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)

Leigh's disease is one of the mitochondrial encephalomyopathies. This article presents a 7-month-old baby boy who had been well-being since birth until 6 months of age when episodic downward gaze of both eyes with limitation of horizontal eye movement were noted. This episode of cranial nerve palsies lasted about 4-5 days and subsided spontaneously. The second attack was noted one month later, to be associated with hypotonia and truncal ataxia. Episodic hyperventilation with resultant gasping and myoclonus was noted at the third attack but spontaneous respiration resumed soon with persistent ophthalmoplegia and truncal ataxia. Lumbar puncture, brain MRI, amino acid assay and cardiac echo all showed negative finding. The oral glucose lactate stimulation test revealed an elevation of lactic acid, brain stem evoked potential indicated bilateral obscure 4th and 5th waves, and muscle biopsy showed ragged red fibres with aggregation of structurally abnormal mitochondria noted under electron microscope. Coenzyme Q, thiamine and carnitine had been given before biochemical study; however, the neurological symptoms did not show any improvement. Biochemical study finally revealed normal respiratory chain enzymes including NADH-coenzyme Q reductase, succinate coenzyme Q reductase and cytochrome c oxidase while other enzymes were technically unavailable for study. Unfortunately the patient died at 18-month-old due to respiratory failure.
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PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy presenting with clinical Leigh's disease: report of a case. 184 64

A patient with chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO) who had abundant cytoplasmic bodies in muscle fibers and a deletion of mitochondrial DNA is reported. The patient was a 26-year-old male suffering from ophthalmoplegia from age 21. He had a marfanoid skeletal abnormality and perceptive hearing loss, but had neither retinopathy, ataxia, nor dementia. In the mitochondria isolated from the biopsied skeletal muscle, NADH-ubiquinone oxidoreductase activity was slightly decreased, succinate-cytochrome c reductase activity was slightly increased, and cytochrome c oxidase activity remained normal. Southern blot analysis of the muscle DNA identified heteroplasmy composed of a normal-sized mitochondrial DNA and a mutant mitochondrial DNA with a 4.2-kilobase deletion. The PCR plus S1 analysis showed that the deletion extended from nucleotide position 7860 +/- 60 to 12,090 +/- 70. The histological studies of the biopsied muscle revealed ragged-red fibers and cytochrome c oxidase-negative fibers in 15.7% and 18.6% of the muscle fibers, respectively. Other conspicuous histological change was abundant cytoplasmic bodies surrounded by clusters of abnormal mitochondria. The cytoplasmic bodies were found preferentially in type 1 fibers, and exclusively in cytochrome c oxidase-negative fibers and in ragged-red fibers. Focal existence of cytoplasmic bodies in muscle fibers with abnormal mitochondria suggests that segregated distribution of the abnormal mitochondria with deleted mitochondrial DNA is involved in the pathogenesis of cytoplasmic bodies.
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PMID:Cytoplasmic body and mitochondrial DNA deletion. 196 59

A case of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy (Kearns-Sayre syndrome) with corneal endothelial abnormality is reported. A 22-year-old woman had retinitis pigmentosa, external ophthalmoplegia, complete heart block, ataxia, muscle weakness, dementia, sensorineural hearing loss, and was of short stature. Renal dysfunction, diabetes mellitus, and amenorrhea were also observed. Biopsy revealed decreased cytochrome c oxidase (complex IV) activity in muscle mitochondria. The corneal endothelium examined by specular microscope showed decreased cell density, severe polymegathism, and pleomorphism in both eyes. To our knowledge, this is the first report concerning primary corneal endothelial abnormality in a case with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy. The corneal endothelium is one of the tissues that could be affected by the enzyme deficiency present in this disease.
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PMID:Corneal endothelium in a case of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy (Kearns-Sayre syndrome). 274 82

The son of third cousins was normal until age 2 when he had difficulty walking. At age 8 there was limb weakness, ataxia, loss of tendon reflexes, dislalia, and he was mildly retarded. During fasting, urinary organic acid excretion was abnormally high. Cytochrome c oxidase activity in muscle was 7% of the normal mean. The enzyme in platelets was 16% of controls with a decreased cytochrome aa3 peak. These data suggest an autosomal recessive transmission of this variant of cytochrome c oxidase deficiency.
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PMID:Childhood encephalomyopathy with cytochrome c oxidase deficiency, ataxia, muscle wasting, and mental impairment. 301 3

Two patients with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy (MEP) serve to emphasize the variability of this group of diseases. Cerebral insults, mitochondrial cardiopathy, relapsing ileus, cerebral angioma, ataxia, and myoclonic seizures characterized the first case of an adult man with similar diseases in his family, interpreted as transitional form between mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) and myoclonus epilepsy associated with ragged red fibers (MERRF). The second patient, a floppy infant with cardiomyopathy and myoclonism, statomotoric and mental retardation showed combined defects in mitochondrial respiratory chain at NADH-CoQ reductase and cytochrome c oxidase and a deficiency of carnitine. In both patients neuropathologically criteria of Leigh's syndrome could be demonstrated in the cerebral cortex, in case 2 also clinically. The classificatory problems of the relationships between KSS, MELAS, MERRF, Leigh's as well as Alpers' syndromes are discussed.
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PMID:Mitochondrial myopathies with necrotizing encephalopathy of the Leigh type. 322 73

Muscle biopsies from six horses with clinical histories of muscle atrophy, muscle tremors, myopathic symptoms, unsteadiness of pelvic limbs and progressive ataxia were examined. Muscle biopsies were studied with enzyme histochemical techniques to evaluate the diagnostic values of these methods in cases suspected of suffering from neuromuscular disorders. Hypertrophy, atrophy, fibre splitting, waxy degeneration, phagocytosis and necrosis were seen in haematoxylin eosin stained sections of the different cases. Fibre type predominance and fibre type grouping were seen in the calcium ion stimulated myosine ATP-ase (Ca-ATP-ase) stained sections of some cases. 'Moth-eaten fibres' were demonstrated in three cases by staining with NADH: nitro blue tetrazolium oxidoreductase (NADH-TR), succinate dehydrogenase (SDH), NADH dependent malate dehydrogenase, cytochrome c oxidase and by lactate dehydrogenase. The catabolic enzymes, acid phosphatase (ACP) and 5'-nucleotidase were active in cases with fibre phagocytosis. The oxidative part of the pentose phosphate pathway in myopathic tissue seemed to be important in three cases, demonstrated by the increased activity of glucose-6-phosphate dehydrogenase (GPDH) and 6-phosphogluconate dehydrogenase (PGDH). The important feature of diseased horse muscle was that the pathohistochemical changes were exactly the same as in diseased skeletal muscles of humans. The application of tissue saving enzyme histochemical techniques can be recommended in the study of muscle tissue from horses suffering from suspected neuromuscular disorders.
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PMID:Enzyme histochemistry on muscle biopsies as an aid in the diagnosis of diseases of the equine neuromuscular system: a study of six cases. 336 6

Two siblings with cytochrome c oxidase deficiency are described. One of them died of subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy which was proven by autopsy. The other was also suspected of having Leigh encephalomyelopathy by the findings on brain CT scans. The former, a younger brother, was in good health until the age of 10 months when progressive dysphagia, muscular hypotonia and abnormal eye movements became apparent. Six months later he suddenly died due to respiratory insufficiency. The latter, an elder brother, started to show nystagmus, abnormal eye movements and ataxia at the age of 5 years. A deficiency of cytochrome c oxidase in the younger brother was demonstrated in autopsied liver and brain, while such a deficiency in the elder brother was shown in biopsied peripheral muscle tissue and in cultured skin fibroblasts. Both patients showed a marked heat lability of cytochrome c oxidase. These results suggest that the biochemical defect observed in the siblings is due to a genetic defect. This seems to be the first case of a generalized defect in cytochrome c oxidase.
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PMID:Cytochrome C oxidase deficiency in two siblings with Leigh encephalomyelopathy. 609 13

An 8-year-old girl with progressive ataxia and bulbar palsy showed diffuse white-matter lesions in the occipital to parietal lobes on magnetic resonance imaging. Since she had slightly elevated lactate in the cerebrospinal fluid, a muscle biopsy was done which revealed scattered ragged-red fibres and focal cytochrome c oxidase deficiency. Southern blot and polymerase-chain-reaction analyses revealed a large-scale mitochondrial DNA deletion, which was 6990 base-pairs in length with 6 base-pair (-TCATCG-) direct repeats at the junctions. Mitochondrial DNA mutation should be considered as one of the candidate causes for diffuse leukodystrophy in children.
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PMID:Diffuse leukodystrophy with a large-scale mitochondrial DNA deletion. 791 Aug 87

We performed a 5-year clinical and electrophysiologic follow-up study on two sibling cases with myoclonus epilepsy with ragged-red fibers. Both had myoclonus, intention tremor, slight muscle weakness, slight mental disturbance, hearing impairment, and optic atrophy. Neither had epileptic attacks or truncal or gait ataxia. Biochemical activity of cytochrome c oxidase was at the lower limit of the normal range of values, and an adenine to guanine transition mutation at nucleotide 8344 in the transfer RNA specific for lysine of mitochondrial DNA was detected in both cases. The electroencephalograms showed slowing of basic patterns, diffuse spike-and-wave complexes, occipital dominant wave-and-spike phantoms, 6- and 14-Hz positive spikes, and photosensitivity. No definite deterioration of basic patterns was seen, and diffuse spike-and-wave complexes and photosensitivity gradually disappeared during the slowly progressive clinical course. P2 latencies of pattern-reversal visual evoked potentials throughout the clinical course and III through V interpeak latencies of auditory brainstem responses at follow-up were prolonged without giant sensory evoked potentials in both cases.
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PMID:Myoclonus epilepsy with ragged-red fibers: a clinical and electrophysiologic follow-up study on two sibling cases. 822 33

The mitochondrion is the only extranuclear organelle containing DNA (mtDNA). As such, genetically determined mitochondrial diseases may result from a molecular defect involving the mitochondrial or the nuclear genome. The first is characterized by maternal inheritance and the second by Mendelian inheritance. Ragged-red fibers (RRF) are commonly seen with primary lesions of mtDNA, but this association is not invariant. Conversely, RRF are seldom associated with primary lesions of nuclear DNA. Large-scale rearrangements (deletions and insertions) and point mutations of mtDNA are commonly associated with RRF and lactic acidosis, e.g. Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS) (major large-scale rearrangements), Pearson syndrome (large-scale rearrangements), myoclonus epilepsy with RRF (MERRF) (point mutation affecting tRNA(lys) gene), mitochondrial myopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) (two point mutations affecting tRNA(leu)(UUR) gene) and a maternally-inherited myopathy with cardiac involvement (MIMyCa) (point mutation affecting tRNA(leu)(UUR) gene). However, RRF and lactic acidosis are absent in Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) (one point mutation affecting ND4 gene, two point mutations affecting ND1 gene, and one point mutation affecting the apocytochrome b subunit of complex III), and the condition associated with maternally inherited sensory neuropathy (N), ataxia (A), retinitis pigmentosa (RP), developmental delay, dementia, seizures, and limb weakness (NARP) (point mutation affecting ATPase subunit 6 gene). The point mutations in MELAS, MIMyCa, and MERRF, and the large-scale mtDNA rearrangements in KSS and Pearson syndrome have a broader biochemical impact since these molecular defects involve the translational sequence of mitochondrial protein synthesis. The nuclear defects involving mitochondrial function generally are not associated with RRF. The biochemical classification of mitochondrial diseases principally catalogues these nuclear defects. This classification divides mitochondrial diseases into five categories. Primary and secondary deficiencies of carnitine are examples of a substrate transport defect. A lipid storage myopathy is often present. Disturbances of pyruvate or fatty acid metabolism are examples of substrate utilization defects. Only four defects of the Krebs cycle are known: fumarase deficiency, dihydrolipoyl dehydrogenase deficiency, alpha-ketoglutarate dehydrogenase deficiency, and combined defects of muscle succinate dehydrogenase and aconitase. Luft disease is the singular example of a defect in oxidation-phosphorylation coupling. Defects of respiratory chain function are manifold. Two clinical syndromes predominate, one involving limb weakness, and the other primarily affecting brain function. Leigh syndrome may result from different enzyme defects, most notably pyruvate dehydrogenase complex deficiency, cytochrome c oxidase deficiency, complex I deficiency, and complex V deficiency associated with the recently described NARP point mutation. A new group of mitochondrial diseases has emerged.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:The expanding clinical spectrum of mitochondrial diseases. 833 7


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