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)

Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) is a neurometabolic genetic disorder that is distinguished from Niemann-Pick disease by its later onset, more insidious progression, variable visceromegaly, and abnormalities of intracellular cholesterol metabolism. We describe a patient who presented with an 8-year history of psychosis requiring chronic neuroleptic therapy for a presumed diagnosis of schizophrenia. He was subsequently diagnosed with NPC as the emerging features of dementia, ataxia, dysarthria, and vertical supranuclear ophthalmoplegia were recognized. The characteristic features of adult-onset NPC and the obstacles to early diagnosis are reviewed.
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PMID:Psychosis as the initial manifestation of adult-onset Niemann-Pick disease type C. 864 5

The authors report on a Portuguese family with 3 adult brothers affected with GM2-gangliosidosis (B1 variant) in a sibship of 4, and more specifically on one of these brothers with neurological onset at the age of 17. Psychosis, lower motoneuron involvement and dysarthria were predominant in two of the cases; the third had a cerebellar symptomatology. Hexosaminidase A activity, studied in leukocytes, was profoundly deficient when measured using the specific sulfated substrate, but nearly normal using a conventional assay (non-sulfated substrate). These results established the diagnosis of the unusual enzymological form of GM2-gangliosidosis known as the B1 variant, which had so far not been associated with an adult phenotype. Molecular studies are in progress to study genotype/phenotype correlations in this family in comparison with known mutations in the B1 variant and in adult GM2-gangliosidosis. This report also emphasizes that a metabolic etiology, leading to genetic counselling, should be considered in some familial degenerative neurological disorders.
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PMID:[GM2-Gangliosidosis variant B1 disclosed during adolescence by an isolated multi-systemic involvement of the central and peripheral nervous systems]. 780 Oct 43

A 25-year-old woman suffered from hyperemesis gravidarum when she was seven weeks pregnant. Since her vomiting continued, she received intravenous dextrose and electrolytes without thiamine in a hospital. One month later, she developed gait disturbance, followed by confusion and dysarthria. On admission to our department, she was confusional and had ataxic dysarthria. Spontaneous and gaze evoked nystagmus was present. Limb coordination was bilaterally ataxic. Based on her clinical course and symptoms, she was diagnosed as having Wernicke's encephalopathy. From the admission day, intravenous infusion of vitamin B1 (600 mg/day) was started. A few days later, her consciousness and limb ataxia began to improve. However, truncal ataxia and polyneuropathy became evident. Eight weeks after onset, she developed Korsakoff's psychosis such as anterograde and retrograde amnesia, disorientation and confabulation. We administered large amounts of corticosteroid (methylprednisolone 500 mg/day) in order to reduce brain edema or stabilize the impaired blood-brain barrier. Soon after, her psychosis began to improve gradually. She recovered remarkably from the psychosis, but she was left with persistent nystagmus, mild ataxic gait and polyneuropathy. The present case suggests that corticosteroid may have the beneficial effect on Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome.
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PMID:[Beneficial effect of steroid pulse therapy on Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome due to hyperemesis gravidarum]. 795 22

Vascular dementia (VAD) is common, and small vessel disease is one of the most frequent etiologies of the disorder. Lacunar state and Binswanger's disease are the two types of VAD associated with small vessel disease. Lacunar state and Binswanger's disease produce a dementia syndrome with characteristics of subcortical dementia including slowing of information processing, impaired memory, and poor sustained attention. Executive dysfunction includes poor word list generation and verbal fluency (design generation), impaired motor programming with perseveration and impersistence, and difficulty with set shifting. Memory loss in subcortical VAD is characterized by poor retrieval and intact recognition. Apathy is ubiquitous in VAD and depression and psychosis are common. Parkinsonism with prominent gait disturbances in conjunction with pyramidal tract signs, dysarthria, pseudobulbar affect, and incontinence are frequent motor manifestations of VAD with small vessel disease. The lesions of subcortical VAD affect the structures--caudate nucleus, globus pallidus, thalamus-and connecting fibers of frontal--subcortical circuits and produce a clinical syndrome similar to that seen in other subcortical diseases.
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PMID:Vascular subcortical dementias: clinical aspects. 808 75

A 58-year-old woman developed severe progressive dementia. Markedly impaired memory, apraxia and abnormal behaviour with psychotic components suggested Alzheimer's syndrome. But there were atypical signs, namely abnormal coordination, occasional tremors and dysarthria. A search for a possible toxic cause was at first unsuccessful, but by chance a "gastric power" containing 0.1 g of bismuth gallate per gram of powder, was found in her night-table. The patient had taken it regularly over years, at a dosage of up to 1.5 g daily, to combat gastric acidity. Six days after stopping the drug the blood bismuth level was 70 micrograms/l, which within 1-2 months fell to 9 micrograms/l. After 4 1/2 months in hospital the patient was discharged in a good general condition and with normal intellectual function.
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PMID:[Chronic bismuth poisoning with encephalopathy and dementia]. 844 Jan 62

Topiramate is a new antiepileptic drug, which is not yet marketed in Germany. The anticonvulsive activity is probably mediated by sodium-channel blockade combined with gabaergic and weak antiglutamatergic properties. We investigated 23 patients with partial seizures in this open prospective study. The efficacy was analysed under stable concurrent antiepileptic drugs. Two of the patients became seizure free. Ten patients had a reduction of seizure frequency of at least 50%. The responder rate was 57%. The maximum daily dosages were 400 to 850 mg. Side-effects without relationship to dose were nervousness and aggression. In two patients an psychotic episode occurred. Dose-related side-effects were ataxia, dizziness, somnolence and dysarthria. This study is underlining that topiramate is efficacious in the treatment of partial onset seizures but also associated with a narrow therapeutic width.
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PMID:[Topiramate--an effective new anticonvulsant. An open prospective study]. 944 Dec 57

The neurologic signs and symptoms of carbamazepine and phenytoin toxicity, such as ataxia, dysarthria, and nystagmus, are well known. The psychiatric manifestations of toxicity, such as psychosis and hallucinations, however, are less widely recognized. This study reports the case of a 9-year-old male with seizures who developed intermittent complex visual hallucinations after therapy with antiepileptic drugs was begun. This study considered seizures, migraine, underlying psychiatric diathesis, and drug toxicity as possible etiologies but after extensive investigation concluded that his symptoms were most likely a drug side effect.
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PMID:Antiepileptic drug-induced visual hallucinations in a child. 1111 3

Twenty-two patients with PD received bilateral implants for high frequency stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus. The patients were treated for more than 1 year (up to 36 months). At the last visit, the Unified Parkinson Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS) motor score without medication improved by 50.2% (p < 0.001) and the UPDRS activities of daily living score improved by 68.4% (p < 0.001). The most common long-lasting adverse events were hypophonia and dysarthria; transient events were increased sexuality and mania. The surgical procedure induced transient intraoperative psychosis in seven patients.
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PMID:Long-term follow up of subthalamic nucleus stimulation in Parkinson's disease. 1203 98

We report a 52-year-old Japanese woman who developed dyskinesia, epilepsy, and gait disturbance. She was well until 35 years of age, when she noted the onset of gait disturbance. She also noted abnormal involuntary movements in her limbs. She also noted dysarthria at age 38. A neurologist examined her at age 41. The neurologist found cerebellar ataxia and dyskinesia. The atrophy of the brain stem and the cerebellum was on CT. She started to have generalized convulsion with loss of consciousness. Dementia became apparent at age 40. In October, 1993, she became psychotic in which she behaved violently taking off her clothes shouting as "Fire". She was treated with major tranquilizers and became quiet. However, choreic movements became prominent. Her subsequent course was complicated with dysphagia, dementia, convulsion, and frequent bouts of pneumonia. She expired on January 24, 2000 after developing pneumonia. Her father and one sibling had similar motor disturbances. She was discussed in a neurological CPC. The chief discussant arrived at conclusion that the patient had dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy. Most of the participants agreed with this diagnosis. Postmortem examination revealed that entire brain looked smaller than normal including the brain stem and the cerebellum. The cerebellar dentate nucleus showed loss of neurons and gliosis; glumose degenerations were also seen. The external segment of the pallidum showed neuronal loss and gliosis. The subthalamic nucleus showed gliosis without neuronal loss. A demyelinated focus was found in the pons; the lesion looked similar to central pontine myelinolysis. The cerebral white matters were unremarkable. Other areas were unremarkable. The pathological diagnosis was dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy. The pathologic lesion which might explain her dementia was not apparent.
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PMID:[A 52-year-old woman with dyskinesia, epilepsy and gait disturbance]. 1247 84

Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) is a rare, neurovisceral lipid storage disorder caused by genetic defects in lipid transporting proteins. It is distinct from Niemann-Pick types A and B (sphingomyelin lipidoses) and displays genetic (mutations in the NPC1 or NPC2[=HE1] gene), biochemical, and clinical heterogeneity. Late infantile to juvenile forms of NPC predominate and are characterised by atypical behaviour, ataxia, dysarthria, dysphagia, dystonia, cataplexy, vertical gaze palsy, splenomegaly, and dementia. In adult variants, psychosis and dementia are common, and dysarthria, ataxia, splenomegaly, and vertical gaze palsy are further facultative signs. Routine laboratory results including serum cholesterol are normal. In bone marrow smears, sea-blue histiocytes are often demonstrated and foam cells sometimes seen. The diagnosis is confirmed by detecting free cholesterol accumulation in perinuclear granules (lysosomes) and reduced cholesterol esterification after challenge with exogenous low-density lipoprotein in fibroblasts. Alternatively or additionally, mutational analysis can be performed. Treatment is restricted to symptomatic measures, since there is no specific therapy.
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PMID:[Niemann-Pick disease type C--a neurometabolic disease through disturbed intracellular lipid transport]. 1455 97


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