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Query: UMLS:C0008489 (chorea)
2,102 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The author studied 40 patients with hereditary extrapyramidal diseases, including 8 cases with Hallerworden-Spatz disease, 13--with Hutchingtons chorea and 23 with torsion dystonia. For control purposes 20 normals were studied as well. The studies were aimed at determining the iron, manganese and zinc content in the blood plasma in the diurnal urine by means of an atom-absorbtional spectrophotometry on the apparatus "Perkin--Elmer-503" with the use of black lead flasks. These parameters were correlated with the clinical syndrome, severity of the condition and its duration. In order to detect the possible intercorrelations between the trace elements the method of a correlational level with determination of Spearman's coefficient was used.
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PMID:[Microelement metabolism in patients with hereditary extrapyramidal diseases]. 14 95

Heavily T2-weighted high-field MR images provide a unique opportunity for the evaluation of the extrapyramidal motor system. The images are affected by the presence of small amounts of naturally occurring paramagnetic substances--principally iron--that delineate the neostriatum (caudate and putamen), globus pallidus, red nucleus, substantia nigra, and dentate nucleus, primarily by a decrease in signal secondary to the T2* effect. Movement disorders are associated with either increased or decreased signal or both in these structures, depending on the pathologic process. In the initial evaluation of 113 patients with a variety of movement disorders, good correlation of imaging abnormalities can be made with a simplified schema of the extrapyramidal pathways and a system of classification of abnormal movements, parkinsonism/tremor, dystonia, chorea, myoclonus, and hemiballismus. Parkinsonisms are characterized by abnormalities of the cortico-ponto-cerebello-dentato-rubro-thalamo-cortico-spinal tract or the nigrostriatal tract. Dystonias are characterized by abnormalities of the neostriatum predominantly affecting the putamen. Choreas are also characterized by abnormalities of the neostriatum but predominantly affecting the caudate nucleus. Hemiballismus is characterized by lesions affecting the subthalamic nucleus or associated pathway.
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PMID:Study of movement disorders and brain iron by MR. 244 Feb 91

We studied two siblings with chorea and amyotrophy of adult onset and spherocytic hemolytic anemia. Autopsy revealed an atrophic striatum with iron deposition and spheroid bodies. Degeneration of the substantia nigra and spinal cord anterior horns was seen without iron deposition. The disorder seems to be a variant of the chorea-amyotrophy-acanthocytosis syndrome, and the pathology may account for evidence of parkinsonism and amyotrophy in that syndrome. Acanthocytosis may not be the only hematologic abnormality in this disorder.
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PMID:Chorea-amyotrophy with chronic hemolytic anemia: a variant of chorea-amyotrophy with acanthocytosis. 356 76

We report a familial case of hereditary ceruloplasmin deficiency (HCD) showing an A-G transition in intron 6 of the ceruloplasmin gene. Clinical features consisted of chorea, cerebellar ataxia, dementia, diabetes mellitus, retinal pigmentation and iron deposition in the liver and brain without copper overload in those organs. The patient's children and siblings had similar laboratory results, but did not show any neurological abnormalities. She was medicated for diabetes mellitus at 43 years of age, and neurological signs appeared when she was 52 years old. The laboratory findings were anemia, low concentrations of iron and copper in serum and of copper in urine. Ceruloplasmin was not detected in the serum. The iron and copper contents in the liver were 3,580 and 10 microg/g wet tissue, respectively. MRI of the brain showed iron deposition in the basal ganglia, dentate nucleus and thalamus. This case did not show any abnormal increase in copper in the blood and urine following CuSO(4)5H(2)O oral overloading test. Following the intravenous administration of commercially available fresh-frozen human plasma (FFP) containing ceruloplasmin, the serum iron content increased for several hours due to ferroxidase activity of ceruloplasmin. In the liver, the iron content decreased more with the combined intravenous administration of FFP and deferoxamine than with FFP administration alone. Her neurological symptoms improved following repetitive FFP treatment.
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PMID:A case of hereditary ceruloplasmin deficiency with iron deposition in the brain associated with chorea, dementia, diabetes mellitus and retinal pigmentation: administration of fresh-frozen human plasma. 1052 42

Neurological manifestations occur frequently in polycythaemia. Chorea, however, is a rare complication of the disease. A case of chorea in a patient previously diagnosed with polycythaemia vera is reported. Choreic movements started after measurement of haematological variables showed deterioration. It was considered that this was caused by inappropriate treatment with iron because the chorea was markedly reduced after the two first venesections and normalisation of the packed cell volume and haemoglobin parameters.
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PMID:Chorea disclosing deterioration of polycythaemia vera. 1100 85

Neuroferritinopathy is a recently recognised genetic disease resulting in a dominantly inherited movement disorder. The condition was mapped by linkage analysis to chromosome 19q13.3 and found to be due to a single adenine insertion in the ferritin light chain (FTL) gene at position 460-461 which is predicted to alter the C terminus of the FTL polypeptide. Clinical features of neuroferritinopathy are highly variable, with chorea, dystonia, and Parkinsonian features predominating in different affected individuals. The most consistent feature is a dystonic dysarthria. Symptoms and abnormal physical signs appear to be restricted to the nervous system and onset is typically in the fourth to sixth decades. Low serum ferritin also characterises this condition. Brain MR imaging of affected patients demonstrates iron deposition in the basal ganglia, progressing over years to cystic degeneration, and brain histochemistry shows abnormal aggregates of ferritin and iron. Now that the molecular basis of the condition is known, therapeutic interventions to reduce or reverse brain iron deposition are being evaluated. This rare disease provides evidence of a central role for iron metabolism in neurodegenerative disorders.
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PMID:Neuroferritinopathy: a window on the role of iron in neurodegeneration. 1254 46

Hereditary haemochromatosis (HH) is a common autosomal recessive systemic iron overload disorder in which CNS manifestations, particularly movement disorders, have been reported. We report a 63-year-old woman with familial HH with a four-year history of progressive gait disturbance, chorea, and mild cervical and laryngeal dystonia. Her movement disorder was thought to be related to the haemochromatosis. On further investigation, analysis for the Huntington's disease expansion was positive. A review of the seven published cases of movement disorders associated with HH as well as data concerning brain iron deposition in this condition leads us to debate the causal link between movement disorders and HH. We suggest that movement disorders are rare in association with HH, and that such patients should be thoroughly investigated for another cause for their movement disorder.
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PMID:Hereditary haemochromatosis is unlikely to cause movement disorders--a critical review. 1750 45

Neuroferritinopathy (MIM 606159, also labeled hereditary ferritinopathy and neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation type 2, NBIA2) is an adult-onset progressive movement disorder caused by mutations in the ferritin light chain gene (FTL1). Four pathogenic mutations in FTL1 have been described to date; 460insA was our original founder mutation in Cumbria, North West England, where it arose before 1800. The same mutation appears to have arisen separately in France. The resulting altered reading frame extends the peptide, disrupting the ferritin dodecahedron structure and causing accumulation of ferritin and iron, primarily in central neurons. A wide range of neurologic symptoms may occur; 50% present with chorea, 43% with limb dystonia, and 7% with Parkinsonian features. The disorder provides a direct link between disordered iron storage and a neurodegenerative disease, opening new avenues for treatment by altering brain iron stores in addition to symptomatic treatments such as local Botulinum toxin and oral anti oxidants.
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PMID:Neuroferritinopathy. 1710 56

Aceruloplasminemia is an autosomal recessive disorder of iron metabolism resulting from mutations of the ceruloplasmin gene. To better define the neurological phenotype of aceruloplasminemia we reviewed reports of published cases and sought details of unpublished ones. We identified 32 published reports and 1 unpublished case. The age at diagnosis ranged from 16 to 71 years with a mean of 51. For the 28 homozygous cases the most common presentation was with cognitive impairment (12/28, 42%) accompanied by craniofacial dyskinesia (8/28, 28%), cerebellar ataxia (13/28, 46%) and retinal degeneration (21/28, 75%). Four heterozygotes presented with cerebellar signs or tremor, whilst 1 had chorea-athetosis. There were no genotype-phenotype associations, but homozygotes tended to have severer disease.
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PMID:The neurological presentation of ceruloplasmin gene mutations. 1866 28

Neuroferritinopathy is a hereditary neurodegenerative disorder caused by mutations in the ferritin light chain gene (FTL1). The cardinal features are progressive movement disturbance, hypoferritinemia, and iron deposition in the brain. To date, five mutations have been described in Caucasian and Japanese families, but the genotype-phenotype correlations remain to be established. We identified a novel FTL1 mutation (exon 4, c.641/642, 4-nucletotide duplication) in a Japanese family and compared the clinical traits with those previously reported. All mutations but one are insertions in exon 4, resulting in frameshifts. Clinical features are similar among patients with the same mutations. Middle-age onset chorea is common in patients with insertions in the 5' portion of exon 4 including our cases, whereas patients with insertions in the 3' portion of exon 4 develop early-onset tremor, suggesting genotype-phenotype correlations. In this family, male predominance and normal serum ferritin levels are characteristic.
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PMID:A novel ferritin light chain gene mutation in a Japanese family with neuroferritinopathy: description of clinical features and implications for genotype-phenotype correlations. 1911 39


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