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

Isoelectric focusing is a valuable method for the analysis of cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) proteins. Its high resolving power has, however, created problems in identifying the large number of protein bands separated. In an attempt to identify these bands, two-dimensional crossed immunoelectrofocusing has been used, where isoelectric focusing is combined with rocket immunoelectrophoresis. By these methods 9 of the normal proteins in the acidic pH interval have been identified. In addition the unusual CSF protein abnormalities occurring in Marie-Sanger-Brown's ataxia and alcoholic cerebellar degeneration have been shown to represent increases of different microheterogeneous forms of transferrin.
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PMID:Crossed immunoelectrofocusing for identification of normal and abnormal cerebrospinal fluid proteins. A preliminary report. 88 59

Thirty-five CT scans were studied from patients with several forms of spinocerebellar degeneration. Atrophy was determined by objective measurements of the number and width of cerebellar sulci, transverse diameter and surface area of the fourth ventricle, brainstem ratio, cerebellopontine angle cistern, and Evans' index. Two-thirds of the patients with Friedreich's ataxia showed moderate cerebellar atrophy and an increase in the surface area of the fourth ventricle. Severe cerebellar atrophy and enlargement of the cerebellopontine angle cistern was seen in patients with olivopontocerebellar (OPC) atrophy and idiopathic cortical cerebellar atrophy. In the OPC atrophy group there was also prominent atrophy of the brainstem and an increase in the fourth ventricle parameters. Alcoholic cerebellar degeneration showed a specific pattern of cerebellar atrophy most prominent in the superior vermis, together with a slight increase in the fourth ventricle surface, a reduction in the size of the brainstem, and an enlargement of the cerebellopontine angle cistern. Supratentorial atrophy was present only in the OPC and alcoholic atrophy groups. In one patient with spastic ataxia, CT was normal but MR imaging revealed prominent atrophy of the spinal cord. These CT patterns appear to be distinctive enough to permit the diagnosis and classification of the various forms of spinocerebellar degeneration.
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PMID:CT findings in spinocerebellar degeneration. 311

Eleven alcoholics with cerebellar degeneration (eight with computerized tomography confirmation of cerebellar atrophy) were matched with nonataxic alcoholics and nonalcoholics. There were no laboratory or physiological markers for ataxia, including hemoglobin A1a + b, red blood cell transketolase, liver function enzymes, and measures of reaction time and hand-eye coordination. Acetaldehyde-modified hemoglobin levels (as hemoglobin A1a + b) did not, as previously reported, distinguish between alcoholics and nonalcoholics. There was 24% less annual alcohol consumption in ataxic alcoholics compared with nonataxic alcoholics, 9% less lifetime consumption in ataxic alcoholics, and 33% less maximal daily intake. The finding that ataxic alcoholics do not have higher alcohol consumption than nonataxic alcoholics suggests that alcoholic cerebellar degeneration is not a dose-dependent phenomenon, and that alcoholics with cerebellar degeneration may have an idiosyncratic sensitivity to the neuronal effects of alcohol.
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PMID:Alcoholic cerebellar degeneration is not a dose-dependent phenomenon. 330 8

Ataxia disorders (or ataxias) include both hereditary and nonhereditary diseases of the cerebellum and spinal cord, all of which are clinically characterized by progressive ataxia. A distinction is made between ataxia disorders and focal diseases of the cerebellum (tumor, abscess, infarction, hemorrhage, demyelinating disease). Ataxias are classified according to the molecular causes, being divided into hereditary ataxias, sporadic degenerative ataxias, and acquired ataxias. The diagnostic tests to be applied should be selected to suit the individual clinical situation in each case. When a patient experiences disease onset before the age of 25 years and the disease affects only one generation autosomal recessive ataxias must be considered. If one of the patient's parents had a similar disease spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) with a dominant autosomal mode of inheritance is probable. Patients with sporadic disease starting in adulthood may have an acquired ataxia, such as alcoholic cerebellar degeneration (ACD) or paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration (PCD), or a sporadic degenerative ataxia, such as multiple system atrophy (MSA) or sporadic adult-onset ataxia (SAOA). Therapies based on the underlying molecular pathogenesis are available for a number of ataxia disorders.
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PMID:[Ataxias. Diagnostic procedure and treatment]. 1617 15

Alcoholic cerebellar degeneration (ACD) is a pivotal neurological complication in alcoholics. However, although there are a few autopsy reports and some data on its frequency, it is considered very rare in Japan. The aims of this study were (1) to estimate the frequency of the disease in Japanese autopsy cases, and (2) to examine the clinicopathological features of symptomatic and asymptomatic cases of ACD. We reviewed the records of 1,509 Japanese autopsies obtained from three autopsy series in Japan, and selected all 55 cases (3.6%) with alcoholism. On neuropathological reexamination, ACD was confirmed in six male alcoholics [0.4% of all subjects; 10.9% of all alcoholics; mean age at death 59.3+/-13.4 years (+/- SD)], including three asymptomatic cases. These frequencies were much lower than some previous Western findings, but more common than that has been expected in Japan. The frequencies of memory impairment and ataxia in ACD cases were significantly higher than those in alcoholics without any alcohol-related pathologies. In ACD cases, loss of Purkinje cells, narrowing of the width of the molecular layer, and tissue rarefaction in the granular layer were observed in the anterior and superior portions of the vermis of the cerebellum. In adjacent regions, the Purkinje cell and molecular layers were more mildly affected. The distribution of severely affected regions was more restricted in the asymptomatic cases than in the symptomatic cases. This study confirmed the frequency of asymptomatic cerebellar degeneration in alcoholics, suggesting that early intervention in alcoholism in the subclinical phase is important to prevent the development of cerebellar symptoms.
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PMID:Frequency and clinicopathological characteristics of alcoholic cerebellar degeneration in Japan: a cross-sectional study of 1,509 postmortems. 1662 56

Late cortical cerebellar atrophy (LCCA) is a neurodegenerative disease which presents with slowly progressive cerebellar ataxia as a prominent symptom and is characterized neuropathologically by a limited main lesion to the cerebellar cortex and inferior olivary nucleus. To elucidate the features of lesions in the cerebellar cortex and inferior olivary nucleus, four autopsy cases suffering from idiopathic LCCA without other cortical cerebellar atrophies, such as alcoholic cerebellar degeneration, phenytoin intoxication, or hereditary cerebellar atrophy including spinocerebellar ataxia type 6, were examined. All affected patients had identical distinct features of cerebellar cortical lesions. In all four cases, the most obvious pathological finding throughout the cerebellum was loss of Purkinje cells, but the rarefaction of granular cell layers was observed only where loss of Purkinje cells was very severe, and thinning of the molecular layer was seen only where the rarefaction of granular cell layers was moderate to severe. Two patients presented with vermis dominant cerebellar cortical lesions, but the other two patients showed hemispheric dominant pathological changes. Neuronal loss of the inferior olivary nucleus was observed in the three autopsy cases. Two of the three cases had a prominent lesion in the dorsal part of the inferior olive and the cerebellar cortical lesion disclosed the vermis dominance, but the other patient, showing prominent neuronal loss in the ventral olivary nucleus, had a cerebellar hemisphere dominant lesion. The patient without neuronal loss in the inferior olivary nucleus had suffered from a shorter period of disease than the others and the rarefaction of granular cell layers and narrowing of the molecular layer of the cerebellar cortex were mild. Therefore, it is obvious that there are two types of cerebellar cortex lesions in idiopathic LCCA; one is vermis dominant and the other is cerebellar hemispheric dominant. The lesion of the inferior olivary nucleus occurs as a secondary degeneration after rarefaction of the granular cell layer and thinning of the molecular layer of the cerebellar cortex progresses. Furthermore, the distribution of the degeneration in the inferior olivary nucleus depends on the distribution of the cerebellar cortex lesions.
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PMID:Distribution of cerebello-olivary degeneration in idiopathic late cortical cerebellar atrophy: clinicopathological study of four autopsy cases. 1818 34

The ataxias are a group of progressive neurodegenerative disorders with ataxia as the leading symptom. Current classifications distinguish between hereditary and non-hereditary ataxias. The hereditary ataxias are further divided into the autosomal recessive ataxias, the most frequent of which is Friedreich's ataxia, and the autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxias. The non-hereditary ataxias are separated into the acquired ataxias, such as alcoholic cerebellar degeneration or paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration, and the sporadic degenerative ataxias, such as multiple system atrophy or sporadic adult onset ataxia. The causative mutations of many hereditary ataxias have recently been identified. Therapies based on the knowledge of the underlying molecular pathogenesis are available for a number of ataxia disorders.
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PMID:Parkinsonism & related disorders. Ataxias. 1826 70

It is now widely accepted that in addition to motor coordination, the cerebellum is also involved in the modulation of cognitive and affective processes. Despite alcoholic cerebellar degeneration (ACD) being the most common form of cerebellar disorder, little systematic investigation of cerebellar-mediated cognitive and affective deficits has occurred in chronic alcoholics. Forty-nine chronic alcoholics and 29 healthy control participants underwent testing of cognitive and affective function, along with measurement of cerebellar ataxia using the International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale (Trouillas et al., Journal of the Neurological Sciences 145:205-11, 1997). The alcoholic group demonstrated significantly poorer performance as compared to the control group in a number of domains, including visuospatial and language skills, psychomotor speed, new learning and memory, executive functioning, and emotional regulation and affect processing. There were no differences between the alcoholic and control groups in immediate attention and working memory abilities. Years of heavy drinking and total period of abstinence were found to be the best predictors of cognitive and emotional function in the alcoholic group. After accounting for alcohol chronicity, there was still a relationship between the degree of clinical signs of ACD and some areas of cognitive and emotional functioning, including language, executive functioning, processing speed and affect processing. The results suggest that some of the cognitive and affective deficits observed in chronic alcoholics may be mediated, at least in part, by cerebellar dysfunction. These findings add support to the theory of disruption to bidirectional cerebro-cerebellar circuitry underlying cognitive and affective deficits in chronic alcoholics.
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PMID:Cognitive and emotional deficits in chronic alcoholics: a role for the cerebellum? 2343 3

The diagnosis of sporadic adult onset ataxia is a challenging task since a large collection of hereditary and non-hereditary disorders should be taken into consideration. Sporadic adult onset ataxias include degenerative non-hereditary, hereditary, and acquired ataxias. Multiple system atrophy and idiopathic late cerebellar ataxia are degenerative non-hereditary ataxias. Late-onset Friedreich's ataxia, spinocerebellar ataxia type 6 and 2, and fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome account for most sporadic hereditary ataxias. Alcoholic cerebellar degeneration, paraneoplastic and other autoimmune cerebellar degeneration, vitamin deficiencies, and toxic-induced and infectious cerebellar syndrome are the main causes of acquired cerebellar degeneration. The diagnostic approach should include a history taking, disease progression, general and neurological examination, brain MRI, and laboratory and genetic tests. Novel opportunities in massive gene sequencing will increase the likelihood to define true etiologies.
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PMID:Degenerative and acquired sporadic adult onset ataxia. 3125 83

Marie et al. (1922) first proposed a disease entity "late cortical cerebellar atrophy (LCCA)", which is characterized neuropathologically by pure cerebello-olivary degeneration. LCCA was originally described as sporadic, late-onset, pure cerebellar ataxia of unknown etiology; however, it has occasionally been used to denote familial or secondary ataxias, particularly alcoholic cerebellar degeneration. Sporadic ataxia is classified mainly into LCCA or CCA and olivo-ponto-cerebellar atrophy (OPCA) in Japan. OPCA, now multiple system atrophy with predominant cerebellar ataxia, has characteristic brain imaging features and is clearly diagnosed based on the consensus criteria. On the other hand, there is no specific biomarker for LCCA/CCA, and neuropathological examination is required for a definitive diagnosis. Therefore, the clinical diagnosis of LCCA/CCA depends on the exclusion of other diseases manifesting as cerebellar ataxia. However the differential diagnosis for LCCA/CCA is not necessarily made carefully. As a result, the LCCA/CCA category in Japan is a "waste basket," including OPCA, hereditary ataxias, and secondary ataxias, which are unidentified yet. To refine the LCCA/CCA category, we proposed the clinically-defined term "idiopathic cerebellar ataxia (IDCA)" and established its diagnostic criteria. By nationwide screening, we have identified 51 patients with probable IDCA according to the criteria so far. Here we review the clinical characteristics of IDCA patients.
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PMID:[Cortical Cerebellar Atrophy and Idiopathic Cerebellar Ataxia: Nomenclature and Diagnostic Approach]. 3293 81


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