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)

A case of Erdheim-Chester disease demonstrates cerebral hemispheric involvement, as well as and intraaxial and extraaxial brain stem involvement in a patient with symptoms of paraparesis, urinary incontinence, visual loss, ataxia, vertigo, proptosis, and nystagmus. Persistent gadopentetate dimeglumine enhancement was noted in the extraaxial cervicomedullary brain stem lesion 23 days after injection. However, the supratentorial lesions fail to show similar persistent enhancement. This case also demonstrates MR features characteristic of retrobulbar infiltration.
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PMID:Erdheim-Chester disease: MR of intraaxial and extraaxial brain stem lesions. 869 76

A 60-year-old man with progressive gait ataxia and mild pyramidal signs showed at MRI a pontine lesion with post-contrast enhancement in the left middle cerebellar peduncle. Diagnosis of Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD), a rare non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis, was suggested, further supported by a previously diagnosed retroperitoneal fibrosis. X-ray films demonstrated characteristic bilateral and symmetric osteosclerosis of the long bones of the lower limbs, which at radionuclide studies exhibited a marked increase in technetium-99 uptake. A cerebral 18FDG-PET showed a relevant pontine uptake of the tracer. Re-evaluation of a past retroperitoneal biopsy showed an intense CD68+, CD1a-, and S100- infiltrate of histiocytes with foamy cytoplasm, thus confirming the diagnosis. ECD should be regarded as a rare cause of adult-onset sporadic ataxia, especially when pontine lesions and extraneurological manifestations are present.
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PMID:Late-onset sporadic ataxia, pontine lesion, and retroperitoneal fibrosis: a case of Erdheim-Chester disease. 1881 Jun 2

Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a rare nonLangerhans cell histiocytosis. Although approximately 50% of cases eventually involve the central nervous system (CNS), the CNS has seldom been reported as the initial biopsy site. The diagnosis of CNS ECD can be challenging due to morphologic overlap with reactive histiocytic proliferation, Langerhans cell histiocytosis (LCH), and extranodal Rosai-Dorfman disease (RDD). We present 3 cases from our files that illustrate the protean manifestations of ECD. Case 1 was a 47-year-old man with ataxia, dysarthria, and intermittent ophthalmoplegia whose cerebellar biopsy had shown only profuse, nonspecific Rosenthal fiber-rich piloid gliosis; ECD was diagnosed only at autopsy. The gliosis and marked variations in histiocyte morphology in different anatomical sites added to the diagnostic challenge. Case 2 was a 67-year-old female with chronic progressive symptoms and a pontine lesion that had been considered to be CLIPPERS by neuroimaging. Identification of a BRAFV600E mutation allowed an ECD diagnosis and treatment with the specific BRAFV600E inhibitor vemurafenib, which resulted in a marked sustained clinical response. Case 3 was diagnosed as ECD after positive bone biopsy with typical foamy histiocytes. Six years later, there was massive dural involvement that showed RDD-like, BRAF-mutation-negative histiocytosis. These cases highlight the clinical and histologic overlap that can occur among these disorders.
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PMID:CNS Erdheim-Chester Disease: A Challenge to Diagnose. 2909 34

Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a non-Langerhans cell histiocytosis that affects multiple body organs, notably the skeletal system. We examined a 58-year-old man who presented with ataxia and T2 hyperintensity of the middle cerebellar peduncles and dentate nuclei without contrast enhancement on MRI brain. Workup for malignancy revealed "hairy kidneys" on CT scan of the abdomen, and excisional biopsy of the retroperitoneal mass for concerns of lymphoma revealed foamy histiocytes that tested positive for CD68 and negative for CD1a, confirming the diagnosis of ECD. Further genetic testing on excised tissue revealed BRAF (V600E) gene mutation that is present in 50% of ECD patients. Treatment was initiated with targeted therapy using the BRAF inhibitor Dabrafenib. X-ray of the lower extremities did not reveal sclerosis of the long bones, and bone scan with technetium 99 was negative except for a nonspecific tracer uptake in left calvarial bone with no corresponding CT changes or T1/T2 signal changes on MRI. His MRI brain revealed classic cerebellar involvement in ECD without other central nervous system (CNS) involvement. It has been postulated that bone involvement is almost universal in ECD; however, our patient with ECD had ataxia and cerebellar involvement without significant bone involvement, as evidenced by bone scan. This is a rare presentation of ECD affecting the CNS and sparing the skeletal system. It confirms the wide spectrum of presentation this multisystem disease can have.
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PMID:Neurohistiocytosis of the Cerebellum: A Rare Cause of Ataxia. 3036 24

Erdheim-Chester disease (ECD) is a rare disorder characterized by accumulation of non-Langerhans cell histiocytes in multiple organs. The clinical manifestations are protean and vary from asymptomatic focal disease to potentially fatal multisystem disorder. The commonest presentation is symmetric osterosclerotic lesions of lower extremity long bones; other organs, including cardiovascular, nervous, and endocrine system may be affected. Central nervous system involvement can occur in up to 50% cases and is associated with poor prognosis. The disease pathogenesis involves organ involvement secondary to histiocytic infiltration and systemic inflammation driven by Th1 cytokine activation. The recent discovery of activating mutations in proto-oncogene B-rapidly accelerated fibrosarcoma (BRAF) V600E and other genes involved in mitogen-activated protein kinase (MAPK) pathways has led to redefinition of ECD as a myeloid neoplastic disorder. The diagnosis requires histochemical and molecular analysis of histiocytes in tissue biopsies in patients with compatible clinical and imaging features. The treatment options include interferon-alpha, anakinra, and immunosuppressive therapies. Better understanding of disease pathogenesis has led to development of novel targeted and effective therapies including BRAF and MEK inhibitors. The rarity of the disease and variable clinical features and course often results in diagnostic errors and delays. Rare primary neurological presentation can occur mimicking CNS inflammatory, neoplastic, or demyelinating disorders. We report an unusual case of ECD presenting with progressive encephalopathy and ataxia along with multifocal brainstem and cerebellar lesions. A comprehensive review of clinical and neuroimaging features and immunohistochemical and molecular characteristic of ECD are presented along with review of neuroimaging findings in two previously reported cases.
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PMID:Clinical and Neuroimaging Manifestations of Erdheim-Chester Disease: A Review. 3292 Sep 40