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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We describe eight patients from three families presenting with myoclonus,
ataxia
, infrequent seizures and minimal
intellectual impairment
. All were Arabs from different parts of the Arabian peninsula. The new consensus on terminology, genetic and clinical definition of Baltic myoclonus, Ramsay Hunt syndrome and Unverricht-Lundborg disease suggests that our group are best categorised under the term of progressive myoclonic
ataxia
of the Unverricht-Lundborg type. Moreover, this report reinforces the existence of this syndrome outside Scandinavia.
...
PMID:Progressive myoclonic ataxia without ragged red fibres: Unverricht-Lundborg disease vs Ramsay Hunt syndrome. 133 90
Analysis of the neurologic symptomatology in 22 patients with Niemann-Pick disease type C revealed 3 phenotypes: (1) an early-onset, rapidly progressive form associated with severe hepatic dysfunction and psychomotor delay during infancy and later with supranuclear vertical gaze paresis,
ataxia
, marked spasticity, and dementia; (2) a delayed-onset, slowly progressive form heralded by the appearance, usually in early childhood, of mild
intellectual impairment
, supranuclear vertical gaze paresis, and
ataxia
, and later associated with dementia and, variably, seizures and extrapyramidal deficits; (3) a late-onset slowly progressive form distinguished from the 2nd pattern by later age of onset (adolescence or adulthood) and a much slower rate of progression. The existence of the 1st and 2nd phenotypes within the same sibship suggests that they are variant expressions of the same clinicopathologic disorder. Niemann-Pick disease type C should be considered not only in infants and children who present with organomegaly and a progressive neurodegenerative course, but also in adolescents and adults who have insidiously progressive neurologic dysfunction and only slight organomegaly. Associated with the disease is a marked deficiency in the ability of cultured fibroblasts to esterify exogenously supplied cholesterol. Assay of this deficiency is particularly useful for confirming the diagnosis in patients with atypical presentation.
...
PMID:Clinical spectrum of Niemann-Pick disease type C. 276 97
Eleven patients with acquired cerebellar degeneration (10 of whom had paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration [PCD]) were evaluated using neuropsychological tests and 18F-fluorodeoxyglucose/positron emission tomography to (1) quantify motor, cognitive, and metabolic abnormalities; (2) determine if characteristic alterations in the regional cerebral metabolic rate for glucose (rCMRGlc) are associated with PCD; and (3) correlate behavioral and metabolic measures of disease severity. Eighteen volunteer subjects served as normal controls. Although some PCD neuropsychological test scores were abnormal, these results could not, in general, be dissociated from the effects of dysarthria and
ataxia
. rCMRGlc was reduced in patients with PCD (versus normal control subjects) in all regions except the brainstem. Analysis of patient and control rCMRGlc data using a mathematical model of regional metabolic interactions revealed two metabolic pattern descriptors, SSF1 and SSF2, which distinguished patients with PCD from normal control subjects; SSF2, which described a metabolic coupling between cerebellum, cuneus, and posterior temporal, lateral frontal, and paracentral cortex, correlated with quantitative indices of cerebellar dysfunction. Our inability to document substantial
intellectual impairment
in 7 of 10 patients with PCD contrasts with the 50% incidence of dementia in PCD reported by previous investigators. Widespread reductions in PCD rCMRGlc may result from the loss of cerebellar efferents to thalamus and forebrain structures, a "reverse cerebellar diaschisis."
...
PMID:The metabolic anatomy of paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration. 326 71
We report two siblings with a mitochondrial encephalomyopathy. The syndrome was characterized by
ataxia
,
intellectual impairment
, myoclonic jerks, rare seizures, and small stature. Muscle biopsy specimens showed abnormal accumulations of mitochondria and lipid droplets. Biochemical studies on muscle demonstrated decreased succinate-cytochrome c reductase activity in the mitochondrial respiratory chain.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with decreased succinate-cytochrome c reductase activity. 631 58
This report describes a patient with degenerative type of progressive myoclonus epilepsy (PME), who showed slowly progressive deterioration of the central nervous system;
intellectual impairment
, dysarthria, and involuntary movements, particularly action myoclonus and dystonia. The patient was a 19-year-old woman who had no hereditary factors. At the age of 4, she developed action myoclonus in the upper limbs bilaterally. Her condition became gradually worse, and at the age of 15, she was admitted to our hospital because of involuntary movement in the upper limbs. First physical examination revealed mild mental retardation, action myoclonus, dystonia, and delayed adolescence. As giant SEP characteristic of PME and Ramsay Hunt syndrome was found, she was tentatively diagnosed as having Ramsay Hunt syndrome without epilepsy, and delayed adolescence. Now, she is 19 years old, and unable to walk alone because of involuntary movements and paralysis. But she has not developed epilepsy. As she has not been compatible with progressive myoclonus epilepsy (PME) and progressive myoclonic
ataxia
(PMA) classified by Marseille Consensus Group, she has been diagnosed as having an atypical PME syndrome.
...
PMID:[A case of degenerative type of progressive myoclonus epilepsy]. 841
We describe a case of a patient with Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) characterized by a rapid clinical course lasting one and a half months, by: presence of focal dystonic movements at onset, absence of mental deterioration in the period preceding the impairment of consciousness,
ataxia
, myoclonus and periodic EEG abnormalities. The autopsy confirmed subacute spongiform encephalopathy, but no evident neuronal loss was observed. An acute clinical course of CJD may explain this latter histological finding which, in turn, probably provides an explanation for the absence of
intellectual impairment
.
...
PMID:Rapidly progressive form of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease without dementia: a case report. 870 72
We report the clinicopathological features of 203 cases of pathologically proven multiple system atrophy (MSA) from 108 publications up to February 1995. The majority of patients showed symptoms in their early fifties, and men were more commonly affected than women (ratio of 1.3:1). Most patients suffered from some degree of autonomic failure (74%). Parkinsonism was the most common motor disorder (87%), followed by cerebellar ataxia (54%) and pyramidal signs (49%). The response to levodopa was poor in most patients, but there was a subgroup with a good response, who also often developed axial levodopa-induced dyskinesias. Other characteristic features included severe dysarthria, stridor, and, in a few patients, contractures and dystonia (antecollis). Mild or moderate
intellectual impairment
occurred in some cases, but severe dementing illness was most unusual. The main pathological change comprised cell loss and gliosis in the putamen, caudate nucleus, external pallidum, substantia nigra, locus ceruleus, inferior olives, pontine nuclei, cerebellar Purkinje cells, and intermediolateral cell columns of the spinal cord. However, other neuronal populations were also involved to varying degrees, such as the thalamus, vestibular nucleus, dorsal vagal nucleus, corticospinal tracts, and anterior horn cells. Characteristic glial and/or neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions were identified in all cases in which they were sought, irrespective of clinical presentation. Akinesia correlated with the degree of nigral and putaminal cell loss, whereas rigidity was related only to the later. Tremor was unrelated to cell loss at any site.
Ataxia
correlated with the degree of olivopontocerebellar atrophy. Pyramidal signs were associated with pyramidal tract pallor. Our analysis also confirmed an association of postural hypotension with intermediolateral cell column degeneration.
...
PMID:Multiple system atrophy: a review of 203 pathologically proven cases. 908 71
This is one of the first studies assessing the pattern of cognitive impairment in spinocerebellar
ataxia
2 (SCA2). Cognitive function was studied in 17 patients with genetically confirmed SCA2 and 15 age- and IQ- matched controls using a neuropsychological test battery comprising tests for IQ, attention, verbal and visuospatial memory, as well as executive functions. Twenty-five percent of the SCA2 subjects showed evidence of dementia. Even in non-demented SCA2 subjects, there was evidence of verbal memory and executive dysfunction. Tests of visuospatial memory and attention were not significantly impaired in the non-demented group compared with controls. There was no relationship between test performance and motor disability, repeat length or age of onset, while disease duration was shown to be inversely correlated with two tests reflecting the progression of cognitive deficits during the course of the disease.
Intellectual impairment
should therefore not be interpreted as a secondary effect of progressive motor disability, but represents an important and independent part of the SCA2 phenotype.
...
PMID:Cognitive deficits in spinocerebellar ataxia 2. 1021 87
A consanguineous family affected by an autosomal recessive, progressive neurodegenerative Huntington-like disorder, was tested to rule out juvenile-onset Huntington disease (JHD). The disease manifests at approximately 3-4 years and is characterized by both pyramidal and extrapyramidal abnormalities, including chorea, dystonia,
ataxia
, gait instability, spasticity, seizures, mutism, and
intellectual impairment
. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings include progressive frontal cortical atrophy and bilateral caudate atrophy. Huntington CAG trinucleotide-repeat analyses ruled out JHD, since all affected individuals had repeat numbers within the normal range. The presence of only four recombinant events (straight theta=.2) between the disease and the Huntington locus in 20 informative meioses suggested that the disease localized to chromosome 4. Linkage was initially achieved with marker D4S2366 at 4p15.3 (LOD 3.03). High-density mapping at the linked locus resulted in homozygosity for markers D4S431 and D4S394, which span a 3-cM region. A maximum LOD score of 4.71 in the homozygous interval was obtained. Heterozygosity at the distal D4S2366 and proximal D4S2983 markers defines the maximum localization interval (7 cM). Multiple brain-related expressed sequence tags (ESTs) with no known disease association exist in the linkage interval. Among the three known genes residing in the linked interval (ACOX3, DRD5, QDPR), the most likely candidate, DRD5, encoding the dopamine receptor D5, was excluded, since all five affected family members were heterozygous for an intragenic dinucleotide repeat. The inheritance pattern and unique localization to 4p15.3 are consistent with the identification of a novel, autosomal recessive, neurodegenerative Huntington-like disorder.
...
PMID:Localization of the gene for a novel autosomal recessive neurodegenerative Huntington-like disorder to 4p15.3. 1084 1
Cerebellar ataxia and hypergonadotropic hypogonadism comprise a rare and presumably heterogeneous association. Inheritance in most cases appears to be autosomal recessive, and associated features include deafness,
intellectual impairment
, and neuropathy. Typically, onset of
ataxia
is in the first decade and hypogonadism results in primary amenorrhoea in females. We describe two sisters with a previously undescribed pattern of adult onset progressive cerebellar ataxia and secondary amenorrhoea due to hypergonadotropic hypogonadism. Sensorineural deafness with vestibular hypofunction and peripheral sensory impairment were also present, and intellect was normal. Onset of neurological symptoms was in the third decade, with secondary amenorrhoea occurring at the ages of 16 and 32 years, respectively. The association of
ataxia
and hypergonadotropic hypergonadism has been classified both as a variant of Holmes type
ataxia
and as a variant of Perrault syndrome, but we suggest the use of a separate category of
ataxia
with hypergonadotropic hypogonadism.
...
PMID:New variant of familial cerebellar ataxia with hypergonadotropic hypogonadism and sensorineural deafness. 1117 90
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