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)

Temporal-spatial patterns of surviving Purkinje cells were studied quantitatively in a rat mutant (shaker) with differential hereditary cerebellar ataxia and Purkinje cell degeneration. Shaker rat mutants are characterized behaviorally as mild if they are ataxic or as strong if they have ataxia and tremor. Purkinje cells degenerate in both mild and strong shaker mutants, but the temporal and spatial patterns of cell death are strikingly different. In mild shaker mutants, Purkinje cell death is temporally restricted, with 31-46% of the Purkinje cells in lobules I-IX dying by 3 months of age. Very few Purkinje cells degenerate after this age. Purkinje cell death is spatially random. In lobules I-IX, every second, third, or fourth Purkinje cell degenerates. Purkinje cells in lobule X do not degenerate. In strong shaker mutants, Purkinje cell degeneration is temporally protracted and spatially restricted. By 3 months of age, most Purkinje cells in lobules I-VIa, -b, and -d have degenerated. Numerous Purkinje cells in the paravermis of lobules VIIb-VIII have also degenerated. Surviving Purkinje cells in the vermis and lateral hemisphere of lobules VIIb-VIII are aligned in parasagittally oriented stripes or transversely oriented bands. Purkinje cells continue to degenerate in localized areas of the posterior lobe such that, by 18 months of age, surviving Purkinje cells are limited primarily to lobules VIc, VIIa, IXd, and X. Quantitative analysis indicates that none of the Purkinje cells in these lobules degenerate.
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PMID:Spatial and temporal pattern of Purkinje cell degeneration in shaker mutant rats with hereditary cerebellar ataxia. 763 28

Clinical features of the anterior inferior cerebellar artery (AICA) territory infarcts were investigated in ten patients, ranging in age from 38 to 76 years. In all patients, there were MR images of infarction located in the area supplied by the AICA. The lesion was on the left side in 6 patients and right side in 4. The lesion of brain stem including the middle cerebellar peduncle was found in 7 patients and that extended to the cerebellum was in 3 patients. The main ipsilateral neurological signs were the VII and VIII cranial nerves palsy and cerebellar ataxia. The V and VI cranial nerves palsy. Horner's syndrome, and dysphagia were also present. The main contralateral sign was superficial sensory disturbance, but no hemiplegia. The underlying pathology included chiefly hyperlipidemia, hypertension, and diabetes mellitus. Cerebral angiography was performed in 8 patients, most of which was observed severe arteriosclerosis suggesting poor hemodynamics in the vertebral and basilar arteries. The prognosis was relatively good, but the VII, VIII, and V cranial nerves palsy and contralateral superficial sensory disturbance remained as the sequelae. As mentioned above, there were various neurological findings and MR images in AICA territory infarcts. Especially there were some patients whose lesion extended to the upper medulla and neurological findings were similar to the Wallenberg syndrome. It is important that one investigates not only axial slices but also coronal slices of MR image to estimate the extension of AICA territory infarct.
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PMID:[Clinical features of anterior inferior cerebellar artery territory infarcts--a study of ten patients]. 904 27

Type 1 antineuronal nuclear autoantibody (ANNA-1, also known as "anti-Hu") is a marker of neurologic autoimmunity that is highly associated with small-cell lung carcinoma (SCLC). To determine the spectrum of symptoms and signs as well as the frequency of cancer in adult patients who are seropositive for ANNA-1, we reviewed 162 sequential patients (67% female) identified as ANNA-1-positive in a comprehensive immunofluorescence screening test. In 21% of these patients, the antibody test requested by the physician was not ANNA-1. By the end of the follow-up period, cancer had been found in 142 patients (88%). Ten of these lacked evidence of SCLC (4 had prostate carcinoma, 3 breast carcinoma, 1 both prostate carcinoma and melanoma, 1 lymphoma, and 1 squamous-cell lung carcinoma). Of the 132 patients (81%) with proven SCLC, 17 had one or more coexisting malignant neoplasms (6 had renal carcinoma, 4 another lung primary carcinoma, 3 prostate carcinoma, 3 breast carcinoma, and 4 assorted neoplasms). The diagnosis of SCLC in 128 patients (97%) followed the onset of paraneoplastic symptoms. SCLC was identified in 10 patients by chest MRI after an equivocal chest radiograph or CT; in 28 by bronchoscopy, mediastinoscopy, or thoracotomy; and in 7 at autopsy. Neurologic signs in decreasing frequency were neuropathy (sensory > mixed somatic > autonomic > cranial [especially cranial nerve VIII] > motor), cerebellar ataxia, limbic encephalitis, polyradiculopathy, associated Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome, myopathy, myelopathy, opsoclonus/myoclonus, motor neuronopathy, brachial plexopathy, and aphasia. Nineteen patients had a solely gastrointestinal initial presentation, including gastroparesis, pseudo-obstruction, esophageal achalasia, or other dysmotility. We conclude that seropositivity for ANNA-1 can expedite the diagnosis and treatment of otherwise occult cancer in patients, especially tobacco abusers, with varied neurologic and gastroenterologic presentations. The search for SCLC should not end on discovering a different neoplasm.
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PMID:Paraneoplastic and oncologic profiles of patients seropositive for type 1 antineuronal nuclear autoantibodies. 952 Dec 51

We present an unusual case of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma within pontocerebellar angle schwannoma in 62-year-old woman. The patient suffered for 5 months with V, VII and VIII nerves paresis and with cerebellar ataxia. CT scan demonstrated large hyperdensive mass in cerebellopontine angle translocating cerebellar hemisphere and cerebral trunk. The patient was subjected to surgery and the tumour was removed totally by suboccipital retromastoidal right craniectomy approach. Histopathological examination revealed schwannoma infiltrated with high grade B-cell lymphoma. The patient did well following surgery without any other lymphoma manifestations, and she died from a heart attack 20 months later. Solitary lymphoma of pontocerebellar angle coexisting with schwannoma is an unusual finding, thus our case is the first report.
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PMID:Coexistence of diffuse large B-cell lymphoma within pontocerebellar angle schwannoma. 1223 Feb 55

Yeast-derived recombinant DNA hepatitis B vaccine usage has been widely accepted since the early 1990s, especially for high-risk patients. Severe adverse effects have been reported infrequently. Certain neurological complications raise concern for hepatitis B vaccine: central nervous system demyelination, acute myelitis, acute cerebellar ataxia, and various peripheral mononeuropathies. Case reports on tinnitus, hearing loss, and vestibular damage are extremely scarce. The case presented here concerns a professionally active nurse, born in 1953, with a medical history of progressive renal failure and hemodialysis. Eleven hours after a second injection of the hepatitis B vaccine Engerix B, an acute left-sided tinnitus occurred and, a few hours later, severe left hearing loss and intense vertigo. Tinnitus and the sensation of vertigo regressed fairly quickly, but the hearing loss and the vestibular paresis were permanent. Increased interpeak intervals on auditory brain responses and lack of recruitment suggested that the lesion probably is located at the level of cranial nerve VIII. From a medicolegal point of view, this audiovestibular damage had to be considered an accident at work and not as an occupational disease.
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PMID:Acute tinnitus and permanent audiovestibular damage after hepatitis B vaccination. 1497 38

Background: Superficial siderosis (SS) is a rare condition in which hemosiderin, an iron storage complex, is deposited in neural tissues because of recurrent subarachnoid bleeding. Hemosiderin deposition in the vestibulocochlear nerve (CN VIII), brain, spinal cord and peripheral nerve can cause sensorineural hearing loss (SNHL) and postural imbalance, but much remains unknown about the vestibular manifestations of SS. Objectives: To report the clinical course, cochleovestibular status, and patterns of vestibulopathy during follow-up of a relatively large case series, and to discuss the possible pathophysiological mechanism of vestibular deterioration. Methods: Six patients diagnosed with SS by magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were enrolled. Their medical records and radiological findings were retrospectively reviewed, particularly in terms of progression of the vestibulocochlear manifestations and the radiological characteristics. Results: All six patients had SNHL. Five of them exhibited progressive hearing loss over years, which was asymmetric in four. On their most recent evaluations, patients showed cerebellar ataxia with combined central and peripheral vestibulopathy on both sides (n = 4), a bilateral peripheral vestibulopathy (n = 1) or isolated central vestibulopathy (n = 1). Notably, the former four patients showed an evolution of isolated central vestibulopathy into combined central and peripheral vestibulopathy. Hypo-intense lesions on T2 weighted MRIs were evident around the cerebellum in all patients, but such lesions were observed around the brainstem in five and the CN VIII in four. The cochlea-vestibular dysfunction generally progressed asymmetrically, but no left-right asymmetry was evident on MRI. Conclusions: SS typically presents as bilaterally asymmetric, progressive cochleovestibular dysfunction with cerebellar ataxia. The pattern of vestibular dysfunction is usually combined central and peripheral vestibulopathy on both sides. Thus, precise identification of audiovestibular dysfunction and central signs is essential in SS, and patients with SS should undergo regular, comprehensive neurotological evaluation to optimize their treatments and prognosis.
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PMID:Bilateral Vestibulopathy in Superficial Siderosis. 2992 56

Spinocerebellar ataxia type 29 (SCA29) is autosomal dominant congenital ataxia characterized by early-onset motor delay, hypotonia, and gait ataxia. Recently, heterozygous missense mutations in an intracellular Ca2+ channel, inositol 1,4,5-trisphosphate (IP3) receptor type 1 (IP3R1), were identified as a cause of SCA29. However, the functional impacts of these mutations remain largely unknown. Here, we determined the molecular mechanisms by which pathological mutations affect IP3R1 activity and Ca2+ dynamics. Ca2+ imaging using IP3R-null HeLa cells generated by genome editing revealed that all SCA29 mutations identified within or near the IP3-binding domain of IP3R1 completely abolished channel activity. Among these mutations, R241K, T267M, T267R, R269G, R269W, S277I, K279E, A280D, and E497K impaired IP3 binding to IP3R1, whereas the T579I and N587D mutations disrupted channel activity without affecting IP3 binding, suggesting that T579I and N587D compromise channel gating mechanisms. Carbonic anhydrase-related protein VIII (CA8) is an IP3R1-regulating protein abundantly expressed in cerebellar Purkinje cells and is a causative gene of congenital ataxia. The SCA29 mutation V1538M within the CA8-binding site of IP3R1 completely eliminated its interaction with CA8 and CA8-mediated IP3R1 inhibition. Furthermore, pathological mutations in CA8 decreased CA8-mediated suppression of IP3R1 by reducing protein stability and the interaction with IP3R1. These results demonstrated the mechanisms by which pathological mutations cause IP3R1 dysfunction, i.e., the disruption of IP3 binding, IP3-mediated gating, and regulation via the IP3R-modulatory protein. The resulting aberrant Ca2+ homeostasis may contribute to the pathogenesis of cerebellar ataxia.
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PMID:Aberrant IP3 receptor activities revealed by comprehensive analysis of pathological mutations causing spinocerebellar ataxia 29. 3042 31

Paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration is a neurological syndrome resulting from immune-mediated dysfunction of Purkinje cells and commonly is associated with a tumor. In most cases, well-characterized onconeural antibodies are detected, such as anti-Yo and anti-Ri antibodies. Carbonic anhydrase-related protein VIII (CARP VIII) antibodies associated with paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration have been previously described in only two cases. Herein, we present a 75-year-old female who developed progressive cerebellar ataxia. Anti-CARP VIII autoantibodies were found at high titres and screening for underlying malignancies revealed a breast cancer. Intravenous immunoglobulin was administered with poor results. Our report further confirms the role of CARP VIII antibodies in cerebellar degeneration.
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PMID:Paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration in a patient with breast cancer associated with carbonic anhydrase-related protein VIII autoantibodies. 3232 85