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 patient with eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome developed progressive central nervosa system involvement that did not improve despite discontinuation of L-tryptophan therapy. Neurologic impairment was manifested initially by spastic monoparesis, which was improved by treatment with methyl-prednisolone and hydroxyurea. Recurrence of weakness was accompanied by gait ataxia, dysphagia, and complaints of a gradual decline in memory and concentration. Neuropsychological testing identified a broad pattern of cognitive deficits suggestive of a subcortical dementia, and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated multiple high-signal lesions in the white matter. Cognitive deficits appear to be underrecognized in patients with the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome. The response of our patient's initial symptoms to corticosteroid therapy suggests a possible role for autoimmune mechanisms in the pathogenesis of central nervous system involvement in the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome. Neuropsychological evaluation should be performed in patients with cognitive complaints to delineate the full spectrum of central nervous system impairment associated with the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome.
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PMID:Central nervous system involvement in the eosinophilia-myalgia syndrome. 141 16

Neurological disorder may be the initial manifestation of Lyme disease. Six cases of neurological Lyme disease have been seen in the years 1986-89, five of whom contracted the disease in the West of Ireland. Three presented with a radiculoneuropathy, one with myalgia/fatigue and one with bilateral sixth nerve palsies and ataxia. These cases indicate the spectrum of neurological involvement of Lyme disease in Ireland which reflects that seen in Europe. They also highlight some of the problems in diagnosis which sometimes necessitate treatment while awaiting serological studies. We feel even in the absence of a history of tick-bite or rash, Lyme disease should be considered in the differential diagnosis of many neurological disorders, especially in patients from the West of Ireland.
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PMID:Neurological manifestations of Lyme disease. 179 Nov 16

The patient, a 30 year-old man, dentist, started having an influenza-like infection which lasted five days, with malaise, muscle pain throughout the body and fever. One day before the hospital admission he presented urinary retention followed in the next day by ataxia and numbness sensation in both feet and lower third of his legs. The neurological examination disclosed a thoracic spinal cord impairment at T9-T10 level and the diagnosis of a post- infectious transverse myelitis was made. The plain Rx of the spine showed a spina bifida oculta in the T7 vertebra, which is roughly at the same level of the T9-T10 spinal cord segment. An iodinated myelography showed no abnormalities. The CSF examination showed small increase in the white cells (6.4 cells/cu.mm). The patient received dexamethasone (4. 5g /day) and two weeks later was entirely free of symptoms. The authors think that the congenital bone defect (spina bifida) might have played a role in the development of the myelitis, probably because of an ontogenetically determined "vulnerable point" ("locus minor resistentia ") at that level, either anatomical or immunological.
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PMID:[Post-infectious transverse myelitis and thoracic spina bifida: report of a case]. 637 43

Serologically confirmed cases of dengue fever among Swedish tourists were studied retrospectively. Dengue fever was found to be the most commonly diagnosed imported arbovirus disease in Sweden during the period December 1989-November 1990. 24 cases were diagnosed. The geographical epidemiology showed that 17/23 who answered a questionnaire were infected in Thailand, most often during spring and early summer. 17 patients were admitted to hospital. All patients had high fever. Other common symptoms were myalgia, headache, fatigue/prostration and erythema. All patients but 1 with a long-standing ataxia recovered without sequelae. Low white blood cell and platelet counts were registered in all sampled patients. Depressed sodium levels and elevated liver enzymes were seen regularly. Dengue virus type 1 was isolated from 2 patients who suffered from dengue haemorrhagic fever grade II in the course of their primary dengue virus infection.
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PMID:Dengue fever among Swedish tourists. 805 9

During the summer of 1996 an unusual clustering of meningoencephalitis cases was recorded in the Capital City, Bucharest, and in some areas from South-East Romania. After an initial suspicion of an enteroviral etiology was discarded, the West Nile etiology was confirmed by specific antibodies demonstration through hemagglutination-inhibition and ELISA tests. This study included 251 patients with the diagnoses of West Nile acute encephalitis (166 cases), acute meningitis (57 cases) and acute febrile disease (33 cases). The patients' age ranged from 1 to 89 years (mean 51.1 years). The most frequent clinical manifestations were: fever (95.7% of cases), cephalalgia (92.6%), stiffness of the neck (89.1%), vomiting (62.5%), marked asthenia (46.5%), myalgia (28.9%). In addition, patients with encephalitis exhibited: alteration of consciousness (89.2% of cases), tremor of extremities (40.4%), ataxia (44%), paralysis (15.1%). The fatality rate was 15.1% in acute encephalitis, 1.8% in acute meningitis and 0% in the acute febrile disease.
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PMID:Clinical manifestations in the West Nile virus outbreak. 983 23

Ciguatera is the most frequently observed form of tropical fish poisoning. It appears as a syndrome associating general signs, gastrointestinal, cardiac and neurological problems. Peripheral and central nervous system signs may be observed. We report a case of a 60-year-old man who developed Ciguatera poisoning with diarrhea, facial paresthesia, myalgia, cramps and weakness. Physical examination revealed a motor distal deficit of the four limbs, myokymia and ataxia. EMG testing was in favor of an axonal neuropathy. Neurologic symptoms persisted for two months. This case illustrates a new pathophysiological mechanism of neuropathy: "axonal channelopathy. Abnormalities of peripheral nerve sodium and potassium channels result in clinical and electrophysiological manifestations unrelated to axonal degeneration or demyelinization. The ciguatoxin mainly acts on sodium channels. Prolonged sodium channel activation results in repetitive axon firing. Recently ciguatoxin was recently demonstrated to have a novel action, blocking the sodium channel leading to slowed nerve conduction and decreased motor and sensory action potential amplitudes.
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PMID:[Ciguatera and peripheral neuropathy: a case report]. 1084 72

Approximately 5,000 to 80,000 of the US service personnel involved in the Persian Gulf War have complained of a variety of nonspecific symptoms since their return in 1991. These symptoms have been collectively labeled Gulf War Illness and include muscle fatigue, general malaise, myalgia, impaired cognition, ataxia, headaches, fever, joint pain, skin rash, gastrointestinal disturbances, sleep disturbances, and respiratory difficulties. Exposures of military and service personnel were diverse and included the prescribed anti-nerve gas agent pyridostigmine bromide (PYR), N.N-diethyl-m-toluamide (DEET) insect repellent, and environmental exposures to jet fuel. Thus, studies in our laboratory were undertaken to determine if concurrent exposure to these agents, singly or in combination, would contribute to significant alterations in immunological function and disease susceptibility. To assess immune status, eight-week old B6C3F1 female mice were exposed for 14 days to single compounds or tertiary mixtures of 15.5 mg/kg DEET, 2 mg/kg PYR, and 500 mg/kg JP-8 (termed low dose), or 31 mg/kg DEET, 5 mg/kg PYR, and 1,000 mg/kg JP-8 (termed high dose). Immunosuppression was assessed 24 h after the last exposure. No remarkable alterations were evident in hematological parameters, spleen and thymus organ weight and total cellularity, natural killer (NK) cell activity, cytotoxic T-cell activity, or mitogen-induced lymphocyte proliferation after exposure to either single or tertiary mixtures at low or high doses. A few changes in CD4/CD8 flow cytometric lymphocyte subpopulations were detected after exposure to the tertiary mixture at the high dose. Delayed type hypersensitivity (DTH) was decreased by 88% after exposure to the high-dose mixture, and suppression of antibody-specific IgM immune responses (plaque-forming cell, PFC) occurred after exposure to all single and tertiary mixtures at both dose levels. In the PFC response, antagonism was apparent in the mixture, while coexposure to these agents resulted in a synergistic effect in the DTH response. Susceptibility to B16F10 tumor or Listeria monocytogenes challenge was not affected after single or tertiary exposures. These data suggest that combined exposure to DEET, PYR, and JP-8 does not profoundly alter many immunological endpoints, but does selectively target functional endpoints such as the PFC and DTH response. This should be considered when assessing human health risks in the military environment.
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PMID:Evaluation of immunotoxicity induced by single or concurrent exposure to N,N-diethyl-m-toluamide (DEET), pyridostigmine bromide (PYR), and JP-8 jet fuel. 1253 64

Marine poisoning results from the ingestion of marine animals that contain toxic substances and causes substantial illness in coastal regions. Three main clinical syndromes of marine poisoning have important neurological symptoms-ciguatera, tetrodotoxin poisoning, and paralytic shellfish poisoning. Ciguatera is the commonest syndrome of marine poisoning and is characterised by moderate to severe gastrointestinal effects (vomiting, diarrhoea, and abdominal cramps) and neurological effects (myalgia, paraesthesia, cold allodynia, and ataxia), but is rarely lethal. Tetrodotoxin poisoning and paralytic shellfish poisoning are less common but have a higher fatality rate than ciguatera. Mild gastrointestinal effects and a descending paralysis are characteristic of these types of poisoning. In severe poisoning, paralysis rapidly progresses to respiratory failure. Diagnosis of all types of marine poisoning is made from the circumstances of ingestion (type of fish and location) and the clinical effects. Because there are no antidotes, supportive care, including mechanical ventilation in patients with severe paralysis, is the mainstay of treatment.
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PMID:Neurotoxic marine poisoning. 1577 1

Polyneuropathy is a frequent feature of mitochondriopathy (MCP). If and how often polyneuropathy in MCP is primarily due to the underlying disorder (mitochondrial neuropathy, MN) or due to other well-known causes is unknown. Retrospectively investigated were 108 MCP-patients with polyneuropathy. According to established diagnostic criteria 37 patients were classified as definite MCP, 56 as probable MCP and 15 as possible MCP. In 38 of the 108 MCP-patients with polyneuropathy (35%), no plausible cause for polyneuropathy other than MCP could be found. MN was characterized by weakness, muscle cramps, wasting, reduced tendon reflexes, muscle pain, ataxia, restless legs, hypesthesia, paresthesia, dysesthesia, and vegetative impairment. In 21 cases predominantly motor fibers, in 14 cases both motor and sensory fibers and in 3 cases predominantly sensory fibers were affected. Axonal degeneration was found in 19 cases, demyelination in 4 and mixed-type polyneuropathy in 15. On sural nerve biopsy axonal loss was the predominant finding. In a single case tomaculae and abnormally shaped and structured mitochondria were found. MN exists, occurs in one third of the MCP-patients with polyneuropathy, and is characterized by predominant affection of the motor and sensory fibers with diffuse, symmetric and equal distribution between upper and lower limbs and by axonal degeneration.
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PMID:Mitochondrial neuropathy. 1582 72

Gabapentin is an antiepileptic medication that also has been used for restless legs syndrome. The mechanism of action is unknown. The most commonly reported adverse effects of this medication include somnolence, dizziness, ataxia, fatigue, nystagmus, and tremor. Myalgia has been reported in 2% of gabapentin users compared with 1.9% of patients in placebo-controlled add-on trials. Two patients on short daily hemodialysis therapy developed neuromuscular symptoms and an elevation in creatine kinase levels after starting gabapentin therapy. To our knowledge, this is the first case report of an increase in creatine kinase level after the administration of gabapentin.
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PMID:Gabapentin-induced myopathy in 2 patients on short daily hemodialysis. 1595 20


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