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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Three adult patients in a single family showed severe
myoclonus
,
ataxia
, and pyramidal signs. Enzymatic analysis of lymphocytes, plasma, and cultured skin fibroblasts showed marked deficiency of beta-galactosidase activity, more profound with GM1 ganglioside than with another natural substrate, asialofetuin. Other lysosomal hydrolases were normal. Although the physical signs were similar to those of types 1 and 2 GM1 gangliosidosis, none had bony abnormalities.
...
PMID:A family with beta-galactosidase deficiency: three adults with atypical clinical patterns. 307 94
We report 2 brothers with progressive
ataxia
, seizures,
myoclonus
, supranuclear ophthalmoplegia, progressive visual loss and embolic strokes. The epilepsy and
myoclonus
came on many years after the onset of the
ataxia
. In the more severely affected brother the
myoclonus
was often unilateral and focal but ultimately involved both sides of the body. His sibling had only unilateral
myoclonus
after a contralateral middle cerebral artery stroke. When focal, persistent and unilateral, the
myoclonus
in both brothers was clinically similar to epilepsia partialis continua except that muscles of the trunk and proximal limbs were the most affected. It was exacerbated by movement of the affected part but was otherwise not stimulus sensitive. The more severely affected brother had a pigmentary retinopathy and a cardiac fibromyxoid valvulopathy. In his sibling, visual loss was not fully investigated and the heart was not examined at autopsy though he had a longstanding heart murmur. Neuropathological studies showed pancerebellar cortical atrophy, cell loss in the inferior olivary nuclei and old right middle cerebral artery infarctions in both brothers. Biochemical assays for known metabolic diseases were negative. We suggest that this syndrome represents a unique autosomal recessive form of progressive myoclonus epilepsy of unclear aetiology. It is distinguished from other familial
myoclonus
epilepsies by the presence of early onset cerebellar ataxia, supranuclear ophthalmoplegia, pigmentary retinopathy and possibly cardiac valvulopathy with subsequent cerebral emboli.
...
PMID:Myoclonus epilepsy in two brothers. Clinical features and neuropathology of a unique syndrome. 308 70
Progressive myoclonus epilepsy (PME) without Lafora bodies, or Baltic myoclonus epilepsy, is characterized by stimulus-sensitive
myoclonus
, generalized tonic-clonic seizures, and an irregularly progressive course beginning between 6 and 15 years of age. The EEG displays spike-and-wave paroxysms with irregular dominant activity. Baltic myoclonus epilepsy is a single-gene disorder inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern. Early cases were reported from Estonia, and many are now found in Finland, suggesting that the gene frequency is increased in those sharing the Finno-Ugric linguistic base. The use of phenytoin should be avoided in this disorder since its continued administration alone or with other antiepileptic drugs is associated with intellectual and motor deterioration, aggressive behavior, increasing
ataxia
, and even death. Treatment with valproate and the concomitant elimination of phenytoin have been associated with marked improvement in most cases. Baltic myoclonus epilepsy must be distinguished from Lafora body PME, which is relentlessly progressive and invariably fatal, but can usually be differentiated on clinical grounds.
...
PMID:Effect of phenytoin on the mental and physical function of patients with Baltic myoclonus epilepsy. 311 15
A patient with intention and action
myoclonus
, epilepsy,
ataxia
, and mental deterioration in association with ragged-red fibers in striated muscle is described. This patient demonstrated a unique form of erratic
myoclonus
with continuous EEG spike activity during eye closure. Both the
myoclonus
and the EEG spiking disappeared on opening the eyes. A defect in the activity of complex I in the respiratory chain was demonstrated.
...
PMID:The syndrome of myoclonic epilepsy with ragged-red fibers. Report of a case and review of the literature. 312 68
A 9-year-old boy manifested acute cerebellar ataxia associated with mumps infection. He developed opsoclonus,
myoclonus
, tremor, and truncal
ataxia
7 days after mumps infection. Lumbar puncture revealed pleocytosis without elevation of protein; ELISA demonstrated an increased IgM titer of cerebrospinal fluid against mumps virus. From these results it was determined that acute cerebellar ataxia was induced by a direct invasion of mumps virus. Electroencephalography demonstrated normal background activity, although alpha-like activity appeared bilaterally in the frontal regions which was induced by eye closure and decreased by eye opening. Polygraphic electroencephalography revealed that the alpha-like activity corresponded to the ocular movement recorded above or lateral to the eyelids by electro-oculography; therefore, the alpha-like activity was considered to be derived from the opsoclonus which was secondary to cerebellar involvement. His neurologic symptoms improved gradually and resolved completely within 3 months after the onset of acute cerebellar ataxia.
...
PMID:Mumps-induced opsoclonus-myoclonus and ataxia. 324 24
An epidemic of bismuth (Bi)-related neurotoxicity in France remains poorly understood, partly because no satisfactory animal model exists. We have now characterized such a model. Single or multiple intraperitoneal injections of Bi subnitrate into female mice produced neurologic signs (
myoclonus
,
ataxia
, tremors, convulsions) and blood (1.2 micrograms/g) and brain (8.4 micrograms/g) Bi levels like those in human cases. Hydrocephalus and axonal swellings in spinal cord were the major neuropathologic lesions.
...
PMID:Characterization of a murine model for human bismuth encephalopathy. 324 42
We describe a 37-year-old man with a 30-month history of progressive dementia,
myoclonus
and prominent
ataxia
with the additional clinical features of dysautonomia and delirious psychomotor excitement and with relatively preserved verbal responses. The pathological changes include 1) severe neuronal loss and gliosis without spongiform change of the thalamus and inferior olives associated with gliosis of the midbrain tegmentum, and demyelination and gliosis of the central tegmental tract, olivo-cerebellar fibers and spino-olivary tract, and 2) mild spongiform encephalopathy of the cerebral cortex. Although the latter implies that the present case may be an example of the rare thalamic form of Creutzfeld-Jakob disease, the preferential and severe involvement of the thalamus and inferior olives without spongiform change as well as the clinical features are quite reminiscent of primary thalamic degeneration [Stern 1939]. This case draws further attention to the relationship between spongiform encephalopathy and degeneration without spongiform change of the thalamus and olivary system.
...
PMID:Degeneration of the thalamus and inferior olives associated with spongiform encephalopathy of the cerebral cortex. 329 94
A case of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) in a 76 year-old man is presented. The clinical picture included a rapid progressive dementia associated with
ataxia
, global aphasia,
myoclonus
and pyramidal signs; death occurred after about 4 months. There was an antecedent of chemical trauma caused by plant liquid on right eye 12 to 18 months before. The electroencephalogram showed diffuse slow activity and the neuropathological findings were typical. The detection of a protein called "prion" or PrP27-30 in the scrapie and the finding that some proteins isolated from brain of patients with CJD have reacted with antibodies raised against it have improved the knowledge about the infectious agent. The recent reports of young patients with CJD after human growth hormone therapy prepared from pools of pituitary glands obtained at autopsy are alarming and probably new cases will be described.
...
PMID:[Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease: report of a case]. 330 Jun 14
The clinical and pathological findings in 4 adults with cancer and opsoclonus were compared with those of 15 other patients described elsewhere. The clinical syndrome of paraneoplastic opsoclonus is characterized by the acute onset of opsoclonus and truncal
ataxia
, often accompanied by encephalopathy,
myoclonus
and a cerebrospinal fluid pleocytosis. Unlike most other paraneoplastic syndromes, the course is often remitting and relapsing. Neuropathological examination in 3 of our patients showed lymphocytic cuffing of occasional blood vessels throughout the central nervous system, associated with a mild, diffuse proliferation of microglia in 1 patient. Apart from a mild, patchy loss of Purkinje cells in 1 patient, there was no loss of neurons from the cerebellum, brainstem, cerebral hemispheres, or spinal cord. These patients differ from those with the more common paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration by the predominance of truncal over limb
ataxia
, the presence of
myoclonus
, the absence of severe dysarthria, a tendency for remission, and the preservation of Purkinje cells.
...
PMID:Opsoclonus, myoclonus, ataxia, and encephalopathy in adults with cancer: a distinct paraneoplastic syndrome. 335 11
We report a family with branchial
myoclonus
, spastic paraparesis, and cerebellar ataxia in which six members were affected in two generations and the inheritance appeared to be autosomal dominant. Age at onset ranged from 40 to 50 years. Rhythmic
myoclonus
involving the palate, pharynx, larynx, and face was followed by truncal
ataxia
and spastic paraparesis in most patients. CT and MRI revealed mild atrophy of the cerebral and cerebellar cortex and severe atrophy of the medulla and spinal cord. The pons appeared normal and the olives not hypertrophic. CSF studies revealed severe reduction of the serotonin metabolite 5-hydroxyindoleacetic acid. Treatment with 5-hydroxytryptophan and carbidopa at highest tolerated dose mildly improved
ataxia
but did not modify the
myoclonus
. Treatment with anticholinergics, benzodiazepines, phenytoin, valproate, carbamazepine, and baclofen was unsuccessful. The clinical symptoms were progressive, leading to death or severe disability 5 to 10 years after the onset of the disease.
...
PMID:Hereditary branchial myoclonus with spastic paraparesis and cerebellar ataxia: a new autosomal dominant disorder. 335 13
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