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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (ataxia)
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The nomenclature, life cycles, and pathogenicity of Sarcocystis of domestic animals are reviewed. Sarcocystis had a 2-host life cycle, with carnivores as definitive hosts and herbivores as intermediate hosts. The following species are found in domestic animals (with the definitive hosts given in parentheses): 3 species in the ox: S cruzi (dog, wolf, coyote, raccoon, fox), S hirsuta (cat), S hominis (man, monkey); 2 species in the sheep: S ovicanis (dog), S tenella (cat); 3 species in the pig: S miescheriana (dog), S porcifelis n sp (cat), S porcihominis n sp (man); and 1 species in the horse: S bertrami (dog). Sarcocystis cruzi, S ovicanis, and S porcifelis are highly pathogenic to the ox, the sheep, and the pig, respectively. Clinical signs of acute bovine sarcocystosis are: anorexia, pyrexia (42 C, or more), anemia, cachexia, enlarged palpable lymph nodes, excessive salivation, and loss of hair at the tip of the tail. Anemia, anorexia, ataxia, and abortions are the chief clinical signs of acute ovine sarcocystosis. These signs are evident at the time of vascular endothelium is parasitized by schizonts. The schizonts disappear in about 1 month, and cysts are formed in the muscles. The cystic phase of sarcocystosis is virtually nonpathogenic. Carnivores shed sporocysts in their feces after ingesting the intramuscular cysts from the herbivores. Sarcocystis is nonpathogenic to the definitive host. Feline and canine coccidia are also reviewed. The following 11 species are found in cats: Toxoplasma gondii, Hammondia hammondi, Isospora felis, Isosporarivolta, Besnoitia besnoiti, Besnoitia sp, and 5 types of Sarcocystis (S hirsuta from the ox, S tenella from the sheep, S muris from the mouse, S porcifelis from the pig, and Sarcocystis sp from Grant's gazelle). The following 10 species are found in canine feces (Isospora canis, Isospora ohioensis, Isospora wallacei n sp; and 7 types of Sarcocystis (S cruzi from the ox, S ovicanis from the sheep, S bertrami and Sarcocystis sp from the horse, S miescheriana from the pig, S hemionilatrantis from mule deer, and Sarcocystis sp from Grant's gazelle). The history of Isospora begemina in dogs is reviewed; life cycles of feline and canine coccidia are given; oocysts of common feline and canine coccidia are compared and illustrated; and public health significance of Toxoplasma gondii oocysts is discussed, especially in relation to cats in the household of pregnant women.
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PMID:A review of Sarcocystis of domestic animals and of other coccidia of cats and dogs. 82 60

The literature contains about 500 cases of equine leucosis, though the reports are deposited in a great number of journals and vary considerably concerning particular topics. During the last years there has been a remarkable increase of publications about this syndrome in the equine. The clinical leucosis key recommended by us has been confirmed in principle considering the latest literature. In about 70 individual symptoms which can be clinically observed in equine with leucosis 11 can be considered as main symptoms because of their frequency; they are again classified in primary (lymph node tumours including splenomegaly--loss of condition, weakness--cachexia, weight loss, periphery oedema), secondary (anorexia, inappetence--fever--paleness of mucous membrane--anaemia--tachycardia) and accessory (incoordination--tachypnoea, dyspnoea--apathy, lethargy) main symptoms. Furthermore in future it will be necessary to take into more consideration the symptoms "recurrent colic" and "hydrothorax" within differential diagnosis. The main symptom "incoordination" (ataxia, asynergy, paresis, paralysis) is used by us more precisely only in case of impairment of nervous system by neoplastic infiltrations and does not signify as possible symptoms of general physical weakness, for example faltering, staggering, tumbling or lameness. The morphological classification follows further on our previous recommendation. There exist generalized forms with tumour infiltrations in abdominal and in thoracic cavity as well as especially in peripheral lymph nodes. On the other hand there are characteristic manifestations in certain regions of the body, which establish distinctly the clinical symptomatology. They are marked as regional multicentric forms with the main localizations "mediastinal", "splenic", "mesenteric" or "intestinal".(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Clinical diagnostic keys and special manifestations in equine leukosis]. 195 30

Brain stem glioma is the third most common childhood brain tumor, comprising 10-15% of this group of neoplasms. Typical presenting symptoms include ataxia, diplopia and headache, while signs of increased intracranial pressure occur later in the clinical course. Although prolonged failure to thrive, characterized by cachexia and vomiting are rare manifestations of brain stem lesions, in this study we report a 9.5-year-old boy with failure to thrive since infancy which remitted after excision of a brain stem astrocytoma.
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PMID:Chronic dysphagia, vomiting and gastroesophageal reflux as manifestations of a brain stem glioma: a case report. 248 55

The aim of the present investigation is the complex study of experimental infection in pregnant ewes by means of clinical, serological, biological, histological and Electron microscopy methods. Four ewes, pregnant from the 2nd to 5th month, were infected by intravenous (in one case by intraperitoneal) routes with a C. burnetii strain at 10(6) ID 50/ml. The clinical illness in all of the animals was characterized by fever and two-phase temperature reaction on the 5th and 12th days. The clinical symptoms were as follows: torpidity, reduced appetite, thirst, conjuctivitis, rhinitis, rapid breathing. As a result of the developed latent infection, after the acute stage, the animals gave birth to three unviable lambs who died within 24 h. Another lamb was still-born. The lambs showed cachexia, arthritis, ataxia, wrinkled skin. The highest CF-titers (1:256-1:512) were reached on the 40th day, but serum antibodies (1:8-1:32) first appeared on the 8th day. The titers began to decrease on the 60th day. The pathomorphological changes testify to a latent infection characterized by placentitis, lymphocellular proliferation of the lamb's parenchymal organs and lymph nodes, multiple thromboses, interstitial pneumonia and plural proliferative changes. The EM exam showed rickettsiae in placentas mainly in the form of inclusions in cytoplasm of leukocytes and epithelial cells.
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PMID:Experimental Q fever in sheep. 260 70

5'-dFUrd (doxifluridine) is a new fluoropyrimidine that may have a higher antitumor effect and less side effects than 5-FU. In this study 15 patients with advanced colorectal carcinoma, one with renal carcinoma, one with carcinoid and one with advanced carcinoma of unknown origin, were randomly assigned to receive 5'-dFUrd 5 g/m2 or 3 g/m2 as a 1-h infusion for 5 days in 3 cycles at intervals of 4 weeks. The patients had repeated neurological and neurophysiological examinations before and during the treatment. Ten patients developed symptoms of toxicity of the central nervous system (CNS), with cerebellopathy and encephalopathy resembling a Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome. The neurotoxicity was dose related, affecting 7 of 8 patients in the high dosage group and 3 of 9 patients in the low dosage group. The symptoms generally started at the end of the second week of the cycle with unsteadiness and diplopia, and progressed to the fourth week with ataxia, confusion and EEG-changes, becoming more pronounced with increasing number of cycles. After the treatment there was normalisation within 4-8 weeks. Cachectic patients and patients with a pathological EEG before treatment seem to represent a high-risk group for CNS-symptoms. EEG may be helpful in early diagnosis of CNS-toxicity.
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PMID:Wernicke-Korsakoff-like syndrome in patients with colorectal carcinoma treated with high-dose doxifluridine (5'-dFUrd). 294 66

The authors report three observations of cerebro-tendinous xanthomatosis (CTX). The three patients presented tendinous xanthoma and cataract. The neurologic disorders were different in each case. The first one, a 43 years old woman suffered from dementia, ataxia and pseudobulbar palsy: CT scan showed cerebellar hypodense lesions. After the apparition of bulbar signs ans cachexia she died at 45. The second patient, a 39 years old man had an ataxia and mild psychiatric disorders. He was stabilized with a treatment of chenodesoxycholic acid. The third one, a 49 years old women suffered only from tendinous xanthoma, cataract, and had no neurological disorder. His plasmatic cholestanol level was high. CTX is a recessive deficit of the hepatic 26 hydroxylase with deposits of abnormal metabolites in tendons, crystalline lenses and central nervous system. Reviewing the 44 observations of CTX in the literature, the authors define the genetical, clinical, biochemical and therapeutical aspects of CTX, and underline the necessity of a early diagnosis with cholestanol dosage, before the apparition of neurological disorders and the short terminal phase. CTX is a rare but fortunately treatable neurolipidosis.
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PMID:[Van Bogaert's cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis. A study of 3 cases]. 306 49

The mutant strain of Wistar rats carrying an autosomal recessive gene defect is characterized by a sequence of progressively developing behavioural alterations including hyperexcitability, tremor, olfactory and gustatory automatisms, bradykinesia, ataxia, rigidity, paresis and cachexia. The stereotypy and locomotor responses to increasing doses of apomorphine hydrochloride and D-amphetamine sulphate, and the catalepsy response to increasing doses of haloperidol were studied in mutant rats at the age of 6-7 weeks. In the mutants, both the stereotypy and locomotor responses to amphetamine were enhanced, while stereotypy and locomotor effects induced by apomorphine were unaltered. The cataleptic response to haloperidol was significantly diminished compared to controls. These findings indicate a derangement in the function of basal ganglia in the mutants.
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PMID:Stereotypy, locomotor and cataleptic effects produced by drugs influencing dopaminergic systems in a mutant strain of Wistar rats: a genuine model of basal ganglia dysfunction? 653 16

We report an autopsy case of Cockayne syndrome (CS). A 40-year-old Japanese woman was admitted to our hospital for cachexia. She had displayed the striking features of CS, including dwarfism, mental retardation, neural deafness, ataxia, intracranial calcifications, and progeria since her childhood. Endocrinological examinations suggested normal pituitary function and a disorder of the hypothalamus or the cerebrum. She died of acute pneumonia at the age of 42. Autopsy findings showed typical abnormalities in the central nervous system compatible with CS; however, no atherosclerotic change was observed in the systemic arteries.
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PMID:An adult case of Cockayne syndrome without sclerotic angiopathy. 926 Jul 74

Patients with multiple sclerosis sometimes show subthalamic lesions presenting syndrome of inappropriate secretion of ADH (SIADH), hypothermia, hyperprolactinemia, weight loss, and cachexia. Hyperprolactinemia also has been found in the patients with active systemic lupus erythematosus, because prolactin can be produced from human activated lymphocytes. We described a case of multiple sclerosis showing galactorrhea-amenorrhea syndrome with hyperprolactinemia. A 31-year-old woman showed a high level of prolactin in the serum (79.6 ng/ml) during remission stage 5 months after the onset of multiple sclerosis. She showed galactorrhea-amenorrhea syndrome 3 years later. She showed dysesthesia in her limbs, relapsing monoparesis, visual disturbance and Gd-enhanced plaques in Brain MRI for 6 years. She was admitted to our hospital on November 24, 1995. A neurological examination showed hyporeflexia of the upper extremities, hyperreflexia of the lower extremities, bilateral ankle clonus, truncal ataxia, and neurogenic bladder. Laboratory tests revealed increased level of serum prolactin, exaggerated secretion of serum prolactin after intravenous injection of 500 micrograms TRH, and marked suppression after oral administration of 2.5 mg bromocriptine. Brain MRI showed demyelinating lesions near the lateral ventricle, and cervical MRI (T2 image) showed high signal intensity lesions in the spinal cord from C2 to C5. In the previous case, galactorrhea-amenorrhea syndrome was found during the exacerbation stage of multiple sclerosis. Hyperprolactinemia may be caused from subthalamic lesions or by activated lymphocytes in multiple sclerosis. We considered that hyperprolactinemia and galactorrhea-amenorrhea syndrome in our patient might be caused from subthalamic lesions because lymphocytes were not activated during the remission stage of multiple sclerosis.
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PMID:[A case of multiple sclerosis with galactorrhea-amenorrhea syndrome]. 936 74

Two siblings (one man, one woman), presenting with diarrhea, severe weight loss peripheral neuropathy, ophthalmoparesis, asymptomatic leukoencephalopathy were diagnosed as a new cases of Mitochondrial Neuro Gastro Intestinal Encephalomyopathy syndrome (MNGIE). Hirano (1994) defined four criteria for the diagnostic: peripheral neuropathy, ophthalmoparesis, gastro intestinal dysmotility, muscle biopsy with histologic features of mitochondrial myopathy (ragged-red fibers, muscle fibers with increased succinate deshydrogenase stain or ultra structurally abnormal mitochondria). In a review of the literature, we found 31 cases with MNGIE. With our two cases, we study this group of 33 patients. First symptoms begin about 13.5 years with a median of 10 years and extremes for 1 to 32 years. The first signs are gastro intestinal symptoms (recurrent nausea, vomiting or diarrhea with intestinal dysmotility) in 22 cases, an ophthalmoparesia in 4 cases, intestinal and ocular signs in 1 case, gait ataxia or peripheral neuropathy in 3 cases, hearing loss in 1 case, gait ataxia or peripheral neuropathy in 3 cases, hearing loss in 1 case. During the evolution, besides the cardinal signs, the following features have been observed with a variable frequency: hearing loss, short stature, facial palsy, dysphonia, dysarthria, sweating, orthostatic hypotension, bladder dysfunction, hepatomegalia, The laboratory features are: abnormal Nerve Condition Studies/EMG compatible with a sensory motor neuropathy, lactic acidosis, mitochondrial respiratory chain defect (essentially complex IV deficiency, complex I deficiency or multiple complex defect), MRI leukodystrophy, elevated CSF protein, heart block, ragged-red fibers or increased SDH stain. The prognosis is poor, due to a severe weight loss bordering on cachexia 13 patients died with a mean age of 28.5 years (median 24 years, extreme 3 years to 51 years). The prognosis seems to be worsened by a young age of onset. The 33 patients belong to 19 families with 7 cases of consanguinity. 25 patients had a brother, a sister or a cousin affected. The study of these families is compatible with an autosomic recessive transmission, suggesting a pathology of the nuclear genomi, probably impliying the control of the mitochondrial DNA replication. In fact, in 13 cases, a study of the mt DNA was realized: multiple deletions were founded in 6 cases, multiples mutations in one case, unique mutation in 1 case. In 5 cases ther was no evidence of abnormality. These precise etiology and pathophysiologic significance of the mt DNA deletions, and the heterogeneity of the modifications of the mt DNA remain unknown. However, the possibility of various phenotypes for a same genotype or inversely is known in mitochondriopathies.
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PMID:[MNGIE syndrome in 2 siblings]. 968 18


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