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Query: UMLS:C0008489 (
chorea
)
2,102
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The mitochondrial cytopathies are genetically and phenotypically heterogeneous group of disorders caused by structural and functional abnormalities in mitochondria. To the best of our knowledge, there are very few studies published from India till date. Selected and confirmed fourteen cases of neurological mitochondrial cytopathies with different clinical syndromes admitted between 1997 and 2000 are being reported. There were 8 male and 6 female patients. The mean age was 24.42+/-11.18 years (range 4-40 years). Twelve patients could be categorized into well-defined syndromes, while two belonged to undefined group. In the defined syndrome categories, three patients had MELAS (mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke like episodes), three had MERRF (myoclonic epilepsy and ragged red fibre myopathy), three cases had KSS (Kearns-Sayre Syndrome) and three were diagnosed to be suffering from mitochondrial myopathy. In the uncategorized group, one case presented with paroxysmal kinesogenic dystonia and the other manifested with generalized
chorea
alone. Serum lactic acid level was significantly increased in all the patients (fasting 28.96+/-4.59 mg%, post exercise 41.02+/-4.93 mg%). Muscle biopsy was done in all cases. Succinic dehydrogenase staining of muscle tissue showed subsarcolemmal accumulation of mitochondria in 12 cases. Mitochondrial DNA study could be performed in one case only and it did not reveal any mutation at nucleotides 3243 and 8344.
MRI
brain showed multiple infarcts in MELAS, hyperintensities in putaminal areas in
chorea
and bilateral cerebellar atrophy in MERRF.
...
PMID:Neurological mitochondrial cytopathies. 1213 80
A 54-year-old woman presented choreic movements in left face and extremities for three months. Cerebral angiography revealed occlusions of bilateral internal carotid arteries (right: after the furcation of posterior communicating artery; left: after the furcation of opthalmic artery) and net-like collaterals around the basal ganglia region (Moyamoya vessels). Haloperidol rapidly resolved the choreic movements and no recurrence was observed. PET demonstrated misery perfusion at bilateral temporo-parietal cortices. Especially, right peri-sylvian region showed the most severe ischemia.
MRI
demonstrated no infarcts. Therefore, ischemia of the right striatum was suspected to be the cause of the left-sided hemichorea. Previously, Moyamoya disease presenting
chorea
was infrequently reported in young people of less than 20 years of age. This is the first report of the aged patient of Moyamoya disease presenting with hemichorea and severe misery perfusion.
...
PMID:[An adult case of Moyamoya disease presenting with transient hemichorea]. 1235 53
Masked prime tasks have shown that sensory information that has not been consciously perceived can nevertheless trigger the preactivation of a motor response. Automatic inhibitory control processes prevent such response tendencies from interfering with behaviour. The present study investigated the possibility that these inhibitory control processes are mediated by a cortico-striatal-pallidal-thalamic pathway by using a masked prime task with Huntington's disease patients (Experiment 1) and with healthy volunteers in a functional
MRI
(fMRI) study (Experiment 2). In the masked prime task, clearly visible left- or right-pointing target arrows are preceded by briefly presented and subsequently masked prime arrows. Participants respond quickly with a left or right key-press to each target. Trials are either compatible (prime and target pointing in the same direction) or incompatible (prime and target pointing in different directions). Prior behavioural and electrophysiological results show that automatic inhibition of the initially primed response tendency is reflected in a 'negative compatibility effect' (faster reaction times for incompatible trials than for compatible trials), and is shown to consist of three distinct processes (prime activation, response inhibition and response conflict) occurring within 300 ms. Experiment 1 tested the hypothesis that lesions of the striatum would interrupt automatic inhibitory control by studying early-stage Huntington's disease patients. Findings supported the hypothesis: there was a bimodal distribution for patients, with one-third (choreic) showing disinhibition, manifested as an absent negative compatibility effect, and two-thirds (non-choreic) showing excessive inhibition, manifested as a significantly greater negative compatibility effect than that in controls. Experiment 2 used fMRI and a region of interest (ROI) template-based method to further test the hypothesis that structures of the striatal-pallidal-thalamic pathway mediate one or more of the processes of automatic inhibitory control. Neither prime activation nor response conflict significantly engaged any ROIs, but the response inhibition process led to significant modulation of both the caudate and thalamus. Taken together, these experiments indicate a causal role for the caudate nucleus and thalamus in automatic inhibitory motor control, and the results are consistent with performance of the task requiring both direct and indirect striatal-pallidal-thalamic pathways. The finding that Huntington's disease patients with greater
chorea
were disinhibited is consistent with the theory that
chorea
arises from selective degeneration of striatal projections to the lateral globus pallidus, while the exaggerated inhibitory effect for patients with little or no
chorea
may be due to additional degeneration of projections to the medial globus pallidus.
...
PMID:Inhibition of subliminally primed responses is mediated by the caudate and thalamus: evidence from functional MRI and Huntington's disease. 1256 91
We report an adult-onset case of Huntington disease presenting with spasticity and cerebellar ataxia. The patient, a 47-year old woman, was admitted to our clinic because of progressive involuntary movements. Her elder brother suffered from the similar symptoms. Neurologically, she had quick temper, dementia, generalized
chorea
, spasticity and truncal ataxia.
MRI
demonstrated atrophy of caudate, midbrain, pons and cerebellum. From these clinical and
MRI
findings, she was suspected to have a form of spinocerebellar degeneration (SCD), particularly DRPLA. However, DNA analysis showed CAG repeats in huntington gene was expanded (47/20). Accordingly she was diagnosed as having adult-onset Huntington disease, mimicking SCD. This case indicates Huntington disease may present atypical clinical features and it is crucial to determine CAG repeat size in huntington gene for the patient with dementia and/or movement disorders, etiology of which is unknown. The relationships between clinical phenotypic variations and huntington gene expression are not determined.
...
PMID:[A case of adult-onset Huntington disease presenting with spasticity and cerebellar ataxia, mimicking spinocerebellar degeneration]. 1282 May 45
A 46-year-old woman with a nine-year history of diabetes mellitus (DM) without treatment had an acute onset of right hemiballism. For the treatment of hyperglycemia (random blood sugar 588 mg/dl) conventional insulin therapy was started, and HbA1c rapidly decreased from 16.3% to 8.8% over the first two months. During this period, there were no hypoglycemic symptoms or episodes, though amnesia appeared just after the insulin therapy was started. T1-weighted
MRI
showed hyperintensity in the left basal ganglia, which has been reported in many cases of
chorea
or ballism associated with DM. In addition, there were unique changes in the left temporal lobe, including transient contrast enhancement along the cortex followed by transient hyperintensity in the cortical-subcortical area on T2 weighted and FLAIR images, and then hyperintensity along the cortex on T1 weighted images and atrophy. These findings were thought to indicate a consecutive process, i.e., capillary hyperlucency followed mainly by vasogenic edema and then laminar necrosis. Similar MR findings were reported in hypoglycemic coma. MRA also revealed a transient vasospasm in the left MCA M1-M2 portions in this patient. These signal changes may have been related to the prolonged hyperglycemic state as well as blood sugar control that was too rapid.
...
PMID:[Abnormal MR findings in the temporal lobe and basal ganglia along with vasospasm in a case of hemiballism associated with diabetes mellitus]. 1450 51
Ataxia with ocular motor apraxia type 1 (AOA1) is an autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxia (ARCA) associated with oculomotor apraxia, hypoalbuminaemia and hypercholesterolaemia. The gene APTX, which encodes aprataxin, has been identified recently. We studied a large series of 158 families with non-Friedreich progressive ARCA. We identified 14 patients (nine families) with five different missense or truncating mutations in the aprataxin gene (W279X, A198V, D267G, W279R, IVS5+1), four of which were new. We determined the relative frequency of AOA1 which is 5%. Mutation carriers underwent detailed neurological, neuropsychological, electrophysiological, oculographic and biological examinations, as well as brain imaging. The mean age at onset was 6.8 +/- 4.8 years (range 2-18 years). Cerebellar ataxia with cerebellar atrophy on
MRI
and severe axonal sensorimotor neuropathy were present in all patients. In contrast, oculomotor apraxia (86%), hypoalbuminaemia (83%) and hypercholesterolaemia (75%) were variable. Choreic movements were frequent at onset (79%), but disappeared in the course of the disease in most cases. However, a remarkably severe and persistent choreic phenotype was associated with one of the mutations (A198V). Cognitive impairment was always present. Ocular saccade initiation was normal, but their duration was increased by the succession of multiple hypometric saccades that could clinically be confused with 'slow saccades'. We emphasize the phenotypic variability over the course of the disease. Cerebellar ataxia and/or
chorea
predominate at onset, but later on they are often partially masked by severe neuropathy, which is the most typical symptom in young adults. The presence of
chorea
, sensorimotor neuropathy, oculomotor anomalies, biological abnormalities, cerebellar atrophy on
MRI
and absence of the Babinski sign can help to distinguish AOA1 from Friedreich's ataxia on a clinical basis. The frequency of
chorea
at onset suggests that this diagnosis should also be considered in children with
chorea
who do not carry the IT15 mutation responsible for Huntington's disease.
...
PMID:Cerebellar ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 1: clinical and genetic studies. 1450 70
A patient with the typical features of neuroacanthocytosis is reported.
Chorea
, tics, personality changes and caudate atrophy on cranial
MRI
resulted in an erroneous diagnosis of Huntington's disease elsewhere. Attention to other features viz., absence of ocular motility disturbances, amyotrophy, areflexia, EMG evidence of axonopathy, raised serum creatinine phosphokinase (CPK) levels and the typical erythrocytic acanthocytosis enabled us to establish the correct diagnosis. The typical features of the disease as seen in the patient are discussed. In view of the implications for genetic counseling, careful clinical and laboratory evaluation is always warranted to exclude neuroacanthocytosis in all suspected cases of Huntington's disease.
...
PMID:Neuroacanthocytosis misdiagnosed as Huntington's disease: a case report. 1505 Apr 53
We present two case studies, one of generalized
chorea
and one of hemichorea, both after severe hypoglycemia episodes. Both cases showed hyperperfusion in their SPECT scans. The
MRI
and SPECT findings serve as clues regarding the role of basal ganglion dysfunction associated with
chorea
.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging and single-photon emission computed tomography changes in hypoglycemia-induced chorea. 1507 49
The aim of this study was to study the neuropsychiatric (NP) manifestations, diagnostic evaluation, treatment and outcome in juvenile systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE). We reviewed the charts of all children with SLE and evidence of NP manifestations as defined by the presence of at least one of the following: headache, cerebrovascular accident (CVA),
chorea
, seizure, papilledema, and psychiatric or spinal cord manifestations. Out of 90 children with SLE, 20 (16 female) had NP manifestations. The mean age at onset was 8.8 years. The mean period between onset of SLE and NP manifestations was 10.2 months. NP manifestations were the presenting feature in 3 patients. Eleven patients had headache, 10 had psychiatric manifestations, 10 had seizure and 6 had CVA. Coma was seen in 5 patients,
chorea
in 4, transverse myelitis in 2 and papilledema in 2. Anticardolipin antibodies were high in 12 patients. Five patients had an abnormal CSF study. Nine patients had EEG abnormalities and 13 showed
MRI
abnormalities. All patients received oral prednisone and 17 were treated with IVMP and immunosuppressive therapy (cyclophosphamide or azathioprine); 85% of our patients recovered completely, but 15% had persistent NP sequelae; 10% died from severe infection. In conclusion, NP involvement in juvenile SLE is common. However, early diagnosis and early treatment with adjunctive intravenous pulse cyclophosphamide may improve the outcome.
...
PMID:Pattern of neuropsychiatric manifestations and outcome in juvenile systemic lupus erythematosus. 1527 52
Anti-basal ganglia antibodies (ABGA) have been associated with 100% of acute cases and 69% of persistent cases of Sydenham's chorea. We describe two cases of late recurrences of Sydenham's chorea with absence of ABGA. Both patients had several childhood episodes of Sydenham's chorea.
MRI
imaging of the basal ganglia and exhaustive investigations for other causes of
chorea
were normal or negative. The absence of ABGA may be evidence against an autoimmune pathology in late and some persistent recurrences. We suggest the likely pathophysiology to be dopamine hypersensitivity of chronically damaged basal ganglia neurones possibly following induction of an autoimmune antibody response in childhood.
...
PMID:Late recurrences of Sydenham's chorea are not associated with anti-basal ganglia antibodies. 1537 2
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