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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report a right-handed 34-year-old woman with diffuse muscle atrophy. The patient was a full-term infant of uneventful delivery, however, motor milestones were delayed in that neck control was obtained at 10 months of the age and she started to walk unassisted at 2 years of the age. Mental development was normal. She was unable to run with her mates at her kindergarten and she required a handrail when she walk up the stairs. She could not close her mouth completely at the primary school. She was unable to use a straw as a middle school pupil. Recently, she noted difficulty in raising her head from the supine position, and has become unable to walk a long distance. She was admitted to our hospital in September 17, 1994 when she was 34-year-old. On admission, general physical examination revealed that she looked slender weighing 38 kg with 149.5 cm height. She showed a high arched palate, slight
scoliosis
, and pes equinus. Otherwise general physical examination was unremarkable. Upon neurologic examination, she was alert and well oriented. Cranial nerves were unremarkable except for bilateral facial atrophy and moderate weakness. Her voice was of nasal quality, and swallowing was slightly difficult. No atrophy was noted in the sternocleidomastoid muscle. She showed waddling gait and positive Gowers' sign. Diffuse muscle atrophy was noted and mild to moderate weakness was presented more in the proximal part in both upper and lower extremities, however, deltoid muscles retained normal power. No
ataxia
was noted. All the deep tendon reflexes were lost. Sensation was intact. Routine laboratory examination was unremarkable. Serum CK was 56 IU/l. Electromyography revealed myogenic changes in the deltoid, biceps, and quadriceps muscles. A diagnostic biopsy was performed in the left biceps brachii muscle. The patient was discussed in the neurologic CPC, and the chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had nemaline myopathy. Opinions were divided among nemaline myopathy, central core disease, and congenital fiber type disproportion. Histologic examination of the biopsied specimen revealed marked atrophy of type 1 muscle fibers; many central nuclei were seen in the type 1 fibers. Approximately 70% of the muscle fibers were type 1 fibers. No nemaline rods or central cores were noted. Histologic appearance was consistent with the diagnosis of congenital fiber type disproportion.
...
PMID:[A 34-year-old woman with delayed motor milestones, high arched palate, and proximal muscle weakness]. 875 5
Angelman syndrome (AS) is characterized by severe psychomotor retardation, speech impairment, happy disposition with bursts of laughter,
ataxia
, convulsions, and some distinct physical anomalies. Correct diagnosis of AS is important because of its clinical implications, and once the disease is confirmed, familial genetic counseling becomes crucial. We evaluated 22 patients with a putative diagnosis of AS by both clinical and molecular cytogenetic analysis. A deletion of the region 15q11-13 could be identified cytogenetically in 11 cases by high-resolution technique (group I). Four additional cases were confirmed by fluorescence in situ hybridization (FISH) study with D15S11, SNRPN, D15S10, and GABRB 3 [Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS)/AS region probes] (group II). The common deletion of GABRB 3 was documented in those AS cases (n = 15) by FISH. The other 7 cases exhibited no deletion over 15q11-13 at either the cytogenetic or molecular level (group III). We compared the following associated neurological disorders: convulsions and abnormal EEG, microcephaly, sleep and behavior problems, brain anomalies proved by image studies, sexual precocity with pineal tumor among the three groups, as well as other clinical conditions including congenital heart disease, obesity,
scoliosis
, and hypopigmentation. In the present study, the differences in neurological and facial characteristics were not distinct among these groups. However, the associated conditions were more frequently observed in the patients with deletion than in those without deletion. The EEG features of AS appear to be less sufficient in helping identify patients at an early age before the clinical features become obvious. Therefore, a region involved in the major As phenotypes may contain only one or more tightly contiguous genes around the GABRB 3 locus, which may explain the clinical heterogeneity in AS.
...
PMID:Angelman syndrome assessed by neurological and molecular cytogenetic investigations. 904 96
Familial dysautonomia (FD) is a rare autosomal recessive disease occurring in Jews of Ashkenazi descent, with only some 500 recognized cases. The causative gene was identified on chromosome 9. FD is of considerable orthopedic interest, because of the prevalence of skeletal deformity. About 90% of surviving dysautonomic children will develop a spinal curvature, commonly a
scoliosis
. The scoliotic curve is usually kyphotic rather than lordotic, and appears during the first decade of life. Fifty-one of the 90 reported cases of familial dysautonomia in Israel involved patients who were seen at the
scoliosis
clinic for assessment and treatment of their spinal deformities. Most of the patients presented with a scoliotic deformity associated in 37 cases with an increased thoracic kyphosis. In our series orthotic treatment and physiotherapy were found to be minimally successful at best. Surgical treatment of the spine was performed in 13 of 51 patients in this series. A retrospective review of these patients' charts and radiographs was carried out. Six years of follow-up are reported. The primary indication for surgery was progression of the spinal curve. Only posterior spinal fusions were performed. Anterior transthoracic procedures were avoided in spite of the significance of the kyphotic deformity, because of the frequency of pulmonary complications. Harrington distraction and compression instrumentation was used. Three-millimeter compression rods were used in a distraction mode in thin, young children. "Harri-Luque" segmental sublaminar wiring technique and Wisconsin spinous process segmental wiring was used in some. In all cases, the spine fusion was supplemented by bank bone only, to avoid the additional trauma of graft removal. We believe that surgical intervention is advantageous, if done early in the evolution of spinal deformity. Greater technical difficulties and a higher complication rate were encountered in this series relative to the problems usually seen after spinal deformity surgery in children; this is all the more important in a disease in which general anesthesia is an additional major complicating factor. It is hoped that the improved physical condition now seen after early gastrostomy and fundoplication will aid in reducing this high complication rate. Only a small degree (about 25%) of correction was achieved in the majority of patients. Some of this apparent rigidity derived from the inability to apply sufficient instrumental corrective force because of the friable osteoporotic bone. After surgery, there was a marked decrease in the frequency of pneumonia and an improvement in the degree of
ataxia
, for reasons not understood, which led to an obvious improvement in the quality of life.
...
PMID:Aspects of spinal deformity in familial dysautonomia (Riley-Day syndrome). 909 25
Osteogenesis imperfecta (OI) is a heritable disorder of bone development caused by defective collagen synthesis. Basilar invagination is an uncommon but devastating complication of this disease. The authors present a comprehensive strategy for management of craniovertebral anomalies associated with OI and related osteochondrodysplasias. Twenty-five patients with congenital osteochondrodysplasias (18 OI, four Hajdu-Cheney syndrome, and three spondyloepiphyseal dysplasia) and basilar invagination were evaluated between 1985 and 1995. The male/female ratio in this cohort was 1:1. The mean age at presentation was 11.9 years (range 13 months-20 years). Fourteen patients (56%) presented during adolescence (11-15 years of age). Symptoms and signs included headache (76%), lower cranial nerve dysfunction (68%), hyperreflexia (56%), quadriparesis (48%),
ataxia
(32%), nystagmus (28%), and
scoliosis
(20%). Four patients (16%) were asymptomatic. Seven (28%) had undergone previous posterior fossa decompression; one had also undergone ventral decompression. Imaging findings included basilar invagination (100%), ventral brainstem compression (84%), hydrocephalus (32%), hindbrain herniation (28%), and syringomyelia/syringobulbia (16%). Patients with hydrocephalus underwent ventricular shunt placement. Reducible basilar invagination (40%) was treated with posterior fossa decompression and occipitocervical fusion. Those with irreducible ventral compression (60%) underwent transoral-transpalatopharyngeal decompression followed by occipitocervical fusion. All patients improved initially. However, basilar invagination progressed radiographically in 80% (symptomatic in 24%) despite successful fusion. Prolonged external orthotic immobilization with the modified Minerva brace afforded symptomatic improvement and arrested progression of the deformity. The mean follow-up period was 5.9 years (range 1.1-10.5 years). Ventral brainstem compression in OI should be treated with ventral decompression, followed by occipitocervical fusion with contoured loop instrumentation to prevent further squamooccipital infolding. Despite fusion, however, basilar invagination tends to progress. Prolonged immobilization (particularly during adolescence) may stabilize symptoms and halt further invagination. This study represents the largest series to date addressing craniovertebral anomalies in OI and related congenital bone softening disorders.
...
PMID:Basilar invagination in osteogenesis imperfecta and related osteochondrodysplasias: medical and surgical management. 917 Nov 73
We report an autosomal recessive form of
ataxia
that is not allelic to Friedreich's disease in six individuals from a large kindred with family origins traced to a common founder of German-Swiss descent. The disorder begins during early childhood with a concentric contraction of the visual fields and proprioceptive loss. Eventually blindness, a severe sensory
ataxia
, achalasia,
scoliosis
, and inanition develop by third decade. Inversion recovery MRIs of the spinal cord in affected individuals demonstrate a hyperintense signal in the posterior columns. Finding the gene responsible for this disorder may aid in our understanding of the mechanisms that cause sensory neuronal degeneration.
...
PMID:An autosomal recessive disorder with posterior column ataxia and retinitis pigmentosa. 985 54
Muscle spindles are skeletal muscle sensory organs that provide axial and limb position information (proprioception) to the central nervous system. Spindles consist of encapsulated muscle fibers (intrafusal fibers) that are innervated by specialized motor and sensory axons. Although the molecular mechanisms involved in spindle ontogeny are poorly understood, the innervation of a subset of developing myotubes (type I) by peripheral sensory afferents (group Ia) is a critical event for inducing intrafusal fiber differentiation and subsequent spindle formation. The Egr family of zinc-finger transcription factors, whose members include Egr1 (NGFI-A), Egr2 (Krox-20), Egr3 and Egr4 (NGFI-C), are thought to regulate critical genetic programs involved in cellular growth and differentiation (refs 4-8, and W.G.T. et al., manuscript submitted). Mice deficient in Egr3 were generated by gene targeting and had gait
ataxia
, increased frequency of perinatal mortality,
scoliosis
, resting tremors and ptosis. Although extrafusal skeletal muscle fibers appeared normal, Egr3-deficient animals lacked muscle spindles, a finding that is consistent with their profound gait
ataxia
. Egr3 was highly expressed in developing muscle spindles, but not in Ia afferent neurons or their terminals during developmental periods that coincided with the induction of spindle morphogenesis by sensory afferent axons. These results indicate that type I myotubes are dependent upon Egr3-mediated transcription for proper spindle development.
...
PMID:Sensory ataxia and muscle spindle agenesis in mice lacking the transcription factor Egr3. 973 39
We describe 2 new cases of Alexander's disease, the first to be reported in Belgium. The first patient, a 4-year-old girl, presented with progressive megalencephaly, mental retardation, spastic tetraparesis,
ataxia
and epilepsy: post-mortem examination showed widespread myelin loss with Rosenthal fibers (RFs) accumulation throughout the neuraxis. She was the third of heterozygotic twins, the 2 others having developed normally and being alive at age 5 years. The second patient developed at age 10 years and over a decade spastic paraparesis, palatal myoclonus, nystagmus, thoracic hyperkyphosis and thoraco-lumbar
scoliosis
with radiological findings of bilateral anterior leukoencephalopathy. Brain stereotactic biopsy at age 16 years demonstrated numerous RFs. With these 2 cases, we review the literature on the various clinico-pathological conditions reported as Alexander's disease. We discuss the nosology of this entity and the pathogeny of RFs formation and dysmyelination. Clues to the diagnosis of this encephalopathy in the living patient are briefly described.
...
PMID:Infantile and juvenile presentations of Alexander's disease: a report of two cases. 1010 Sep 59
The Chiari malformation, condition characterized by herniation of posterior fossa contents below the level of foramen magnum coexists very often with solitary or multiple syringomyelic cysts in spinal cord. The authors, on the basis of current opinions presented in literature and an own case present considerations concerning pathogenesis, operative procedures and prognostic factures which are of value in prediction of long-term outcome in patients which Chiari type I-Syringomyelia complex. The presence or absence of three preoperative signs as: muscular atrophy,
ataxia
and
scoliosis
facilitate, with confidence of 95%, prediction of long-term postoperative result. Preoperative incidence of all three above signs is much less favourable for outcome. In the presented case all unfavourable signs were observed preoperatively and, despite of good MRI-result, long-term outcome was only fair.
...
PMID:[Type I Chiari malformation coexisting with syringomyelia: pathogenesis, treatment choice and prognostic factors for remote outcome in the light of own case]. 1035 45
The Chiari malformations are a group of central nervous system defects that involve the posterior cranial fossa. The clinical complaints range from headache, sensory changes, vertigo,
ataxia
, and imbalance to hearing loss. In patients with Chiari malformation, only those with type I malformation were born grossly normal, the neurological dysfunction developing gradually as they grew up, which spurred our interest. From August 1990 to September 1998, seven patients received surgical intervention at Kaohsiung Medical College Hospital under the impression of Chiari malformations. There were 4 males and 3 females, with age ranging from 7 years to 41 years. All these patients were diagnosed via magnetic resonance imaging and surgical findings revealed a hypoplasic vermis. Among them, 4(57%) were cranial nerve plasy, 2(29%) nystagmus, 6(100%) syringomyelia, 7(100%)
scoliosis
and one (14%) with hydrocephalus. Cerebellar ataxia and upper limbs weakness was noted in 5(71%) patients. Our surgical interventions included suboccipital craniectomy and dural opening(7/7), C1 posterior arch decompression (7/7), C4,5 laminectomy (1/7), and syringostomy(4/7). There was one mortality in a 41 y/o male with progressively lower cranial nerve(V, VII, IX) impairment as well as poor lung compliance. Other patients improved in their symptoms after follow-up periods of 6 months to 6 years. Our study shows that 1) surgical decompression was indicated in all patients with brain stem and lower cranial nerve dysfunction as well as central cord syndrome caused by syringomyelia; 2) a better result was achieved in those patients who received adequate nervous system decompression; and 3) much attention should be payed to cases with lower cranial nerves XI, X, XII impairment, because complications such as choking and aspiration pneumonia can happen.
...
PMID:Surgical outcome of Chiari I malformations--an experience sharing and literature review. 1063 63
Rett syndrome is a neurological disorder affecting predominantly females with regression loss of speech and purposeful hand use, after a few months of almost normal development. Postnatal microcephaly, hand dispraxia, stereotypic 'hand-washing' activities,
ataxia
, and abnormal breathing are among its most characteristic features. Another aspect of this disorder is growth failure. The preserved speech variant (PSV) shares with Rett syndrome the same course and the stereotypic hand-washing activities but it differs in that patients typically recover some degree of speech and hand use and usually do not show growth failure. Progressive
scoliosis
, epilepsy and other minor handicaps, usually present in Rett syndrome, are rare in the preserved speech variant. Here we explore the spectrum of mutations affecting the MECP2 gene in a group of 25 classic Rett syndrome girls and in three patients with the preserved speech variant. Among the Rett syndrome group, two novel mutational hot spots (R270X and R294X), four novel mutations, two novel small deletions, as well as the previously reported 806delG, R168X and R255X mutations, were identified in 20/25 patients. Of note, among the preserved speech variants, two patients carry deletions of 41 bp and 44 bp each, which are strikingly similar to those observed in classic Rett syndrome. Our results confirm the presence of mutational hot spots in MECP2, broaden the spectrum of mutations, pinpoint additional mutational hot spots and establish that the preserved speech variant is indeed allelic of the classic form. Phenotype variability is only partially dependent on the kind of MECP2 mutation and other mechanisms such as skewed X-inactivation, and/or modifier gene effects should be investigated to explain the variable recovery in speech and hand use.
...
PMID:Preserved speech variant is allelic of classic Rett syndrome. 1085 91
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