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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We studied three large kindreds with the
HLA
-linked form of spinocerebellar
ataxia
(SCA1) in order to localize the SCA1 locus on the short arm of chromosome 6 (6p). Two loci containing highly informative dinucleotide repeat sequences were used for linkage analysis. These two loci are D6S89, which is telomeric to the
HLA
region, and T complex-associated testes-expressed 1 (TCTE1), centromeric to
HLA
. Pairwise linkage analysis of SCA1 and D6S89 revealed a maximum lod score of 5.86 in the Houston SCA1 (HSCA1) kindred and of 8.08 in the Calabrian SCA1 (SCA1) kindreds, at recombination fractions of .050 and .022, respectively. A maximum pairwise lod score of 4.54 at a recombination frequency of .100 was obtained for SCA1 and TCTE1 in the HSCA1 kindred. No evidence for linkage was detected between TCTE1 and SCA1 in the CSCA1 kindreds. Multilocus linkage analysis of SCA1,
HLA
, and D6S89 in all three kindreds provided strong evidence for localization of the SCA1 locus telomeric to the
HLA
regions. However, multilocus linkage analysis of SCA1,
HLA
, and TCTE1 with HSCA1 family genotypes indicated the possibility of a location of the SCA1 locus centromeric to
HLA
. An analysis of HSCA1 recombinants in this region of chromosome 6 revealed relatively high recombination frequencies between
HLA
and each of the other two markers and relatively low frequencies between the latter and SCA1, predicting that the SCA1 locus would tend to segregate away from
HLA
together with D6S89 or TCTE1, as found with the three-point linkage analyses for this family.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:The gene for autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA1) maps telomeric to the HLA complex and is closely linked to the D6S89 locus in three large kindreds. 206 71
Two families with autosomal dominant spinocerebellar
ataxia
(SCA) of late onset were studied. These families originate in the same small rural area in a Southern Italian region (Calabria). We report the clinical study of 23 patients in different stages of the disease and neuropathological study in one patient. Linkage studies provided strong evidence for linkage of the SCA locus to the
HLA
loci (SCA1) in the subjects of these families. Our study allows to outline the clinical features of
HLA
linked SCA in order to trace a pattern of SCA1 phenotype thus making easier the identification of SCA1 heterozygotes in an early clinical stage.
...
PMID:[Clinical study of two families with late-onset autosomal dominant spinal-cerebellar ataxia linked with HLA. Preliminary results]. 210 35
A family of German extraction with progressive
ataxia
, eye movement abnormalities, peripheral sensory loss, and spinal muscular atrophy of adult onset is described. Three members came to autopsy, and neuropathologically, the major changes included varying degrees of atrophy of the basis pontis and degeneration of the spinocerebellar tracts, Clarke's columns, anterior horn neurons, and fasciculus gracilis. The dentate nucleus was spared, and there was slight neuron loss from the substantia nigra in one patient. Clinically and neuropathologically, our family resembles that reported by Boller and Segarra as having spinopontine atrophy. However, several kindreds with similar findings have recently been described as having Azorean or Machado-Joseph disease in non-Portuguese families. Comparison of clinical and neuropathological features in spinopontine atrophy and Machado-Joseph disease, both in Portuguese and non-Portuguese families, reveals clinical and pathological similarities and differences between the two. The major differences in our patients include only minor extraocular movement abnormality and absence of protuberant eyes, and muscular rigidity clinically, and the sparing of the substantia nigra and the dentate nucleus neuropathologically. These differences suggest that spinopontine atrophy, as manifested in our family, is distinct from Machado-Joseph disease. Our family showed no linkage to the
HLA
locus on chromosome 6.
...
PMID:Family with dominantly inherited ataxia, amyotrophy, and peripheral sensory loss. Spinopontine atrophy or Machado-Joseph Azorean disease in another non-Portuguese family? 239 38
Observation of neurosarcoidosis in a thirty-year-old black female characterised predominantly by bilateral facial nerve paralysis gave rise to a review of literature since 1978 and also to a comparison with an early study in 1963. As described 1963 the clinical picture is characterized by increased protein content of the CSF (33.8%), facial nerve paresis (25.5%), pleocytosis (23%), diabetes insipidus (21%), hemiparesis (17.2%), organic psychosis (16.9%), papilloedema (15.5%),
ataxia
(13%), convulsive seizures (12.5%), optic atrophy (12.5%), loss of hearing (12.2%), nystagmus (8.6%) and numerous other symptoms more rarely found. This corresponds to the symptoms of chronic basal meningitis with an infiltration in the neighbouring structures of brain and less frequently the spinal cord. In only 58.7% of the cases (presumably at the onset of sarcoidosis) was the bronchial tract (or the lungs) affected, in 11.5% the skin or the eyes. Although the clinical picture is clear enough the etiology has yet to be determined. Evidence of a pathogen or a pathogenic agent (analogous to berylliosis) has never been established to date. On the other hand there are some indications of a disturbance in the immune system, perhaps of a particular genetic foundation since sarcoidosis strikes black patients with conspicuous frequency. There exist more cases in one family. Exceeding expected random distribution, many patients have the
HLA
-Factor B 8 (on the chromosome 6) and DR 3. The Kveim-Test was in 71 cases positive, in 12 cases negative. The possibilities of carrying out studies of CSF - analogous to the studies of bronchial lavage - in the most cases of neurosarcoidosis have not been exhausted as to determine the activity of the T-lymphocytes, the interleucines, the angiotensin-converting enzyme while the Gallium 67 scintigraphy and other methods to determine the non-specific activity of the inflammation. The efficiency of the treatment with corticosteroids (Prednison or Triamcinolonacetonid) depends of the phase of the inflammatory process. 12% of the registered cases died.
...
PMID:[Neurosarcoidosis. Comparative analysis of the clinical profile based on 537 cases from the world literature up to 1963 and from 1976-1988]. 240 26
A 7-generation kindred with the
HLA
-linked form of spinocerebellar
ataxia
(SCA1) was studied to determine whether the SCA1 gene maps centromeric or telomeric to the
HLA
loci. The DNA markers flanking the
HLA
-(A-B) region were used for polymorphism studies and multilocus linkage analysis. These two markers are the cDNA for the beta-subunit of HLA-DP, which is centromeric to
HLA
-(A-B), and the cDNA for coagulation factor XIIIa (F13A), which is telomeric to
HLA
-(A-B). Haplotypes were constructed using multiple polymorphisms for these two DNA markers, and pairwise linkage analysis revealed a maximum lod score of 2.18 for SCA1 versus HLA-DP at a recombination fraction of .05 and a maximum lod score of 0 for SCA1 versus F13A at a recombination fraction of .50. A possible crossover between
HLA
-(A-B) and HLA-DP was identified, but lack of samples from key individuals hampered the analysis. To clarify the phase and improve the analysis, the two chromosomes 6 for the crossover individual were separated in somatic cell hybrids. The results strongly favored the probability that the crossover occurred between
HLA
-(A-B-DR) and HLA-DP with SCA1 segregating with HLA-DP, consistent with a location centromeric to
HLA
-(A-B). Multilocus linkage analysis was used to evaluate further the location of SCA1 relative to F13A,
HLA
-(A-B), and HLA-DP; the results indicated that the SCA1 gene locus is centromeric to HLA-DP with odds of 46:1 favoring this most likely location over the second most likely location, i.e., telomeric to
HLA
-(A-B) between the
HLA
complex and F13A.
...
PMID:Assignment of autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA1) centromeric to the HLA region on the short arm of chromosome 6, using multilocus linkage analysis. 256 95
One of 4 siblings affected by hereditary spinocerebellar
ataxia
(HSCA) of Marie's type developed Hodgkin's disease (HD): the stage was IV B, the patient was submitted to conventional chemo- and radiotherapy and achieved complete remission. An accurate clinical, genetic and immunological study was carried out on all his family, including a complete
HLA
typing, a chromosome study, the immunophenotyping of peripheral blood mononuclear cells (PBMC), the PBMC response to polyclonal mitogens, to interleukin 2 (IL-2), to the association of PHA + IL-2 and the evaluation of the IL-2 receptor expression. No association was clearly demonstrable between an
HLA
haplotype and HSCA, while the patient with HSCA and HD was HLA-B18- and DQw3-positive (the last at homozygous level), two antigens known to be strongly associated with HD, mainly among the Sardinian ethnic group. The mode of inheritance of HD susceptibility is however completely different from that of Marie's HSCA. The chromosome study did not show any characteristic pattern of the karyotype, neither of the HSCA affected nor of the unaffected members. The immunological investigations did not elucidate any characteristic behavior of the family members, apart from the typical findings of HD seen on patients with HSCA and HD. Our study could not demonstrate any genetic and/or immunologic common background shared by the two diseases, HSCA and HD. Their coexistence in our patient, although the statistic probability is very low, seems to be a fortuitous coincidence more than the result of a common genetic and pathogenetic mechanism.
...
PMID:Hodgkin's disease presenting in 1 of 4 siblings affected by hereditary spinocerebellar ataxia: clinical, immunological and genetic study. 278 67
Five families with at least three generations of members affected with autosomal dominant spinocerebellar
ataxia
(SCA) were studied.
HLA
typing was carried out and the coded
HLA
haplotypes were used to calculate the likelihood of linkage using the LIPED computer program. The combined lod scores from these five families does not, by itself, support linkage. Negative lod scores were observed in all five families, however, when pooled with the previously published data significant lod scores were obtained [Z = 3.343 (theta = 0.20) and +4.286 (theta = 0.30)]. In four families, affected members had clinical features consistent with autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia (ADCA) type I while in the fifth, ADCA type II was suggested. Clinical heterogeneity within ADCA raises doubts about the significance of summed lod scores. In view of the previous reports probably two genetically heterogeneous types of ADCA exist --
HLA
linked and nonlinked.
...
PMID:Hereditary cerebellar ataxia and genetic linkage with HLA. 345 60
Because linkage has been reported between
HLA
and the locus for hereditary ataxia in some families, we studied a 3-generation kindred in which several individuals had dominantly inherited spinopontine atrophy. Affected family members had upper and lower limb
ataxia
, hypoactive reflexes, loss of proprioception, dysarthria, dysphagia, and pronounced extraocular movement abnormalities. Linkage analysis, based on 25 markers in 28 people, gave strongly negative results with both
HLA
(z less than -2.0 for theta less than 0.15) and GLO1 (z less than -2.0, theta less than or equal to 0.01). The highest LOD score was for linkage to GPT on chromosome 16 (z = 0.42, theta = 0.0). To assess the relationship between
HLA
linkage and phenotype, 4 published kindreds with adequate clinical and neuropathological descriptions were used for comparison to the present family. Persons in the 3 families showing evidence for
HLA
linkage had clinical and pathologic changes consistent with olivopontocerebellar atrophy, type 1. The conditions in the 2 "nonlinked" families were phenotypically distinct from the
HLA
-linked condition with respect to extraocular movement findings and peripheral sensory nervous system signs. They differed markedly from each other in neuropathologic changes.
...
PMID:Linkage analysis in spinopontine atrophy: correlation of HLA linkage with phenotypic findings in hereditary ataxia. 347 98
We studied a large kindred with autosomal dominant spinocerebellar
ataxia
(SCA) to assess reproductive performance, the impact of genetic counseling, and linkage relationships of the SCA locus. Reproduction was not lower in those with SCA than in unaffected sibs or first cousins. Genetic counseling reduced reproduction during the risk period for development of SCA. Given autosomal dominant transmission of a single gene, we found strong evidence that the locus for SCA in this kindred is linked to the
HLA
loci.
...
PMID:Spinocerebellar ataxia in a large kindred: age at onset, reproduction, and genetic linkage studies. 650 24
Dominantly inherited spinocerebellar
ataxia
(OPCA 1) poses a particular problem for genetic counseling due to late age of onset. Liability for disease using observed age of onset can be combined with
HLA
linkage data to provide revised estimates of risk for affection. Where data is informative, certain combinations may yield estimates which improve so rapidly with age that postponement of childbearing may become a strong consideration as an option.
...
PMID:Dominant spinocerebellar ataxia: genetic counseling. 668 42
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