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

The report contains data of a clinico-genealogical analysis of 450 observations of hereditary diseases of the nervous system, and the prevalence rates of neurohereditary diseases in the Kuibyshev region. The authors stress the significance of the founder effect as a factor lying at the basis of a concentration of autosome-dominant forms in some of the areas of the region. The role of increased inbreeding in the enlargement of the amount of autosome-recessive forms is being confirmed. The results of the study denote that in the population of the studied region the group of nervous-muscular hereditary diseases is most frequent. The main neurohereditary diseases are being clinically defined with an indication of the type of hereditary transmission. The authors underline the significant clinical intra- and inter-familial polymorphism of such diseases as the Charcot-Marie-Tooth neuronal amyotrophy, scapulohumeral-facial myopathy of Landusi-Dejenrinne, primary pelvic-humeral progressive muscular dystrophy, autosoma-dominant myatrophic ataxia, myotonic dystrophy. The authors indicate the necessity of a screening of patients with hereditary diseases of the nervous system.
...
PMID:[Clinico-genalogic characteristics of hereditary diseases of the nervous system in the Kuibyshev region]. 15 55

The paper presents data from the literature and the author's own materials on the correlation between the extent of activity of reparation processes and the development of cell malignization. A review cites the results of investigations on the molecular mechanisms in some hereditary human diseases in which a defect in some stages of the reparation processes has been found (xeroderma, ataxia telangesthesia. Fanconi anemia, Down's syndrome, etc.). These diseases are also characterized by a high rate of neoplasia development. It is emphasized that inhibition of the reparation process is observed only in the first stages of normal cell transformation into a malignant one. A correlation between carcinogenic and mutagenic activity of chemical compounds which is in favour of the mutation hypothesis of the origin of tumours is discussed.
...
PMID:[Mechanisms of carcinogenesis associated with DNA repair]. 15 41

Of 319 patients with cerebral palsy recalled for reevaluation 15 years after the initial visit, 10 percent had died. Of the living, 55 percent had spasticity, 32 percent had athetosis, 4 percent had ataxia and 9 percent had mixed spasticity and athetosis; 38 percent had an intelligence quotient (IQ) less than 50, 24 percent between 50 and 79, and 38 percent had IQ above 80. There was a high correlation between overall functional outcome and intellectual level. Severity of physical disability, as measured by hand use, mobility and speech, also correlated with dependence, in part because increased severity of the disability was associated with decreased intellectual capacity generally.Twenty-five years after the initial visit, parental attitudes and personality intactness were evaluated (using the Minnesota Multiphasic Personality Inventory [MMPI]) and were correlated with satisfaction with status in life in 28 persons predicted to be independent on the 15-year study. Twenty (72 percent) of the 28 were satisfied with their status in life and of these, 16 were evaluated (with the MMPI) with 70 percent scoring in the normal range; 13 (65 percent) had parents with a positive attitude. Positive attitude was defined as parental feelings that the handicapped child was a worthy, valuable person, to be encouraged and assisted but not isolated from the world of nonhandicapped people. Careful serial assessment by professional teams combined with repeated long-term counseling of families can result in optimal outcome for the disability level involved, due to the primary role parents play in the development of a child's character and behavior.
...
PMID:Follow-up study of patients with cerebral palsy. 15 7

All five members of a family developed subacutely mental confusion and/or truncal ataxia. Symptoms and signs of polyneuropathy were seen later. The well water in the patients' home contained 400 ppm acrylamide. The present cases are unique in that they are cases of acrylamide poisoning induced by oral intake and percutaneous penetration, and that central nervous system symptoms were prominent.
...
PMID:Acrylamide encephaloneuropathy due to well water pollution. 16 22

Two cases of Aujeszky's disease in a cat and a dog belonging to the same owner are reported. The two animals each were five months of age. The symptoms shown by the cat were typical of Aujeszky's disease: intense itching, salivation and the head bent to one side. The main symptoms shown by the dog consisted in salivation, ptosis of one eye, a drooping ear, the head bent to one side and ataxia. As itching was not observed in the dog and the animal had spent the first months of its life in wooded surroundings, it could also have been affected with rabies, although it had been inoculated with LEP-Flury vaccine forty days prior to importation. It is of importance to the practitioner to know that itching may be absent in dogs with Aujeszky's disease and that rabies should also be suspected in these cases. Only a laboratory diagnosis will be conclusive. Studies were negative for rabies, the virus of Aujeszky's disease being found to be present in the two cases. The source of infection probably consisted in contaminated pork offal (larynges).
...
PMID:[An atypical case of Aujeszky's disease in a dog (author's transl)]. 16 63

A 23-year-old man had slow psychomotor development at 6 months of age and developed intermittent corneal clouding at about 18 months. He developed a truncal ataxia and hypotonia of the limbs combined with spasticity and active deep reflexes that did not progress. His skeleton and facies were normal. Between 1 and 13 years of age, he developed severe optic atrophy, absence of retinal blood vessels, and an extinguished electroretinogram. Biochemical analysis of cultured fibroblasts indicated no lysosomal hydrolase deficiency; cellular metachromasia was absent and there was no mucopolysaccharidoses. Ultrastructural studies indicated single-membrane-limited vacuoles containing lamellated membranes and a polymorphous substance in tissue-cultured cells and conjunctiva.
...
PMID:A new mucolipidosis with psychomotor retardation, corneal clouding, and retinal degeneration. 16 96

Acrylamide, widely employed as a vinyl monomer in the polymer industry, is a potent neurotoxin to man and to animals. The cumulative effect of prolonged, low-level exposure to acrylamide monomer is the insidious development of a progressive peripheral neuropathy. Sensory symptoms begin in the hands and feet (numbness, pins and needles), certain reflexes are lost and, with severe exposure, muscle weakness and atrophy occur in the extremities. The peripheral neuropathy may be supplemented by symptoms indicative of central nervous system damage (ataxia, tremor, somnolence and mental changes). The neuropathologic basis for this clinical picture has been determined in cats. Here, chronic acrylamide intoxication produces selective peripheral and central nerve fiber degeneration. Degeneration first occurs in the extremities of long and large nerve fibers which later undergo a progressive, seriate proximal axonal degeneration known as dying-back. Especially vulnerable are sensory axons supplying Pacinian corpuscles and muscle spindles in the hindfoot toepads, while adjacent motor nerve axons die back later. Distal central nerve fiber degeneration is seen in the medulla and the cerebellum. The neurotoxic property of acrylamide is of practical concern in two areas. One major problem is the protection of factory workers engaged in the manufacture of acrylamide. A sensitive test of neurologic function in these individuals, i.e., touch sensation, based on the experimental observation of the exquisite vulnerability of Pacinian corpuscles in acrylamide intoxicated cats, is presently under consideration. The second area for concern is the exposure of the populace to minute amounts of neurotoxic acrylamide monomer which contaminate acrylamide polymers currently deployed in the environment. Federal restrictions on the maximum permitted exposure to acrylamide, based on a largely clinical study of acrylamide neurotoxicity conducted ten years ago, may require a re-evaluation in the light of recent advances which have pinpointed the initial sites of nerve fiber degeneration.
...
PMID:Nervous system degeneration produced by acrylamide monomer. 17 76

The authors report 4 cases of the morbid familial association revealing itself late in life (average age 37.7 years) including multiple basal cell carcinomas of the face and neurological and psychiatric symptoms, the most complete examples of which were severe, including mixed cerebello-spinal ataxia, involvement of the anterior horns of the spinal cord, a pyramidal syndrome and extra-pyramidal syndrome, abolition of the osteo-tendinous reflexes, dementia, paralysis of certain cranial nerves. These are associated constantly with increased glucose concentration in the cerebro-spinal fluid and dilatation of the cerebral ventricles. The course is unusual. The skin signs always occur first. There is a definite parallel between the severity of the skin involvement and that of the central nervous system. A neuropathological study of one case (case 2) showed lesions of degenerative type resembling spino-cerebellar degeneration of Menzel type with supramedullary diffusion to the locus niger, locus coeruleus, cranial nerves and thalamus. From these clinical and pathological findings, the authors noted an original pathological and clinical entity and consider certain diagnostic and pathological problems. The precise relationship between the skin and nervous lesions is unknown, but may be due to abiotrophic processes. Concerning the classification, this disease should not be included among the phacomatoses for there is no biastema tendency, and should be included among the more general group of neuro-cutaneous dystrophies or genoneurodermatoses.
...
PMID:[Association of multiple basal cell carcinomas of the face and spinocerebellar degeneration. Study of 4 familial cases including an anatomo-clinical description]. 17 21

A man now 22 years of age had slow psychomotor development about 6 months after birth and developed intermittent corneal clouding at about 18 months. He developed truncal ataxia, hypotonia of the limbs combined with spasticity, and active deep reflexes. These have not progressed. His skeleton and facies are normal. Between his first and thriteenth year he developed sev ere optic atrophy, absence of retinal blood vessels, and an extinguished electroretinogram. Biochemical analysis of cultured fibroblasts indicated no lysosomal hydrolase deficiency; cellular metachromasia was absent and there was no mucopolysaccharidoses. Ultrastructural studies indicated single membrane vacuoles containing lamellated membranes and a polymorphous substance in tissue cultured cells and conjunctiva.
...
PMID:A new mucolipidosis with psychomotor retardation, corneal clouding, and retinal degeneration. 17 65

Two adult Ashkenazi Jewish siblings have had slowly progressive deterioration of gait and posture since early childhood, distal to proximal muscle atrophy, pes cavus, foot drop, spasticity, mild ataxia of limbs and trunk, dystonic features, and dysarthria. Vision and optic fundi are normal, verbal intelligence is stable, and no seizures have occurred. The sister of the patients died at 16 years of age with the same illness. Autopsy showed diffuse neuronal storage, predominating in subcortical areas, consisting of membranocytoplasmic bodies, zebra bodies, and complex lamellar structures. GM2 ganglioside was increased in her brain. Hexosaminidase A was decreased in serum and leukocytes of the living patients, and was in the range for carriers of Tay-Sachs disease in their parents. The disease found in this family represents a new, more indolent variant of GM2 gangliosidosis.
...
PMID:Adult (chronic) GM2 gangliosidosis. Atypical spinocerebellar degeneration in a Jewish sibship. 17 70


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>