Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0007758 (cerebellar ataxia)
3,609 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

ACTH is used in childhood to treat infantile spasms and acute cerebellar encephalopathy (opsoclonus-cerebellar ataxia syndrome). We report two infants with ultrasonographic and CT evidence of massive, reversible adrenal enlargement secondary to exogenous ACTH therapy for these disorders.
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PMID:ACTH induced adrenal enlargement in infants treated for infantile spasms and acute cerebellar encephalopathy. 825 50

A case of 43-year-old woman with Hashimoto's encephalopathy who experienced three relapses closely associated with the menstrual cycle is reported. In April 1992, she began to experience occasional tremors in her arms. Three months later, she experienced a generalized seizure and was transferred to our hospital. Hashimoto's thyroiditis was diagnosed on the basis of high thyroid microsomal titer and mild hypothyroidism. Neurological findings in admission included action tremor in both hands, myoclonus in all extremities, cerebellar ataxia, confusion, and hyperreflexia. Cerebrospinal fluid showed elevated protein level without pleocytosis. Electroencephalogram showed diffuse slowing and magnetic resonance imaging of brain was normal. Hashimoto's encephalopathy was diagnosed from these findings. These episodes of remission and exacerbation were observed during the admission. Her symptoms started at ovulation, worsened during the luteal phase, and improved when menstruation started. After the third relapse, she was treated with oral thyroxine for hypothyroidism and with an estrogen and progesterone combination to regulate the menstrual cycle. Her thyroid function gradually became euthyroid and she did not experience any subsequent relapses. The relation between the relapsing course and menstrual cycle suggests that the periodic alteration of gonadotrophic and/or gonadal hormones or the menstrual regulating center itself in the brain may be an important factor of pathogenetic mechanism of the disorder.
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PMID:[A case of Hashimoto's encephalopathy with a relapsing course related to menstrual cycle]. 829 82

Sixty cases with varicella-associated neurological disorders from Japanese literature during recent 11 years were analyzed and compared with previous reports. Chief diseases were encephalitis (encephalopathy) (23.3%), cerebellar ataxia (21.7%), meningitis (18.3%), cerebral infarction (13.3%) and facial palsy (8.3%). Cerebellar ataxia, meningitis and cerebral infarction were found in young children under 9 years, and other disorders were seen also in older children and adults. Some cases had neurological symptoms before the appearance of skin rash. The number of cells in cerebrospinal fluid was increased in meningitis, encephalitis and myelitis. Though neurological complications due to varicella were rare, prognosis was not necessarily good, including several cases with death or severe sequelae. In our 4 cases of herpes zoster meningitis, marked intrathecal VZV-specific antibody production was found and they showed high antibody index. Oligoclonal band was found in one case. The pathogenesis of neurological complications of VZV infection was considered to be caused by direct viral invasion in herpes zoster and at least in some cases of varicella. Therapy with antiviral agents is necessary and vaccination is recommended for prevention.
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PMID:[Neurological complications of varicella-zoster virus (VZV) infection]. 846 Nov 62

Quantitative gait analysis has been used to elucidate characteristic features of neurological gait disturbances. Although a number of studies compared single patient groups with controls, there are only a few studies comparing gait parameters between patients with different neurological disorders affecting gait. In the present study, gait parameters were compared between control subjects, patients with parkinsonian gait due to idiopathic Parkinson's disease, subjects suffering from cerebellar ataxia and patients with gait disturbance due to subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy. In addition to recording of baseline parameters during preferred walking velocity, subjects were required to vary velocity from very slow to very fast. Values of velocity and stride length from each subject were then used for linear regression analysis. Whereas all patient groups showed slower walking velocity and reduced step length compared with healthy controls when assessed during preferred walking, patients with ataxia and subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy had, in addition, increased variability of amplitude and timing of steps. Regression analysis showed that with changing velocity, subjects with Parkinson's disease changed their stride length in the same proportion as that measured in controls. In contrast, patients with ataxia and subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy had a disproportionate contribution of stride length when velocity was increased. Whereas the findings in patients with Parkinson's disease can be explained as a reduction of force gain, the observations for patients with ataxia and subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy reflect an altered spatiotemporal gait strategy in order to compensate for instability. The similarity of gait disturbance in subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy and cerebellar ataxia suggests common mechanisms.
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PMID:Comparative analysis of gait in Parkinson's disease, cerebellar ataxia and subcortical arteriosclerotic encephalopathy. 1038

During the period from May 1997 to October 1998, eight patients with coeliac disease or dermatitis herpetiformis and neurological disorders were admitted to the Department of Neurology, University Hospital of Bergen. The most frequent conditions were polyneuropathy (seven patients) and spinocerebellar ataxia (three patients). Other conditions were lower motor neuron disease, myelopathy, epilepsy and encephalopathy. The patients used various degrees of gluten-free diet at the time of admission. It remains unclear whether there is a shared common pathogenetic mechanism or the neurological disorder is a complication to the coeliac disease. Both vitamin depletion and immunological mechanisms may cause neurological disorder. Neurological manifestations may occur before the gastrointestinal symptoms. With reference to our patients and available literature we discuss prevalence, clinical picture, pathogenesis, treatment and prognosis. Neurologists, gastroenterologists and general practitioners should be aware that coeliac disease can cause neurological diseases, especially polyneuropathy, cerebellar ataxia and encephalopathy.
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PMID:[Neurological diseases associated with celiac disease]. 1086 1

Two anti-neuronal nuclear antibodies (ANNA-1 and ANNA-2) are markers of paraneoplastic neurological autoimmunity related to small-cell carcinoma. ANNA-2 is also related to breast carcinoma. Here we define a third IgG specificity (ANNA-3), identified in 11 patients (10 adults) by immunofluorescence screening of sera from approximately 68,000 patients with suspected paraneoplastic neurological syndromes. ANNA-3 binds prominently to nuclei of cerebellar Purkinje neurons, not to cytoplasm, granular neurons, or enteric neurons, but distinctively to renal glomerular podocytes. Western blots revealed an approximately 170 kDa antigen, in cerebellum and small-cell carcinoma. IgG eluted from this protein reproduced Purkinje and podocyte nuclear staining. ANNA-2 in 8 of 32 cases bound to podocyte nuclei but not to the 170 kDa protein. Healthy subjects and control neurological and cancer patients lack ANNA-3. Neurological accompaniments, subacute and usually multifocal, included sensory/sensorimotor neuropathies, cerebellar ataxia, myelopathy, brain stem and limbic encephalopathy. All of 9 adults followed had an intrathoracic neoplasm, seven biopsied within 7 months (five small-cell lung carcinomas and two adenocarcinomas, one lung, one esophagus) and two imaged, one early, the other 3 years later. Thus, immunohistochemical and Western blot criteria can now identify six IgG markers of neurological autoimmunity related to small-cell carcinoma, their frequency being ANNA-1 > collapsin response-mediator protein-5 > amphiphysin > Purkinje cell cytoplasmic antibody-2 = ANNA-2 = ANNA-3.
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PMID:ANNA-3 anti-neuronal nuclear antibody: marker of lung cancer-related autoimmunity. 1155 86

Celiac disease can be associated with a wide spectrum of neurological and psychiatric symptoms (cerebellar ataxia, neuromuscular manifestations, epilepsy, dementia), even in the absence of malabsorption or gastrointestinal symptoms. The case of a 72-year-old man with a rapidly progressive, lethal encephalopathy secondary to celiac disease is reported, together with a review of documented neurological symptoms in celiac disease. The aetiology of these neurological symptoms is unknown, although immunological mechanisms are suspected.
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PMID:[Celiac disease can be associated with severe neurological symptoms. Analysis of gliadin antibodies should be considered in suspected cases]. 1157 96

We report a 67-year-old man with mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS), successfully treated with eicosapentaenoic acid ethyl ester (EPA-E) for about eight months. He showed bilateral auditory disturbance and slowly progressive gait ataxia at age 50 during treatment of diabetes mellitus (DM) with subcutaneous injection of insulin since age 29. At age 58 he manifested an acute hemiparesis of right extremities for one week with no abnormal findings on neuroradiological examinations. A permanent pacemaker was implanted at age 61 to treat frequent syncopal attacks due to complete atrioventricular block. On admission to our hospital, neurological examinations revealed dementia, auditory disturbance, severe cerebellar ataxia and mild atrophy of proximal muscles with systemic hyporeflexia. Based on a point mutation in position 3243 of mitochondrial DNA, he was diagnosed as having MELAS with severe DM, auditory disturbance and cardiac conduction block. After initiation of treatment with EPA-E at a dose of 2,700 mg/day he showed temporarily an improvement in auditory disturbance, blood glucose control and cerebellar ataxia. In objective evaluations for cerebellar ataxia, we could find significant decreases in times for 20 m walking and heel-knee patting in the ninth month, and in time for tracing of a whirl from the third to the ninth month, compared with those before treatment of EPA-E (p < 0.0001). Because EPA-E is taken into mitochondrial membranes and activates electron transmission enzyme complexes, it might be a candidate for therapy of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, including MELAS.
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PMID:[A case of mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS), showing temporary improvement during the treatment with eicosapentaenoic acid ethyl ester]. 1199 86

Long-term exposure to carbon disulfide (CS(2)) may induce diffuse encephalopathy with parkinsonism, pyramidal signs, cerebellar ataxia, and cognitive impairments, as well as axonal polyneuropathy. The pathogenic mechanisms of diffuse encephalopathy are unclear, although vasculopathy and toxic demyelination have been proposed. Recently, we have encountered a patient who developed headache, limb tremors, gait disturbance, dysarthria, memory impairment, and emotional lability after long-term exposure to CS(2). The brain magnetic resonance images (MRI) showed diffuse hyperintensity lesions in T(2)-weighted images in the subcortical white matter, basal ganglia, and brain stem. The brain computed tomography perfusion study revealed a diffusely decreased regional cerebral blood flow and prolonged regional mean transit time in the subcortical white matter and basal ganglion. To our knowledge, there have been few reports demonstrating diffuse white matter lesions in chronic CS(2) encephalopathy using brain MRI. In addition, the (99m)Tc-TRODAT-1 single photon emission computed tomography showed a normal uptake of the dopamine transporter, indicating a normal presynaptic dopaminergic pathway. We conclude that diffuse white matter lesions may develop after chronic exposure to CS(2), possibly through microangiopathy. In addition, CS(2) poisoning can be considered as one of the causes of chronic leukoencephalopathy.
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PMID:Diffuse white matter lesions in carbon disulfide intoxication: microangiopathy or demyelination. 1463 66

This case study describes the long-term course of behavioral alterations and MRI findings in a patient with a combined limbic and cerebellar paraneoplastic syndrome, which was associated with a squamous lung carcinoma. Clinical equivalents were cerebellar ataxia, as well as severe anterograde memory loss, frontal executive dysfunction and behavioral alterations. MRI revealed inflammatory changes followed by progressive atrophy affecting the cerebellum and both temporal lobes. Tumor surgery yielded only a partial and transient recovery of neurological symptoms, and paraneoplastic atrophy continued to progress despite radical excision of the carcinoma. This case of paraneoplastic encephalitis suggests that the related atrophy may present as a chronic, progressive, multifocal encephalopathy and that the associated cognitive impairments may include several cognitive domains.
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PMID:Long-term cognitive and MRI findings in a patient with paraneoplastic limbic encephalitis. 1501 90


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