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Query: UMLS:C0004134 (
ataxia
)
15,886
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Observations have been made on two brothers who had progressive
ataxia
, intention myoclonus and visual failure starting early in the third decade of life. Their parents were consanguineous. The brothers showed bilateral cherry red spots at the maculae and bilateral perinuclear cataracts; their intelligence was preserved. Urine was found to contain large amounts of sialylated oligosaccharides; cultured skin fibroblasts showed deficiency of the enzyme
sialidase
(
neuraminidase
). Studies on leucocytes and cultured skin fibroblasts showed aberrant electrophoretic mobilities of six enzymes all of which are known to be glycoproteins, and this has been attributed to excessive amounts of sialic acid on the enzyme molecules. The clinical features together with the biochemical findings indicate that these are further cases of the newly described condition Sialidosis Type 1 and it is suggested that the electrophoretic findings might be typical of the condition.
...
PMID:Sialidosis type 1: cherry red spot-myoclonus syndrome with sialidase deficiency and altered electrophoretic mobility of some enzymes known to be glycoproteins. II. Enzymes studies. 49 93
A family is described with three affected brothers, two of whom were examined, born to consanguineous parent, who in early adult life began to experience
ataxia
, intention myoclonus, and progressive visual failure. The brothers examined had cherry red spots at the maculae and cataracts. They were of normal intelligence. The intention myoclonus responded partially to treatment with clonazepam and pheneturide, but not to 5-hydroxytryptophan in combination with carbidopa or to sodium valproate. Studies in one patient showed the excretion of large quantities of sialylated oligosaccharides in the urine. Both patients showed deficient
sialidase
activity in their cultured fibroblasts. Further studies on cultured skin fibroblasts revealed increased electrophoretic mobility of six glycoprotein enzymes that was returned approximately to normal by treatment with
sialidase
. The clinical and biochemical findings indicate that these patients are further cases of the newly described condition sialidosis type 1.
...
PMID:Sialidosis type 1: cherry red spot-myoclonus syndrome with sialidase deficiency and altered electrophoretic mobilities of some enzymes known to be glycoproteins. 1. Clinical findings. 51 62
We describe 3 children (from two families) with a multisystemic disorder characterized by mental retardation, nonprogressive
ataxia
, polyneuropathy, hepatopathy during infancy and growth retardation. Due to the clinical similarities to a recently recognized disorder associated with carbohydrate-deficient transferrin, we examined serum transferrin by means of isoelectric focusing, and found increases in disialo transferrin and asialotransferrin. Removal of sialic acid with
neuraminidase
revealed the same transferrin phenotypes as in their parents. Similarly, carbohydrate-deficient fractions of serum alpha 1-antitrypsin were also detected. Therefore, the diagnosis was made of the recently identified carbohydrate-deficient glycoprotein syndrome. This is a genetic disorder with distinctive clinical features and multiple carbohydrate-deficient glycoproteins. These seem to be the first reported Japanese patients with this syndrome.
...
PMID:The carbohydrate deficient glycoprotein syndrome in three Japanese children. 159 May 25
Prospective and retrospective genetic studies were performed on sheep with a recently described inherited lysosomal storage disease that involves a profound deficiency of beta-galactosidase and an associated deficiency of
alpha-neuraminidase
. Retrospective studies of the flock of sheep in which four affected lambs were born indicated little inbreeding but the presence of a common ram in both the maternal and paternal sides of the pedigrees. When unrelated rams were used in the flock in subsequent years, no affected lambs were born. The affected lambs' parents were phenotypically normal, so the disease was investigated as a putative autosomal recessive condition in prospective breedings of related sheep over two breeding seasons. For the third breeding season, heterozygous ewes were superovulated and bred to a heterozygous ram, and the resultant embryos were transferred to recipient ewes. Later in the same breeding season, the heterozygous ewes were re-bred naturally to the heterozygous ram. Lambs were identified as affected by the development of signs of
ataxia
, levels of beta-galactosidase that were less than 7% of the levels in controls by spectrofluorometric assay, or the histopathologic demonstration of vacuolization of neurons. Heterozygous sheep were identified by the production of affected offspring and/or by levels of beta-galactosidase in fibroblast cultures that were approximately 50% of control levels. The phenotypic ratio of affected sheep to normal sheep and the genotypic ratio of affected to heterozygous to normal sheep were consistent, by chi-square analysis, with an autosomal recessive trait. It was concluded that this ovine lysosomal storage disease is an autosomal recessive disease.
...
PMID:Inheritance of an ovine lysosomal storage disease associated with deficiencies of beta-galactosidase and alpha-neuraminidase. 212 14
A 12 year old boy with
neuraminidase
deficiency (sialidosis, mucolipidosis I) is described. His clinical features included coarse facies, cherry red spot,
ataxia
, myoclonus, and dysotosis multiplex. The level of
neuraminidase
activity in cultured fibroblasts was very low and intermediate levels were observed in both parents. The clinical disorders associated with
neuraminidase
deficiency are reviewed.
...
PMID:Neuraminidase deficiency: case report and review of the phenotype. 358 42
Increased amounts of free sialic acid were found in body fluids, leukocytes, cultured fibroblasts, and liver tissue of a four-year-old boy with mental retardation,
ataxia
, and clinical and radiologic findings of a mild mucopolysaccharidosis. A diagnosis of Salla disease was made though in contrast to earlier reports, recurrent upper respiratory infections and hepatosplenomegaly were present already in infancy, and skeletal abnormalities of dysostosis multiplex were found in early childhood. Free sialic acid in the urine was identified as N-acetylneuraminic acid by 1H-NMR spectroscopy. Sialidase activities were normal. Increased amounts of bound sialic acid were found in liver and cultured fibroblasts and were attributed to an intracellular inhibition of sialyloligosaccharide-degrading
neuraminidase
by excessive amounts of free neuraminic acid. The molecular basis of N-acetylneuraminic acid storage disease is unknown but may be related to a defective transport mechanism preventing neuraminic acid from leaving the lysosomal compartment.
...
PMID:N-Acetylneuraminic acid storage disease. 404 64
We have measured in leukocytes the following lysosomal enzymes in 11 Friedreich disease cases, 11 "atypical" recessive ataxias, 13 neurological controls and 16 normal controls: hexosaminidase A and B; beta-galactosidase and
neuraminidase
(labile and cold stable, or A and B). The lysosomal enzyme deficiencies known to produce certain forms of spinocerebellar degeneration were not present in Friedreich's disease or the Charlevoix-Saguenay syndrome. The very small scale survey of "atypical" recessive ataxias revealed 3 cases of severe deficiencies in hexosaminidase activity. Two adult brothers presenting with the clinical phenotype of Kugelberg-Welander disease (one also with
ataxia
), were shown to have a severe deficiency of both HEX A and HEX B activity (Sandhoff biochemical pattern). This is the first such report. A further adult female patient, unrelated to the others, had a severe isolated deficiency of HEX B and presented with a very slowly progressive and mild
ataxia
with severe internal strabismus. These patients and their families are being studied clinically and biochemically in greater detail and will be reported elsewhere. However these preliminary findings justify screening for such lysosomal defects in all cases of "atypical" recessive
ataxia
.
...
PMID:Lysosomal enzymes in ataxia: discovery of two new cases of late onset hexosaminidase A and B deficiency (adult Sandhoff disease) in French Canadians. 623 79
A 17-year-old Japanese boy was found to have
ataxia
, generalized angiokeratomas, skeletal deformities, visual impairment, and macular cherry-red spots, without hepatomegaly, splenomegaly, or renal failure. Laboratory examination disclosed a deficiency of beta-galactosidase as well as of
neuraminidase
activity in the leukocytes and fibroblasts, while alpha-galactosidase and alpha-L-fucosidase activities were normal. On electron microscopic examination, numerous cytoplasmic vacuoles containing flocculated material were found in the vascular endothelial cells, histiocytes, perineurial cells, and Schwann's cells.
...
PMID:beta-Galactosidase and neuraminidase deficiency associated with angiokeratoma corporis diffusum. 643 42
In recent years, there have been described a number of patients with beta-galactosidase and
neuraminidase
deficiency of juvenile onset. The clinical features in these patients are myoclonus, cherry-red spots, insidious visual loss, corneal clouding, gargoyle like appearance and
ataxia
. The condition appears to be transmitted as an autosomal recessive trait. Pathologically it has been characterized that there are vacuolation of lymphocytes, and inclusion bodies such as concentric membranous bodies in the ganglion cells of the rectum. Here we report a patient with beta-galactosidase and
neuraminidase
deficiency of juvenile onset in whom unusual "fingerprint" profiles were obtained in the submucosal ganglion cells in the rectum and will discuss the clinical significance of the inclusion bodies.
...
PMID:Adult type beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase deficiency in three siblings. 674 51
Two young adult siblings were diagnosed as having a deficiency of acid beta-galactosidase activity in leukocytes and fibroblasts. The parents had enzyme levels approximately half of the normal level, consistent with this being the primary enzymatic lesion. Sialidose activities measured with natural and synthetic substrates in the patient's skin fibroblast cultures were normal. Hybridization of one of these patient's cells with cells from a patient with GM1 gangliosidosis, Type 1 did not show complementation of beta-galactosidase activity. However, when the cells from the patient were hybridized with cells from a patient with combined
sialidase
and beta-galactosidase deficiency, complementation was observed. These two siblings have
ataxia
, mild intellectual deterioration, slurred speech, mild vertebral changes and little, if any, visceromegaly. They do not have myoclonus, seizures or cherry-red spots, which are found in most patients with combined
sialidase
and beta-galactosidase deficiency. These patients are discussed with regard to other patients in the literature called variant or adult GM1 gangliosidosis.
...
PMID:Adult GM1 gangliosidosis: clinical and biochemical studies on two patients and comparison to other patients called variant or adult GM1 gangliosidosis. 677 95
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