Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0013362 (dysarthria)
3,768 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Right brain damage results in a variety of cognitive and behavioural dysfunctions. Mutism however, has been described only with left or bihemispheric lesions involving the parietal lobe. We report an elderly man who had left faciobrachial monoparesis and concomitant mutism. His auditory-verbal comprehension was intact. MRI revealed a right parietal infarct involving the cortical and subcortical regions. Recovery from mutism during the course of treatment was abrupt and complete with no residual dysarthria. A possibility of diaschisis or impaired modulation of left hemispheric function due to right cerebral infarct, presenting as conversion reaction, is proposed for this rare association.
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PMID:Right parietal infarction with concomitant mutism. 992 42

Among the numerous clinical syndromes observed after severe traumatic head injury, post-traumatic mutism is a disorder rarely reported in adults and not studied in any detail in children. We report seven children between the ages of 3 1/2 and 14 years who sustained severe head injury and developed post-traumatic mutism. We aim to give a precise clinical characterization of this disorder, discuss differential diagnosis and correlations with brain imaging and suggest its probable neurological substrate. After a coma lasting from 5 to 25 days, the seven patients who suffered from post-traumatic mutism went through a period of total absence of verbal production lasting from 5 to 94 days, associated with the recovery of non-verbal communication skills and emotional vocalization. During the first days after the recovery of speech, all patients were able to produce correct small sentences with a hypophonic and monotonous voice, moderate dysarthria, word finding difficulties but no signs of aphasia, and preserved oral comprehension. The neurological signs in the acute phase (III nerve paresis in three of seven patients, signs of autonomic dysfunctions in five of seven patients), the results of the brain imaging and the experimental animal data all suggest the involvement of mesencephalic structures as playing a key role in the aetiology of post-traumatic mutism.
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PMID:Post-traumatic mutism in children: clinical characteristics, pattern of recovery and clinicopathological correlations. 1072 32

A 4-year old girl with meningitis, caused by streptococcus pneumoniae, developed a subcoma with respiratory insufficiency, followed by a severe cerebellar syndrome. Cerebellar involvement after regaining consciousness consisted of a symmetrical ataxia and mutism. This mutism changed into dysarthria and finally into normal speech. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed lesions in both cerebellar hemispheres, suggesting cerebellitis. She recovered with prompt antibiotic treatment.
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PMID:Cerebellar involvement as a rare complication of pneumococcal meningitis. 1083 85

When a child does not speak, this may be because there is no wish to do so (elective or selective mutism), or the result of lesions in the brain, particularly in the posterior fossa. The characteristics of the former children are described, especially their shyness; and it is emphasized that mild forms are quite common and a definitive diagnosis should only be made if the condition is significantly affecting the child and family. In the case of mutism due to organic causes, the commonest of these is trauma to the cerebellum. Operations on the cerebellum to remove tumours can be followed by mutism, often after an interval of a few days, and it may last for several months or longer, to be followed by dysarthria. Other rarer causes are discussed, and also the differential diagnosis. The so-called posterior fossa syndrome consists of mutism combined with ataxia, cranial nerve palsies, bulbar palsies, hemiparesis, cognitive impairment and emotional lability, but the post-operative symptoms are often dominated by the lack of speech. The most accepted cause for the condition is vascular spasm with involvement of the dentate nucleus and the dentatorubrothalamic tracts to the brain-stem, and subsequently to the cortex. Diaschisis may be involved in causing the loss of higher cerebral functions, and possibly, complicating hydrocephalus. The treatment of elective mutism is reviewed, either using a psychotherapeutic approach or a variety of drugs, or both. These may well be ineffective, and it must be remembered that the condition often resolves on its own. The former treatment must concentrate on the training of social skills and activities of daily life and must be targeted to both the child, the family, and the school. Also, all kinds of punishment and insistence on speech must be discouraged. The drug, which seems to be most effective, is fluoxetine. Discovering more about the causes of mutism due to organic causes may well depend on studies using such techniques as magnetic resonance imaging and single photon emission tomography.
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PMID:Mutism: elective or selective, and acquired. 1124 56

Transient mutism following posterior fossa tumour resection in children is well known in the literature. To our Knowledge, this phenomenon has never been reported without surgical intervention. We report a case of cerebellar mutism secondary haemorrhage from a vermian arteriovenous malformation (AVM), which resolved to ataxic dysarthria after 6 weeks. Embolization of the AVM was performed and the patient's clinical status continued to improve gradually till she became normal 6 months from the insult. The mutism was due to rupture of the AVM which might correlate the cerebellar mutism with the transient vasospasm of the blood vessels supplying the cerebellum. It is possible for a spontaneus posterior fossa bleed to result in transient mutism similar to post surgical mutism.
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PMID:Cerebellar mutism caused by arteriovenous malformation of the vermis. 1130 61

Transient cerebellar eye closure (TCES) is a complication of cerebellar tumor surgery in children and is almost exclusively observed in the context of the syndrome of mutism and subsequent dysarthria. As knowledge about the course of transient cerebellar eye closure is absent, we describe in detail the clinical picture in a 14-year-old girl. The process of improvement of TCES is characterized by four distinct phases, can last more than 1 month and may be associated with severe persistent cerebellar dysfunction.
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PMID:Transient cerebellar eye closure and mutism after cerebellar tumor surgery: long-term clinical follow-up of neurologic and behavioral disturbances in a 14-year-old girl. 1260 Dec 36

Seizures are an uncommon but serious complication of hyponatremia which can lead to permanent brain damage and even death. It is recommended that patients with hyponatremic-induced seizures be treated with 3% hypertonic saline, however, a rapid rate of correction may result in central pontine myelinolysis (CPM), a severe neurological disorder characterized by mutism, dysarthria, spastic quadriparesis, and pseudobulbar palsy. The patient in this case developed a hyponatremia-induced generalized tonic-clonic seizure which was aborted by rapid therapy with diazepam, followed by hypertonic saline and phenytoin. Subsequent replacement of hypertonic saline with normal saline and salt tabs in combination with phenytoin allowed gradual correction of serum sodium without any subsequent seizures or neurological complications.
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PMID:Therapy with hypertonic saline in combination with anti-convulsants for hyponatremia-induced seizure: a case report and review of the literature. 1263 26

A 38-year-old man was admitted to our hospital with headache, dysarthria and paraparesis. Brain CT and diffusion MRI disclosed cerebral infarction at bilateral anterior cerebral artery (ACA) territories. His symptoms and signs deteriorated in several days despite intensive antithrombotic therapy, resulting in right hemiparesis, akinetic mutism, memory disturbance, change of personality, urinary incontinence, forced grasping, and starting delay of speech and motion. Cerebral angiography demonstrated occlusion with contrast pooling at the right ACA A2 portion. Stenosis and dilatation were found at left ACA A2 portion. An intimal flap was also demonstrated on serial angiography. This case was diagnosed as cerebral infarction caused by dissection of bilateral ACA. Although no definite primary arteriopathy was demonstrated, bilateral dissection could be occurred simultaneously.
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PMID:[A case of juvenile cerebral infarction caused by bilateral anterior cerebral artery dissection]. 1266 Nov 8

An 85-year-old woman developed sudden confusion and dysarthria progressing to mutism, orobuccal dyskinesias, generalized tremors worse with activity, ataxia, and rigidity with cog wheeling without high-grade fevers or dysautonomia. These findings were related temporally to the institution of mirtazapine as monotherapy for a major depressive illness with superimposed anxiety disorder. Withdrawal of the agent resulted in early notable clinical resolution with only residual hypertonia after 2 weeks. This is a rare report of serotonin syndrome induced by mirtazapine monotherapy. The hypothesized pathophysiologic mechanism in this case is overstimulation of serotonin (5-hydroxytryptamine or 5-HT) type 1A receptors (5-HT(1A)) in the brainstem and spinal cord in an individual with risk factors for hyperserotoninemia resulting from reduced, acquired endogenous serotonin metabolism.
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PMID:Mirtazapine-induced serotonin syndrome. 1464 4

Tacrolimus (FK506), an immunosuppressant, has been associated with mutism in adults after liver transplant. Speech arrest, agitation, tremor, ataxia, and downward gaze deviation in a 5-year-old female 13 days after orthotopic liver transplant are reported. FK506, which began to be administered 12 days earlier, rose to a level of 44 ng/mL (normal range, 10-20 ng/mL) 1 day before neurologic abnormalities began. FK506 dose level was maintained and then reduced. Three days later the patient could say a few single words and extra-ocular movement returned to normal. Four months later, she continued to exhibit decreased fluency and dysarthria with ataxia. One year later, decreased fluency and mild ataxia persists. Rapid identification of speech loss linked to FK506 may be important because reduction or cessation of the drug may be associated with reverse of speech loss.
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PMID:Tacrolimus (FK506)-induced mutism after liver transplant. 1269 71


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