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Query: UMLS:C0004135 (
ATM
)
13,001
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
13 children with
ataxia-telangiectasia
were followed for 6 years. Unlike previously reported cases, these patients had progressive, debilitating neurological disease and slight pulmonary or infectious symptoms. Immunological dysfunction was variable and endocrinological defects were absent. Oculomotor findings,
alpha-fetoprotein
levels, and the incidence of chromosomal breakage were the most consistent parameters in the diagnosis of the condition. This disease should be considered in any patient with chronic ataxia, regardless of immunological findings or whether he has a history of infections.
...
PMID:Diagnostic considerations in ataxia-telangiectasia. 9 14
Seventy individuals with
ataxia telangiectasia
were studied: 29 females and 41 males with an age range of 2 to 42 years. The majority (43/68) presented by 3 years of age with truncal ataxia. All had progressive, handicapping neurological symptoms exhibiting ataxia (70/70), ocular motor apraxia (70/70), an impassive face (70/70), dysarthria (70/70), chorea (68/70), dystonia (55/70) and peripheral neuropathy (50/70). Clinical immune deficiency was present in 43 of 70 patients. Ocular telangiectasia were seen in all but one case and excessive thinness in 54 of 70. The mean age of loss of walking was 10 years and of writing 8 years. All 60 tested showed increased sensitivity to ionizing irradiation, 43 of 48 had an elevated
alpha-fetoprotein
level and 14 of 21 had an immunoglobulin deficiency. Although there was a marked variation in disease findings sibs were always similar. The heterogeneity seen seems at odds with the unilocus linkage of
ataxia telangiectasia
to 11q23.
...
PMID:Ataxia telangiectasia in the British Isles: the clinical and laboratory features of 70 affected individuals. 137 28
Ataxia-telangiectasia
(
A-T
) is a progressive autosomal recessive disease featuring neurodegeneration, immunodeficiency, chromosomal instability, radiation sensitivity and a highly increased proneness to cancer.
A-T
is ethnically widespread and genetically heterogeneous, as indicated by the existence of four complementation groups in this disease. Several "A-T-like" genetic diseases share various clinical and cellular characteristics with
A-T
. By using linkage analysis to study North American and Turkish
A-T
families, the ATA (
A-T
, complementation group A) gene has been mapped to chromosome 11q23. A number of Israeli Arab
A-T
patients coming from large, highly inbred families were assigned to group A. In one of these families, an additional autosomal recessive disease was identified, characterized by ataxia, hypotonia, microcephaly and bilateral congenital cataracts. In two patients with this syndrome, normal levels of serum immunoglobulins and
alpha-fetoprotein
, chromosomal stability in peripheral blood lymphocytes and skin fibroblasts, and normal cellular response to treatments with X-rays and the radiomimetic drug neocarzinostatin indicated that this disease does not share, with
A-T
, any additional features other than ataxia. These tests also showed that another patient in this family, who is also mentally retarded, is affected with both disorders. This conclusion was further supported by linkage analysis with 11q23 markers. Lod scores between
A-T
and these markers, cumulated over three large Arab families, were significant and confirmed the localization of the ATA gene to 11q23. However, another Druze family unassigned to a specific complementation group, showed several recombinants between
A-T
and the same markers, leaving the localization of the
A-T
gene in this family open.
...
PMID:Ataxia-telangiectasia: linkage analysis in highly inbred Arab and Druze families and differentiation from an ataxia-microcephaly-cataract syndrome. 155 65
Fourteen patients with
ataxia-telangiectasia
and 10 relatives were studied. Besides neurological examination, laboratorial investigations as to their immunological condition were carried out. In this study, our attention was attracted to the most frequent and relevant laboratorial data being decreased serum and salivary levels of IgA, decreased rate of blastic transformation of lymphocytes and increased serum levels of
alpha-fetoprotein
(
AFP
). On the other hand, no patient showed increased levels of carcinoembryonic antigen (CEA). Our population reported a consanguinity rate of 28.5%.
...
PMID:Ataxia-telangiectasia: a clinical and laboratory review study of 14 cases. 169 74
Ataxia telangiectasia
(AT) is a primary immunodeficiency syndrome characterized by cerebellar ataxia, extrapyramidal signs, oculocutaneous telangiectasia, recurrent respiratory infections and development of malignancies. AT is a complex autosomal recessive disorder involving several systems other than lymphoid cells or the central nervous system. Such a diversity of abnormalities includes hypersensitivity of fibroblasts and lymphocytes to ionizing radiation (anomaly of DNA repair), non-random chromosomal rearrangements in lymphocytes, elevated serum level of
alpha-fetoprotein
, premature aging and endocrine disorders. A DNA processing or repair protein is the suspected common denominator in this pathology. Whatever the putative common underlying mechanism, AT patients have profound alterations of the humoral and cellular immune system whose mechanisms should be discussed in terms similar to those for other immunodeficiency diseases. The usual immunological abnormalities in this disease include decreased levels of CD 3 and CD 4 positive T lymphocytes, impaired delayed hypersensitivity, hypoplasia of thymus, decreased blast transformation in vitro in response to mitogen or antigenic stimulation, and decreased levels of serum IgA, IgE, and IgG 2 subclass. In this paper, the results of our recent studies on the defects of B cells in patients with AT were presented. (1) We found that the geometric means of IgA production in the supernatants of the lymphoblastoid cell lines established by EB virus, from all patients with AT, were significantly lower than those from healthy controls (P less than 0.01). (2) IgG subclasses of the patients' sera were also measured by ELISA, and IgG 4 was defective in four cases among six patients with AT.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Ataxia telangiectasia and characterization of its immunological disorders]. 215 3
By in situ hybridization of cloned human
alpha-fetoprotein
cDNA to human mitotic chromosome preparations, the
alpha-fetoprotein
gene was localized within the q11-22 region on the long arm of human chromosome 4. In addition, the human
alpha-fetoprotein
gene was isolated from a genomic phage library. The gene is split into 15 exons and 14 introns, and the entire structure is contained within two large (9.5 and 9.0) and two small (0.3 and 0.25 kb) EcoRI fragments of contiguous chromosomal DNA. The structure of
alpha-fetoprotein
and its gene is very similar to the corresponding structures of serum albumin, indicating a common evolutionary origin of these two serum proteins. However, the two genes are differentially expressed during normal development and under certain pathological conditions such as hepatomas, germ-cell tumors, or
ataxia-telangiectasia
. The molecular basis of this differential gene expression remains to be understood.
...
PMID:Chromosomal localization, structure, and expression of the human alpha-fetoprotein gene. 241 90
Three children with
ataxia-telangiectasia
have been followed up since their early childhood. Sequential immunological, biochemical and chromosome studies have been performed over the last 7 years. All the children showed progressive cerebellar ataxia and inexorable neurological deterioration. Further evidence for the progressive nature of this condition is the fall in lymphocyte counts, deterioration of lymphocyte transformation responses to mitogens, and an increase in chromosomal translocations and breakage. Elevated serum
alpha-fetoprotein
levels are a highly characteristic and useful diagnostic finding in this condition. Two of the patients had an X,14 translocation. In vitro studies of immunoglobulin synthesis suggest an intrinsic defect in B-cell synthesis as well as decreased helper T-cell activity. In spite of moderately severe and progressive abnormalities in the immune system, sinopulmonary infections have not been prominent in our patients.
...
PMID:Ataxia-telangiectasia. X,14 translocation, progressive deterioration of lymphocyte numbers and function, and abnormal in vitro immunoglobulin production. 241 40
Ataxia-telangiectasia
(AT) is a complex multiparametric disease associating oculocutaneous telangiectasias, cerebellar ataxia, elevated chromosomal aberration frequency and varied degrees of immunodeficiency. Recently a wasted mutant mouse (wst) has been described as an animal model of AT. We have looked in the wasted mutants for the presence of immune and endocrine abnormalities characteristic of AT. In contrast to the T cell immunodeficiency in AT, wasted mutants had a marked hypoplasia of all lymphoid organs, which affected both T and B lymphocyte subsets. The marked thymic atrophy appearing at the final stage of their disease did not modify the endocrine function of the thymic epithelium which produced normal levels of the thymic hormone thymulin. Although in vitro interleukin 2 (IL-2) production by splenic T cells in response to Con A was markedly diminished, these mice presented normal T and B cell proliferative responses to mitogens. Finally, no significant increase in serum
alpha-fetoprotein
level (a typical marker of AT) was found throughout the course of the disease. Although by many aspects, i.e. neurological disorder, chromosomal aberrations and early death, wasted mice presented similarities with human AT, major discrepancies in the typical features of immune abnormalities were found between the mouse model and the human disease.
...
PMID:The wasted mutant mouse. II. Immunological abnormalities in a mouse described as a model of ataxia-telangiectasia. 242 78
Ataxia-telangiectasia
, an inherited disorder characterized by progressive cerebellar ataxia and telangiectasias, is often associated with primary immunodeficiency and high incidence of malignancies, mostly of the lymphoreticular type. Endodermal sinus tumor is a rare germ cell tumor of the ovary characterized by an extremely rapid growth and poor prognosis. Both these diseases are associated with an abnormal production of
alpha-fetoprotein
. Primary tumors of the ovary in patients with
ataxia-telangiectasia
are extremely rare and the association of an endodermal sinus tumor and
ataxia-telangiectasia
has never been reported in the literature. This case report serves to focus on the particular problems encountered in the diagnosis and management of two diseases both characterized by the same serum marker.
...
PMID:Ataxia-telangiectasia and endodermal sinus tumor of the ovary: report of a case. 244 92
Although only a single gene exists for
alpha-fetoprotein
(
AFP
), differential glycosylation generates several different forms and these are associated with different tissues of origin, namely, liver, gastrointestinal tract, and yolk sac. This microheterogeneity of serum
AFP
was studied in seven patients with
ataxia-telangiectasia
(AT) in order to determine the tissue of origin of their elevated
AFP
levels. Concanavalin A (Con A), Lens culinaris agglutinin A (LCA-A), and erythroagglutinating phytohemagglutinin (E-PHA) affinity electrophoresis and antibody-affinity blotting were used to fractionate
AFP
. It was found that serum
AFP
in AT patients was composed mainly of Con-A band 2 (AFP-C2), LCA-A band 1 (AFP-L1), and E-PHA band 2 (AFP-P2). This profile of
AFP
species in AT patients is similar to those seen in neonates and patients with chronic hepatitis, but clearly different from
AFP
originating in hepatocellular carcinoma, gastric carcinoma, and yolk sac tumour cells. These data are compatible with a hepatic origin for the elevated
AFP
in AT patients. Since no evidence exists for ongoing liver damage in these patients, we suggest that the
AFP
gene in the AT liver may be under aberrant transcriptional control, perhaps secondary to a defect of DNA regulatory proteins which are necessary for hepatic maturation.
...
PMID:Tissue of origin of elevated alpha-fetoprotein in ataxia-telangiectasia. 245 78
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