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Query: UMLS:C0004352 (
autism
)
32,579
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Autism
is a behaviorally defined syndrome in which neuropathological abnormalities have been identified in the limbic system and cerebellum. The morphology of hippocampal neurons in two cases of
infantile autism
was studied and compared to age-matched controls.
CA4
neurons in autistic children were smaller in perikaryon area and dendritic branching of both
CA4
and CA1 neurons was less than in controls. These findings are consistent with previous studies and suggest a curtailment in maturation in the pathogenesis of
autism
.
...
PMID:Hippocampus in autism: a Golgi analysis. 877 56
Entorhinal cortex (EC), fascia dentata (FD), hippocampus (HP), and basal ganglia (BG) were studied in Rett syndrome (RS) cases and compared with control brains and an
autism
case. Kluver-Barrera and Golgi methods were used. In RS most of the areas of EC, HP, and FD showed severe cell hypochromia. In the EC all cells of layer II and most in layer III were in a state of total chromatolysis or were "ghost" cells, but the cells of layers V and VI were preserved and moderately hyperchromic. In FD and HP the majority of the granular cells and cells of CA3 and
CA4
fields were severely hypochromic, whereas in the CA1 field most cells were normal or slightly hypercaryochromic. In BG mostly mild or moderate aberration from normal cell structure was observed: in striatum, mild hypercaryochromia of small neurons and more expressive hyperchromia of large neurons were found; and in pallidum, mild or moderate hypercaryochromia to severe hyperchromia in pallidum internum was found. Degeneration of thick myelinated fibers was evident in pallidum. Large striatal and pallidal neurons showed signs of constructive changes in Golgi slices. These data allow the determination of the cause of the main symptoms of RS. The motor disorders, including specific stereotyped movements, could be related to the enhanced activity of BG cells due to their deafferentation from the side of the neocortex and to supposed hyperactivity of the EC-striatal pathway; the mental retardation and epileptic seizures could be due to FD-HP involvement.
...
PMID:Morphological study of the entorhinal cortex, hippocampal formation, and basal ganglia in Rett syndrome patients. 1034 23
The present paper addresses post mortem pathological and neuropathological findings in two males with fragile-X syndrome, aged 67 and 87 years. Both subjects died from sudden, unexpected cardiovascular causes, and both showed abnormalities of the mitral valve, ventricular hypertrophy and cardiomegaly. Both cases demonstrated macrocephaly characteristic of the classical Martin-Bell phenotype in FRAXA. There was increased brain weight in both cases: macroscopically, both cerebral and cerebellar hemispheres appeared normal, but dilated lateral ventricles were seen; and microscopic examination of the brain in case 2 showed normal hexalaminar architecture and no gross neuronal dropout. The hippocampus showed mild
CA4
pyramidal cell loss and associated gliosis. The cerebellum showed focal Purkinje cell loss and corresponding Bergmann gliosis. Whilst there is a need to delineate the microscopic features of fragile-X syndrome from those of the ageing process, there is an urgent need for more systematic neuropathological studies of fragile-X syndrome; the increased brain weight and Purkinje cell loss in
autism
and fragile-X syndrome reopens the debate on these two conditions. The case for further research into the cardiac anomalies in fragile-X syndrome is also strengthened by the findings. Finally, the present report confirms the role of interstitial cell hyperplasia as the major cause of megalo-testes in this condition.
...
PMID:Pathological and neuropathological findings in two males with fragile-X syndrome. 1071 53
Autism
, a neuropsychiatric disorder that severely impairs social, language and cognitive development, has a clinical onset in the first years of life. Because components of the limbic system mediate memory, social and affective functions that are typically disturbed in
autism
, a developmental defect in the limbic system has been hypothesized to underlie different autistic symptoms, but no developmental study has been performed. To obtain neuroanatomical evidence of limbic system abnormality in
autism
, we measured the cross-sectional area of the area dentata (AD; dentate gyrus +
CA4
) and combined area of the subiculum and CA1-CA3 (CAS) using in vivo MRI. Autistic patients aged 29 months to 42 years (n = 59) and healthy normal controls (n = 51) participated. The cross-sectional area of the AD was significantly smaller than normal in
autism
, the largest deviation from normal size (-13.5%) being found in autistic children aged 29 months to 4 years. Strong age-related increases were seen in the cross-sectional area of CAS, but autistic and normal subjects were not significantly different. This is the first direct evidence that anatomical abnormality within the limbic system exists from the earliest years of the disorder, and persists throughout development and to middle age.
...
PMID:Development of the hippocampal formation from 2 to 42 years: MRI evidence of smaller area dentata in autism. 1140 27
The purposes of this study were to identify differences in patterns of developmental abnormalities between the brains of individuals with
autism
of unknown etiology and those of individuals with duplications of chromosome 15q11.2-q13 (dup[15]) and
autism
and to identify alterations that may contribute to seizures and sudden death in the latter. Brains of 9 subjects with dup(15), 10 with idiopathic
autism
, and 7 controls were examined. In the dup(15) cohort, 7 subjects (78%) had
autism
, 7 (78%) had seizures, and 6 (67%) had experienced sudden unexplained death. Subjects with dup(15)
autism
were microcephalic, with mean brain weights 300 g less (1,177 g) than those of subjects with idiopathic
autism
(1,477 g; p<0.001). Heterotopias in the alveus,
CA4
, and dentate gyrus and dysplasia in the dentate gyrus were detected in 89% of dup(15)
autism
cases but in only 10% of idiopathic
autism
cases (p < 0.001). By contrast, cerebral cortex dysplasia was detected in 50% of subjects with idiopathic
autism
and in no dup(15)
autism
cases (p<0.04). The different spectrum and higher prevalence of developmental neuropathologic findings in the dup(15) cohort than in cases with idiopathic
autism
may contribute to the high risk of early onset of seizures and sudden death.
...
PMID:Differences between the pattern of developmental abnormalities in autism associated with duplications 15q11.2-q13 and idiopathic autism. 2248 57