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)

A 53-year-old man presented with progressive ataxia two and a half years prior to admission. Initially he was treated in a local hospital for 4 months with a diagnosis of spinocerebellar degeneration. Subsequently he developed psychomotor excitement with hallucination and was admitted to a mental hospital for 7 months with a diagnosis of Wernicke's encephalopathy. After a year of partial remission, he presented with increasing difficulty in thinking and walking. On admission he developed mental agitation and excitement, ocular flutter and opsoclonus, and prominent cerebellar ataxia. A lymphocytic pleocytosis in the CSF and a high-intensity lesion in the superior cerebellar peduncle of the upper brainstem revealed on a T2-weighted MRI led to a diagnosis of brainstem encephalitis. Treatment with steroid (two series of 3 days of 1,000mg methylprednisolone DIV, followed by 60mg oral prednisolone) brought about a dramatic improvement in mental and ocular symptoms corresponding with the CSF findings. He was left with mild cerebellar ataxia and returned to work on a small dose of steroids. Differential diagnoses including Bickerstaff's encephalitis and pathomechanism were discussed.
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PMID:[Steroid responsive chronic brainstem encephalitis featuring mental symptoms, abnormal eye movement and cerebellar ataxia]. 923 54

An autopsy case with clinically and molecular genetically diagnosed Huntington's disease (HD) accompanied with minimal non-specific neuropathological features was reported. When the patient was 45 years old, he had faulty memory, mood swing, personality change and agitation. Neurological and psychiatric examinations revealed choreoathetoid movements in limbs and trunk, generalized hyperreflexia and mental deterioration. However, cerebellar ataxia and muscle rigidity were not disclosed. Neuroimaging study did not show a definite atrophy of heads of caudate nuclei. Neuroacanthocytosis and Wilson's disease were ruled out by the peripheral blood examination and serum Cu and ceruloplasmin examination. At the age of 55 he died of pneumonia. Post-mortem examination revealed minimal non-specific neuropathological features for HD (Vonsattel's grade 0), that is, no visible fibrillary gliosis in the striatum, and few neuronal loss and only proliferation of astrocytes (astrocytosis) in the striatum. Molecular-genetic study the patient's brain tissues and his youngest son's blood was performed. These studies revealed 40 CAG repeats in the patient, 56 CAG repeats in his youngest son. These results suggest they may be HD. Vonsattel et al. [ 1998] insist that grade 0 comprises 1% of all HD brains, and grade 1 comprises 4% of all HD brains. But we could not find any reports in which the clinical and neuropathological features were described in detail on the cases with clinically and molecular genetically diagnosed HD without specific pathological findings. Therefore, we present in detail the clinical and neuropathological features of such case.
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PMID:An autopsy case with clinically and molecular genetically diagnosed Huntington's disease with only minimal non-specific neuropathological findings. 1074 90

While cerebellar ataxia (CA) is a neurodegenerative disease known for motor impairment, changes in mood have also been reported. A full account of neuropsychiatric symptomology in CA may guide improvements in treatment regimes, measure the presence and severity of sub-clinical neuropsychiatric disturbance symptomology in CA, and compare patient versus informant symptom recognition. Neuropsychiatric phenomena were gathered from CA patients with genetic and unknown etiologies and their informants (e.g., spouse or parent). Information was obtained from in-person interviews and the Center for Epidemiologic Studies Depression Scale. Responses were converted to the Neuropsychiatric Inventory-Questionnaire (NPI-Q) scores by consensus ratings. Patient NPI-Q scores were evaluated for symptom prevalence and severity relative to those obtained from healthy controls. Patient-informant NPI-Q score disagreements were evaluated. In this cohort, 95% of patients presented with at least one neuropsychiatric symptom and 51% of patients with three or more symptoms. The most common symptoms were anxiety, depression, nighttime behaviors (e.g., interrupted sleep), irritability, disinhibition, abnormal appetite, and agitation. The prevalence of these neuropsychiatric symptoms was uniform across patients with genetic versus unknown etiologies. Patient and informant symptom report disagreements reflected that patients noted sleep impairment and depression, while informants noted irritability and agitation. Neuropsychiatric disturbance is highly prevalent in patients with CA and contributes to the phenomenology of CA, regardless of etiology. Clinicians should monitor psychiatric health in their CA patients, considering that supplemental information from informants can help gauge the impact on family members and caregivers.
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PMID:Neuropsychiatric Symptoms as a Reliable Phenomenology of Cerebellar Ataxia. 3300 Mar 80