosporine levels in the blood and CSF.
...
PMID:Neurologic complications of liver transplantation. 283 45
Identical twins developed myoclonic epilepsy in their teens. One twin remained mildly affected but the other went on to develop sensorineural deafness and
ataxia
with lactic acidosis and ragged red fibres leading to a diagnosis of mitochondrial
encephalopathy
. Multiple stroke-like episodes with hemiparesis followed, indicating progression from a MERRF to a MELAS phenotype. Biochemical studies revealed a severe deficiency of mitochondrial NADH-ubiquinone reductase and a moderate deficiency of cytochrome aa3. Western immunoblotting experiments using polyclonal antibodies raised against human placental cytochrome oxidase identified a similar profile of bands to those seen in controls, supporting the view that cytochrome aa3 deficiency in this case may be a secondary consequence of a failure of assembly related to a severe proximal respiratory chain defect.
...
PMID:Progression from MERRF to MELAS phenotype in a patient with combined respiratory complex I and IV deficiencies. 285 17
5'-dFUrd (doxifluridine) is a new fluoropyrimidine that may have a higher antitumor effect and less side effects than 5-FU. In this study 15 patients with advanced colorectal carcinoma, one with renal carcinoma, one with carcinoid and one with advanced carcinoma of unknown origin, were randomly assigned to receive 5'-dFUrd 5 g/m2 or 3 g/m2 as a 1-h infusion for 5 days in 3 cycles at intervals of 4 weeks. The patients had repeated neurological and neurophysiological examinations before and during the treatment. Ten patients developed symptoms of toxicity of the central nervous system (CNS), with cerebellopathy and
encephalopathy
resembling a Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome. The neurotoxicity was dose related, affecting 7 of 8 patients in the high dosage group and 3 of 9 patients in the low dosage group. The symptoms generally started at the end of the second week of the cycle with unsteadiness and diplopia, and progressed to the fourth week with
ataxia
, confusion and EEG-changes, becoming more pronounced with increasing number of cycles. After the treatment there was normalisation within 4-8 weeks. Cachectic patients and patients with a pathological EEG before treatment seem to represent a high-risk group for CNS-symptoms. EEG may be helpful in early diagnosis of CNS-toxicity.
...
PMID:Wernicke-Korsakoff-like syndrome in patients with colorectal carcinoma treated with high-dose doxifluridine (5'-dFUrd). 294 66
"Energy metabolism" is deranged in a wide variety of disorders of the nervous system. This term refers rather loosely to the pathways responsible for the utilization of the major substrates of brain. Primary disorders of energy metabolism are those in which the primary insult affects the cellular machinery required for energy metabolism. A typical example would be a defect in a gene coding for a mitochondrial protein. Biochemically, defects which appear to be hereditary and which lead to disease of the central nervous system have been described in each of the pathways of energy metabolism: glycogenolysis (the break-down of glycogen to glucose); glycolysis (the break down of glucose to pyruvate and lactate); the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex (which oxidizes pyruvate to enter the Krebs tricarboxylic acid cycle); the tricarboxylic acid cycle itself (which completes the oxidation of carbohydrates and other substrates to carbon dioxide); electron transport (which carries out their oxidation to water); the pentose phosphate pathway (an alternate pathway for glucose oxidation); and several "minor" mitochondrial pathways. Clinically, the spectrum of syndromes associated with primary disorders of energy metabolism is wide. Common manifestations include psychomotor retardation, with associated lactic acidosis and/or hypoglycemia. The laboratory abnormalities may be intermittent. Syndromes which have been culled out include congenital lactic acidosis, Leigh disease, intermittent
ataxia
, Kearns-Sayre-Shy syndrome (KSS), myoclonus epilepsy with ragged red fibers (MERRF), and mitochondrial myopathy-
encephalopathy
-lactic acidosis-stroke (MELAS). As with other families of inborn errors, both clinical and biochemical heterogeneity occur. Patients with apparently similar clinical syndromes can turn out to have different inborn errors, and patients with abnormalities of the same gene product can have clinically distinguishable syndromes. Secondary disorders are those in which the derangements of energy metabolism are presumably secondary to some other insult but may still be important for the cellular pathophysiology. These include the metabolic encephalopathies and probably a number of well-known neurodegenerative disorders. In the hereditary ataxias, abnormalities of mitochondrial markers are common but do not correlate consistently with the disorders as conventionally classified; a new classification into axonal ataxias, multiple system degenerations, and ataxic encephalopathies may be easier to relate to the pathophysiology.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:Energy metabolism in disorders of the nervous system. 297 43
A survey of the literature of neurological manifestations associated with the acquired immune deficiency syndrome (AIDS) shows a broad disease spectrum affecting approximately one third of the patients in large hospital series. The complications include focal cerebral lesions caused by abscesses, lymphomas, leucoencephalopathy or infarcts as well as encephalitis, meningitis and myelitis. Most opportunistic infections of the central nervous system presumably are caused by toxoplasma gondii, cytomegalovirus and cryptococcus neoformans. One tenth of all patients have neurological disease as their initial symptom of AIDS. The diagnosis should always be considered in patients at risk and in males with an unusual neurological history or with a peculiar CT scan of the brain. Besides the opportunistic complications of AIDS, LAV/HTLV-III itself probably attacks the nervous system and gives rise to concomitant lesions of the long tracts of the spinal cord with
ataxia
, paresis and spasticity and to subacute
encephalopathy
and peripheral nerve abnormalities as well.
...
PMID:Neurological complications and concomitants of AIDS. 303 38
D-Lactic acid can accumulate in blood in some patients with intestinal failure, leading to a clinical syndrome of severe acidosis and
encephalopathy
. The possible impact of parenteral nutrition on its clinical course has not been established. One patient with a severe short-bowel syndrome supported by long-term parenteral nutrition who suffered repeated episodes of
ataxia
and disorientation associated with elevated serum levels of D-lactate was studied. Results demonstrated no impact of glucose- vs lipid-based parenteral nutrition formulations on total acid production or serum D-lactic acid levels, increased serum D-lactate levels during administration of neomycin, but prompt resolution of both acidosis and clinical symptoms with discontinuation of oral intake. This study confirms the findings of other investigators that D-lactic acidosis may be a significant, heretofore unappreciated complication in patients with severe short-bowel syndrome, and that prompt resolution may be effected with abrupt discontinuation of oral intake. Furthermore, the present study suggests neither a detrimental nor a beneficial effect of parenteral nutrition on this syndrome.
...
PMID:Effect of parenteral nutrition and enteral feeding on D-lactic acidosis in a patient with short bowel. 312 29
Described are 76 children with a picture of progressive
encephalopathy
and
ataxia
as the principal or joint principal leading signs. The series was hospital-based in Gothenburg between 1973 and 1983, and not representative for epidemiologic analyses. The children were divided in groups by using a combined pathogenetic and clinical grouping system: lysosomal disorders (6 children), non-lysosomal lipid disorders (10), intermediary metabolic disorders (3), heredoataxias (22), phacomatoses including Louis-Bar (5), dysimmune encephalopathies (6), other defined disorders (19) and undefined or incompletely defined conditions (5). Different groups are discussed and, according to this material, a diagnostic pathway is drawn up.
...
PMID:The nosologic panorama of progressive ataxia in Swedish children. 317 79
Previous studies reported that some children who survive acute lead
encephalopathy
suffer from
ataxia
and have difficulties maintaining postural equilibrium. More recent studies have failed to quantify postural imbalance in association with lower levels of lead exposures, perhaps due to the insensitivity of the clinical measure. In our study, we noninvasively measured postural disequilibrium with a microprocessor-based force platform. The test provides a real time quantification of the body's center of gravity movement pattern. Measurements were made in a cohort of 33 inner city children (mean age: six years +/- 0.4 SD) with well documented blood lead histories. The average maximum blood lead of these children during their first six years of life was 23.5 micrograms/dl (range = 8.5 to 49.4). The children performed four postural tests [i.e., standing eyes open (EO) and closed (EC), on firm surface and standing on a compliant foam surface with eyes open (FO) and closed (FC)]. The results indicated that the maximum blood lead incurred during the second year of life was significantly positively related to postural sway, and the body balance was most affected in the EC test where visual cues were eliminated and proprioceptive feedback was not modified. Fetal Pb exposure levels as well as Pb exposures during the first year of life were not correlated with postural sway of six year olds. However, the maximum blood lead concentration beyond two years of life was significantly associated with the postural sway at six years of age.
...
PMID:Postural disequilibrium quantification in children with chronic lead exposure: a pilot study. 320 May 2
Two patients with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy (MEP) serve to emphasize the variability of this group of diseases. Cerebral insults, mitochondrial cardiopathy, relapsing ileus, cerebral angioma,
ataxia
, and myoclonic seizures characterized the first case of an adult man with similar diseases in his family, interpreted as transitional form between mitochondrial myopathy,
encephalopathy
, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) and myoclonus epilepsy associated with ragged red fibers (MERRF). The second patient, a floppy infant with cardiomyopathy and myoclonism, statomotoric and mental retardation showed combined defects in mitochondrial respiratory chain at NADH-CoQ reductase and cytochrome c oxidase and a deficiency of carnitine. In both patients neuropathologically criteria of Leigh's syndrome could be demonstrated in the cerebral cortex, in case 2 also clinically. The classificatory problems of the relationships between KSS, MELAS, MERRF, Leigh's as well as Alpers' syndromes are discussed.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial myopathies with necrotizing encephalopathy of the Leigh type. 322 73
Rett syndrome is a progressive
encephalopathy
observed only in girls, who are apparently normal until 6 to 12 months of age. It is characterized by autism, dementia,
ataxia
, stereotypic hand movements, hyperreflexia, spasticity, and seizures. Eight of 10 females with Rett syndrome evaluated at the Alfred I. duPont Institute have C-shaped neuromuscular curves averaging 29 degrees (range 22-48 degrees). Curve progression was seen in all eight patients and occurred despite bracing in four, averaging 21 degrees (range 12-31 degrees). Five patients, two of whom were braced, have undergone posterior spinal fusion with segmental instrumentation for curves ranging in size from 49 to 105 degrees (average 67 degrees).
...
PMID:Scoliosis in Rett syndrome. 335 Sep 46
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