Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0004134 (ataxia)
15,886 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We reported a case of fibromuscular dysplasia (FMD) presenting lateral medullary syndrome accompanied with left truncal ataxia, left Horner's syndrome and superficial sensory deficit in the right extremities. He was 46-year-old man and had no remarkable risk factors for the cerebrovascular disease such as hypertension, diabetes mellitus and valvular heart disease. Cerebral angiography was performed and there was the string-of-beads-like shadow in the left vertebral artery, revealing a localized FMD. Wedge-shaped area of low signal intensity in the left lower medulla was recognized in magnetic resonance imaging (spin echo Tr/Te 600/30). It was suggested that the lesion of the lower medulla caused the patient's several symptoms. In Japan, there have been a few case reports of cervical or intracranial FMD, but we cannot find any report of FMD localizing in the unilateral vertebral artery. In general, it has been said that the etiology of lateral medullary syndrome under fifty years old differs from those of geriatric patients. The authors pointed out the significance of FMD as one of those risk factors causing lateral medullary syndrome and also discussed the mechanism of the sensory disturbance sparing face.
...
PMID:[A case of fibromuscular dysplasia presenting lateral medullary syndrome]. 238 16

Somatosensory and motor functions of both hands were examined in 10 patients with unilateral parietal cortex lesions as revealed by computerized tomography. Tests of elementary somatosensory functions comprised surface sensibility, vibration, and position sense. For evaluation of complex somatosensory functions, the recognition of surface textures and object forms was tested. Motor performance was examined by measuring force and position control as well as manipulative and explorative motor behaviour. All patients showed varying degrees of sensory disturbance. Although the patients had no or minor paresis, they all had motor deficits concerning force control, fine movements, and manipulation with the hand contralateral to the lesion. Patients with more posteriorly located parietal lesions revealed predominantly severe disturbances of complex sensibility, precision grip, manipulation, and explorative finger movements. The characteristic and consistent feature of the disturbed motor behaviour was the loss of the purposive nature of the motor acts which were no longer adequate for the tasks (tactile apraxia). Paresis or ataxia could not account for this deficits.
...
PMID:Role of the parietal cortex for sensorimotor transformation. Evidence from clinical observations. 275 92

An autopsy case of hereditary spastic ataxia is reported. There are four family members with similar symptomatology through three generations. A 36-year-old man developed atactic gait at the age of 22 years, with following dysarthria, scanning speech, pyramidal signs, dysmetria, dysdiadochokinesia, nystagmus and mild sensory disturbance. The clinical course was steadily progressive and terminated about 14 years after the onset. The gross examination showed smallness of the brain stem and spinal cord with marked symmetrical atrophy of the anterior and lateral columns, especially at thoracic level. Histologically, pronounced degeneration was found in the anterior and posterior spino-cerebellar tracts, spino-thalamic tracts, and spinal ganglia. The olivary nuclei, pons and cerebellum were spared. The dentate nuclei showed considerable loss of neurons with degeneration, however there were no clinical signs related to this pathology. This case is considered to fall in the group of hereditary spastic ataxia according to Greenfield's classification, however, there was no report on degeneration of the dentate nucleus in this disease for the present. Hereditary spastic ataxia is very rare disease and only four cases have well been documented in our country to the best of our knowledge. The presence of nystagmus and superficial sensory disturbance, and sparing of the posterior column of the spinal cord seems to be common clinico-pathology in Japanese cases, differing from those of foreign cases. The fact that reactive astrogliosis was immunohistochemistry demonstrated in the degenerative regions of the spinal cord and where is no discrepancy between degenerative and reparative processes as reported before is stressed.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of hereditary ataxia (hereditary spastic ataxia)]. 404 Dec 92

A 46-year-old man developed sudden dysarthria and atactic gait and was noted to be unable to get up even on the bed about one year prior to his death. By following several days, he started to have scanning speech, nausea, trancal ataxia and dysmetria in succession. The cerebro-spinal fluid yielded moderate pleocytosis. There were no sensory disturbance, pathological reflexes and Romberg's sign. Half a year later, submandibular tumor was noted. The biopsy showed metastatic small cell undifferentiated carcinoma, presumably of pulmonary origin, and paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration was suspected. He died of bronchopneumonia, superimposed on lung cancer on February 25 in 1979. The necropsy showed a large tumor in the right lung which was histologically verified small cell undifferentiated carcinoma (so-called oat-cell carcinoma). The cerebellum disclosed diffuse cortical atrophy, chiefly of Purkinje cell type. Moderate demyelination with reparative gliosis and foamy macrophages was seen in the white matter, which was considered secondary to cortical devastation. The morphometric study on Purkinje cell loss showed interesting distribution of the lesions. The severely affected portions were the central lobe and culmen in the vermis, and the ala lobuli centralis and quadrangular lobe in the hemisphere, respectively. The lingula was strikingly spared. The finding was compared with that of other cerebellar disease in reviewing the literature.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of carcinomatous subacute cerebellar degeneration--on distribution of cerebellar cortical lesions]. 609 6

A male, born on December 8, 1956, during the period when many Minamata diseases broke out in a district. His parents who ate much fish and shell fish taken in Minamata Bay suffered from the light, incomplete Minamata disease showing sensory disturbance, the constriction of the visual field, muscular weakness, etc. He weighed 3,225 gr. upon the normal birth given 10 months after pregnancy. His abnormalities were noted since his head was not stabilized on the neck even six months after the birth. Because of the delay in the development of the motor function, he became barely able to sit, stand up and begin walking at the ages of 3, 5 and 6 respectively. In 1962 (at the age of 6), his congenital Minamata disease was diagnosed in view of his clinical symptoms and epidemiological conditions. The mercury value in the hair and blood upon the birth is not known because a considerable time had elapsed after the birth when his mercury poisoning was discovered. However, the clinical symptoms included intelligence disturbance, character change, dysarthria, primitive reflexes, strabismus, hypersalivation, ataxia and hyperkinesia, indicating a typical congenital Minamata disease. Until he became 13 years old (1969) or so, his mental and motor function developed, both gradually. In the same year, he was admitted to a special class for the handicapped. EEG examination revealed that there was a slow alpha activity in the basic pattern and that 6 Hz positive spike was found in the sleep EEG. The constriction of the visual field was classified through examination.2+
...
PMID:[Congenital Minamata disease accompanied by arachnoid cyst (author's transl)]. 709 64

We presented a rare care who had right frontal lobe infarction, with left side pseudoataxia, and the mechanism, causing pseudoataxia, was considered. The patient, a 51 year-old, righ-handed male, was admitted on August 9, 1980, complaining of left-side pseudoataxia. About p.m. 7:00, July 29, 1980, he suddenly noticed numbness of the left foot, and he found himself difficulty in standing in the next morning. He had a mild paresis and tactile-tactile of the left side including the face, which was rapidly improved. However, there was pseudoataxia of the left extremities, which had not been improved. On physical examination, dysarthria, aphasia, finger agnosia, difficulty in right left orientation or muscle weakness was not recognized, and there was no sensory disturbance except for slight impairment of stereognosis, two point discrimination and vibratory sense. Demonstrable impairment of tactiletactile from was observed in the left hand. Notable dysmetria, terminal tremor and dysdiadochokinesia were seen in the left limbs, which were remarkably worsened with eyes closed. However, tapping and line-drawing tests were normal. Babinski-Weil's test disclosed typical compass gait. There was marked swaying in Romberg position. Tandem gait was impossible with a tendency to decline the left. Deep reflexies were normal except for mildly hyperactive radial reflex in the left. Carotid and vertebral angiographies revealed neither evidence of vascular occlusion nor displacement of vessels CT scan demonstrated a low density area, which included the right inferior and middle frontal gyri, the head of the right caudate nucleus and a part of anterior crus of right internal capsule. There was enlargement of anterior horn of the right lateral ventricle. Caloric test, electronystagmography, eye tracking test or optokinetic nystagmus test disclosed no abnormalities. Vibration induced falling, which is the postural reaction to muscle vibration during standing (Ekuland, G., 1972), was not recognized when the left Achiles' tendon was stimulated. Pseudoataxia of this patient differed from the typical cerebellar or vestibular ataxia. From a review of the literatures concerning frontal pseudoataxia, almost all cases had no distinct cerebellar signs, and showed positive Romberg's sign. The impairment of tactile-tactile form and postural reaction to vibratory stimulation to the left leg, appeared in this case, could be hardly explained by the lesion of parietal lobe or deconnection syndrome. Sensory perception of parietal lobe and pyramidal motor system were thought to be almost normal in this case. Therefore, these findings should be due to impairment of integration center between sensory and motor systems. The pseudoataxia in frontal lesion seems to occur as the results of involvement of this center, in which caudate nucleus maybe has important role, but not as the results of disturbances in the front-ponto-cerebellar or front vestibular pathway.
...
PMID:[Frontal pseudoataxia, discussion on its mechanism (author's transl)]. 732 87

A 28-year-old male was admitted to our hospital with the complaints of numbness of the left upper limb and gait disturbance. Neurological examination disclosed slight left dysmetria, truncal ataxia and sensory disturbance at the dermatome of C8 and Th1. CT and MRI scans showed a large mass lesion in the left posterior fossa, ventricular dilatation, cavum septi pellucidi and cavum Vergae, empty sella, cervical syringomyelia and left tonsilar herniation. The tumor which attached to cerebellar tentorium was totally removed and a histological diagnosis of meningothelial meningioma was made. Postoperative MRI scan demonstrated a disappearing of syringomyelia with the improved tonsillar herniation. Association of syringomyelia with brain tumor is relatively rare, so its pathogenesis was discussed.
...
PMID:[Syringomyelia associated with tentorial meningioma]. 754 27

Minamata disease (MD), a result of methylmercury poisoning, is a neurological illness caused by ingestion of contaminated seafood. We evaluated MR findings of patients with MD qualitatively and quantitatively. Magnetic resonance imaging at 1.5 Tesla was performed in seven patients with MD and in eight control subjects. All of our patients showed typical neurological findings like sensory disturbance, constriction of the visual fields, and ataxia. In the quantitative image analysis, inferior and middle parts of the cerebellar vermis and cerebellar hemispheres were significantly atrophic in comparison with the normal controls. There were no significant differences in measurements of the basis pontis, middle cerebellar peduncles, corpus callosum, or cerebral hemispheres between MD and the normal controls. The calcarine sulci and central sulci were significantly dilated, reflecting atrophy of the visual cortex and postcentral cortex, respectively. The lesions located in the calcarine area, cerebellum, and postcentral gyri were related to three characteristic manifestations of this disease, constriction of the visual fields, ataxia, and sensory disturbance, respectively. MR imaging has proved to be useful in evaluating the CNS abnormalities of methylmercury poisoning.
...
PMID:MR imaging of minamata disease: qualitative and quantitative analysis. 786 32

Eighteen patients are described, all of whom had chronic demyelinating peripheral neuropathy and benign IgM paraproteinaemia. All patients had serum antibodies against peripheral nerve myelin or myelin-associated glycoprotein. Seventeen were followed up clinically and electrophysiologically for between 1 and 14 years (mean 7.4 years). The presenting symptoms and signs were almost always those of a distal sensory disturbance in the limbs followed by distal weakness. All patients developed tremor or ataxia in the arms, and gait ataxia. The severity of the neuropathy varied greatly between patients at similar stages. Some had a predominantly sensory deficit and others a predominantly motor deficit. All patients eventually developed both motor and sensory signs. The neuropathy became slowly worse over the first 2-5 years and then appeared to stabilize, although long-term follow-up did reveal a very slow progression in the group as a whole. No patient developed evidence of haematological malignancy but two patients died of malignancy involving other systems. On reviewing 75 patients from the literature, non-haematological malignancy was found to be the commonest cause of death.
...
PMID:The natural history of chronic demyelinating neuropathy associated with benign IgM paraproteinaemia. A clinical and neurophysiological study. 795 4

Deficiency of 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase (MTHFR) leads to deficient remethylation of homocysteine and is one of the causes of homocystinuria. Only 28 patients have been reported so far. A 15-year-old boy with mild mental retardation was admitted in our hospital because of progressive difficulty in walking. He is the second child. The paternal grandparents are first cousins. On admission, clinical examination revealed mild disturbance of consciousness, left hemiparesis, truncal ataxia, pyramidal tract signs in the lower limbs and sensory disturbance in his feet. There was no marfanoid symptoms nor ectopia lentis. EEGs showed slow activity with sporadic spike and wave complexes. Peak latencies of N20 of median nerves SEPs, the third and 5th wave of ABR and P100 of VEP were delayed. The CT scan showed mild cortical atrophy and MRI revealed increased intensity on T2-weighted images in the cerebral white matter. Biochemical studies revealed homocystinuria with homocystinemia. Both plasma methionine and serum folic acid were low. Serum vitamin B12 and methylmalonic acid in urine were normal. The lymphoblastoid cell line, transformed by Epstein-Barr virus of lymphocytes of the patient, could not grow when homocysteine was substituted in the culture medium for methionine. The normal control cell line grew naturally under the same condition. A diagnosis of homocystinuria due to MTHFR deficiency was made. The patient was on various therapeutic regimens for about 70 days. Treatment with high doses of folic acid (400 mg/day) resulted in disappearance of homocysteine in plasma, remarkable decrease of homocysteine in urine and increase of methionine in plasma of the patient.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Effect of folic acid for treatment of homocystinuria due to 5,10-methylenetetrahydrofolate reductase deficiency]. 812 71


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 Next >>