Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0011168 (
dysphagia
)
15,644
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Neuronal intranuclear hyaline inclusion disease (NIHID) has been recognized in 14 patients. It usually occurs in the first and second decades but has been seen in the sixth. Both sexes are affected by this sporadic multisystem degenerative disorder that has involved the central and peripheral nervous systems with fibrillar and granular intranuclear inclusions. NIHID appears to be several variants of a multisystem degenerative disease as illustrated by the combination of a spontaneous, degenerative central and peripheral nervous system disorder with neuronal intranuclear inclusions and severe atherosclerotic coronary artery disease in a 23-year-old white man. Beginning at 11 years of age, this patient had experienced diffuse muscle spasms, dysarthria,
dysphagia
, tremors,
ataxia
, oculogyric crises, progressive muscle weakness, and atrophy. At autopsy, neuronal intranuclear hyaline inclusions and neuronal loss were seen in his brain, brainstem, cerebellum, spinal cord, bowel, bladder, and esophagus. These fibrillary and granular Cowdry type A and B intraneuronal inclusions were consistent with the diagnosis of NIHID associated with severe coronary atherosclerosis.
...
PMID:Neuronal intranuclear hyaline inclusion disease associated with premature coronary atherosclerosis. 244 45
The authors report a case of ataxic hemiparesis (dysarthria-clumsy hand syndrome plus crural hemiparesis with homolateral
ataxia
), secondary to a single cerebellar lacuna (CT scan), in a left rostral para-vermian position in the vicinity of the peduncle and secondary to arterial hypertension. They discuss the nosological aspects of this recently established entity and the origin of particularly severe and persistent
dysphagia
in their case (cerebellar dysphagia?)
...
PMID:[Ataxic hemiparesis due to a cerebellar lacuna]. 251 Apr 50
We reported a 71-year-old male with lateral medullary syndrome presented acute respiratory arrest after ataxic respiration. The patient had experienced transient diplopia repeatedly for about 2 weeks and then the developed persistent diplopia and vertigo. On the third day he was admitted to our hospital because of neurological deterioration and aspiration pneumonia. He showed left Horner's sign and double vision. And he had sensory disturbances of pain and temperature in the left face and the right side of the body, left limb
ataxia
and truncal
ataxia
. He showed dysarthria, severe
dysphagia
and left mild central facial paresis, but no hemiparesis. This case was clinically considered to be a typical case of left lateral medullary syndrome. When he was admitted to our hospital, he showed hypoxia with hypercapnea in spite of no history of chronic obstructive pulmonary disease. This condition was considered to be a central alveolar hypoventilation. He had two episodes of sudden-onset respiratory arrest following ataxic respiration on the 4th and 5th days, but no cardiac arrest. He was supported his respiration by mechanical ventilation until he was able to breathe spontaneously on the 29th day. The 22nd day MRI disclosed high intensity area in the left lateral and dorso-medial medulla in T2-weighted image, and this lesion was 1.5 cm in length. Therefore this case was diagnosed medullary infarction. This case developed ipsilateral facial pain in chronic stage. Pain existed around the eye and in the cheek, and pain was like toothache and unbearable like thalamic pain.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of medullary infarction presented lateral medullary syndrome and respiratory arrest after ataxic respiration]. 268 32
The patient, a 31-year-old married woman, noticed spasticity on walking at the age of 19 accompanied by
ataxia
, dysarthria and
dysphagia
. Facial twitching and dystonic movement of extremities have been observed since age 27. A sister of her father showed the similar
ataxia
and dysarthria, and expired of pneumonia at the age of 45. On admission at the age of 29, neurological examinations revealed nystagmus, marked spasticity with pathological reflexes and clonus, cerebellar ataxia, dysarthria and
dysphagia
, diffuse muscle wasting, fasciculation in facial musculature, and generalized slow dystonic movement. By neuro-otological studies bilateral MLF syndrome with upward gaze limitation and decreased velocity of saccadic eye movement were detected. Surface EMG at rest showed a dystonic discharges on the extremities. Needle EMG disclosed a systemic neurogenic change with reduced interference and high amplitude potentials. Atrophy of the brainstem was remarkable on the cranial CT and MRI. These abnormal eye movements, especially bilateral MLF syndrome and generalized dystonia seem to be quite unusual in the variety of spinocerebellar degenerations. On reviewing detected clinical descriptions on Joseph disease this case can be probably included.
...
PMID:[A case of spinocerebellar degeneration with bilateral MLF syndrome and dystonia]. 274 81
Multiple sulfatase deficiency is an inherited disorder characterized by a deficiency of several sulfatases and the accumulation of sulfatides, glycosaminoglycans, sphingolipids, and steroid sulfates in tissues and body fluids. The clinical manifestations represent the summation of two diseases: late infantile metachromatic leukodystrophy and mucopolysaccharidosis. We present a 9-year-old girl with a phenotype similar to a mucopolysaccharidosis: short stature, microcephaly, and mild facial dysmorphism, along with
dysphagia
, retinal degeneration, developmental arrest, and
ataxia
. We discuss the importance of measuring the sulfatase activities in the leukocytes, and the instability of sulfatases in the cultured skin fibroblasts.
...
PMID:Multiple sulfatase deficiency. 289 61
Because linkage has been reported between HLA and the locus for hereditary ataxia in some families, we studied a 3-generation kindred in which several individuals had dominantly inherited spinopontine atrophy. Affected family members had upper and lower limb
ataxia
, hypoactive reflexes, loss of proprioception, dysarthria,
dysphagia
, and pronounced extraocular movement abnormalities. Linkage analysis, based on 25 markers in 28 people, gave strongly negative results with both HLA (z less than -2.0 for theta less than 0.15) and GLO1 (z less than -2.0, theta less than or equal to 0.01). The highest LOD score was for linkage to GPT on chromosome 16 (z = 0.42, theta = 0.0). To assess the relationship between HLA linkage and phenotype, 4 published kindreds with adequate clinical and neuropathological descriptions were used for comparison to the present family. Persons in the 3 families showing evidence for HLA linkage had clinical and pathologic changes consistent with olivopontocerebellar atrophy, type 1. The conditions in the 2 "nonlinked" families were phenotypically distinct from the HLA-linked condition with respect to extraocular movement findings and peripheral sensory nervous system signs. They differed markedly from each other in neuropathologic changes.
...
PMID:Linkage analysis in spinopontine atrophy: correlation of HLA linkage with phenotypic findings in hereditary ataxia. 347 98
A three-year-old boy with a progressive history of headache, vomiting and
ataxia
in the course of 2 months, was admitted on August 1983, when he was lethargic. Neurological examination revealed
dysphagia
, scanning speech and tremor in the bilateral hand. CT scan showed a very large enhanced mass in the center of posterior fossa with central necrosis in it and the dilatation of whole ventricular system. Suboccipital craniectomy was immediately performed and the tumor that occupied the vermis and invaded into both cerebellar hemisphere was subtotally removed. Postoperative irradiation was well performed: 4140 rads to the whole brain and 3162 rads to the spinal cord. However, 5 months later, facial palsy in the left side and progressive
ataxia
became prominent. CT scan showed multiple enhanced masses in the left trigonum and right anterior horn of the lateral ventricles and in the left cerebellopontine angle. In spite of chemotherapy, the patient had a down-hill course, especially after the ventricular hemorrhage, and died on June 9th, 1984. Histologically, the tumor had a lobulated appearance with an aggregation of tumor cells encircled by vascular septae. The cells within lobules generally had vesicular nuclei, which were arranged in parallel row. Occasionally smaller hyperchromatic cells with scant cytoplasm were present along the vascular septae. Reticulin was present within the septa, but was not observed within the lobules. Scattered astrocytic cells and processes were identified within the lobules by the immunoperoxidase technique for GFAP. The fibrillary cytoplasmic processes within the lobules were stained by immunoperoxidase technique for neurofilament (68K).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of cerebellar neuroblastoma]. 361 40
A 65 year old man developed progressive signs of pontine and medullary dysfunction with striking bilateral paralysis of lateral gaze, dysarthria,
dysphagia
, and
ataxia
. A respiratory death occurred seven months from the onset. Pathological examination revealed focal brain-stem changes of perivascular lymphocytic cuffing, microglial infiltration, glial nodules, and neuronophagia. No underlying malignancy or general disease impairing immunity mechanisms was discovered.
...
PMID:Subacute brain-stem encephalitis. 485 9
Two siblings with cytochrome c oxidase deficiency are described. One of them died of subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy which was proven by autopsy. The other was also suspected of having Leigh encephalomyelopathy by the findings on brain CT scans. The former, a younger brother, was in good health until the age of 10 months when progressive
dysphagia
, muscular hypotonia and abnormal eye movements became apparent. Six months later he suddenly died due to respiratory insufficiency. The latter, an elder brother, started to show nystagmus, abnormal eye movements and
ataxia
at the age of 5 years. A deficiency of cytochrome c oxidase in the younger brother was demonstrated in autopsied liver and brain, while such a deficiency in the elder brother was shown in biopsied peripheral muscle tissue and in cultured skin fibroblasts. Both patients showed a marked heat lability of cytochrome c oxidase. These results suggest that the biochemical defect observed in the siblings is due to a genetic defect. This seems to be the first case of a generalized defect in cytochrome c oxidase.
...
PMID:Cytochrome C oxidase deficiency in two siblings with Leigh encephalomyelopathy. 609 13
An 18-year-old girl died following a slowly progressive neurodegenerative disease of nine years duration. At 9 years of age, she developed intellectual deterioration associated with speech difficulty, pseudobulbar palsy and
ataxia
. The progression included spastic quadriplegia, anarthria, severe
dysphagia
, ophthalmoplegia, and pes cavus. There was no family history. The brain was uniformly small and the substantia nigra was not pigmented. Neuronal loss and gliosis involving globus pallidus, subthalamic nucleus, thalamic nuclei, brain stem, cerebellum, and spinal cord gave the picture of multisystem atrophy. Intranuclear hyaline inclusions were observed in numerous neurons of the central and peripheral nervous system. These were auto-fluorescent and were made up of intermingled straight filaments (8-9 nm in diameter). Only two previously reported cases showing these same inclusions are known. They are reviewed, compared, and discussed in relation to primary neuronal degenerations.
...
PMID:Multiple system atrophy with neuronal intranuclear hyaline inclusions. Report of a new case with light and electron microscopic studies. 626 27
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>