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)

We present a clinicopathological report of a recent fatal case of a 27-year-old woman whom we consider to have had encephalitis lethargica. Clinical features of note were a presentation with vertigo, persistent vomiting and sleep disturbance including marked daytime somnolence and vivid nightmares. On examination, she had impaired slow pursuit vertical eye movements, dysarthria, an expressionless face and slow tongue movements. She went on to develop gross supranuclear gaze palsy, neck rigidity, bradykinesia, blepharospasm, profound somnolence and anarthria but no tremor, weakness or impairment of cognition. She died after an illness lasting 12 months. On investigation, the cerebrospinal fluid was found to contain a very high level of IgG with oligoclonal bands but no cells. Post-mortem examination revealed an active encephalitis, mainly centered on the upper brainstem and diencephalon with extensive Purkinje cell loss and marked plasma cell infiltrates and morula cells. No virus was recovered.
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PMID:A contemporary case of encephalitis lethargica. 1122 Jun 91

We report a 61-year-old, right-handed woman with motor neuron disease, dementia, and apraxia of the upper limbs. The patient developed clumsiness of the right hand and dysarthria two years and a half prior to admission. Neurological examination showed limb-kinetic apraxia and ideomotor apraxia, predominantly on the right side, in addition to dementia and anarthria. There was mild muscle wasting in the neck and hands. A muscle biopsy from the biceps muscle of arm as well as needle EMG revealed neurogenic changes compatible with motor neuron disease. Brain MRI indicated pyramidal tract degeneration. Three-dimensional brain perfusion imaging generated from SPECT demonstrated an asymmetric decrease in cerebral blood flow in the fronto-temporo-parietal regions, predominantly on the left side. This case suggests that asymmetric limb apraxia can be associated with motor neuron disease.
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PMID:[A case of motor neuron disease with dementia and apraxia of the upper limbs]. 1273 88

In spite of the considerable progress in clinical and molecular research, knowledge regarding brain damage in spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) and type 3 (SCA3) still is limited and the extent to which the thalamus is involved in both diseases is uncertain. Accordingly, we performed a pathoanatomical analysis on serial thick sections stained for lipofuscin granules and Nissl substance through the thalami of two genetically confirmed cases: one an SCA2 patient, the other an SCA3 patient. During this systematic study, we detected severe destruction of the reticular (RT), fasciculosus (FA), ventral anterior (VA), ventral lateral (VL), ventral posterior lateral (VPL), ventral posterior medial (VPM), cucullar (CU) and mediodorsal thalamic nuclei (MD), the lateral geniculate body (LGB) and inferior nucleus of the pulvinar (PU i) in the SCA2 case, and a severe neuronal loss in the RT, FA, VA and PU i of the SCA3 case. In the SCA2 patient, additional obvious neuronal loss was observed in all nuclei of the anterior and rostral intra laminar groups, in the lateral posterior nucleus (LP), the lateral (PU l) and the medial subnuclei of the pulvinar (PU m), whereas in the SCA3 patient only two of the nuclei that belong to the anterior thalamic group, the VL, VPL, VPM, LP, LGB, PU l and PU m, displayed marked neurodegeneration. These novel findings indicate that thalamic involvement in SCA2 and SCA3 patients has been underestimated in the past. In view of what is known about the functions of the affected thalamic nuclei, the present findings provide an appropriate pathoanatomical explanation for some of the disease-related symptoms seen in both of our and other SCA2 and SCA3 patients: gait, stance, truncal and limb ataxia, dysarthria or anarthria, falls, dysdiadochokinesia and bradykinesia, problems with writing, somatosensory deficits, saccadic dysfunctions, executive dysfunctions and abnormalities of visual evoked potentials.
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PMID:Thalamic involvement in a spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) and a spinocerebellar ataxia type 3 (SCA3) patient, and its clinical relevance. 1284 80

The aim of the present study was to investigate the manifestations of mutism after surgery in children with cerebellar tumors. Speech impairment following cerebellar mutism in children was investigated based on standardized acoustic speech parameters and perceptual criteria. Mutistic and non-mutistic children after cerebellar surgery as well as orthopedic controls were tested pre-and postoperatively. Speech impairment was compared with the localization of cerebellar lesions (i. e. affected lobules and nuclei). Whereas both control groups showed no abnormalities in speech and behavior, the mutistic group could be divided into children with dysarthria in post mutistic phase and children with mainly behavioral disturbances. In the mutistic children involvement of dentate and fastigial nuclei tended to be more frequent and extended than in the nonmutistic cerebellar children. Cerebellar mutism is a complex phenomenon of at least two types. Dysarthric symptoms during resolution of mutism support the anarthria hypothesis, while mainly behavioral changes suggest an explanation independent from speech motor control.
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PMID:Cerebellar mutism--report of four cases. 1531 1

Deficiency of enzyme acid beta-galactosidase causes GM1 gangliosidosis. Patients with adult GM1 gangliosidosis typically present with generalized dystonia. We describe clinical, bone marrow, and radiological features of adult GM1 gangliosidosis to help improve its recognition. We report 3 Indian patients and review of reports between 1981 and October 2002. The disease frequently is reported in the Japanese literature (75%). Patients are normal at birth and have normal early motor and mental development. Onset is within the first decade with abnormal gait, or worsening of speech is an initial symptom. Dystonia occurs in 97% of patients. Facial dystonia described as "facial grimacing" observed in approximately 90% could be an important clinical clue. Dysarthria/anarthria (97%) is frequent, and eye movements are normal. Bone marrow examination may show Gaucher-like foam cells (39%). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) frequently (90.9%) shows bilateral symmetrical putamenal hyperintensities on T2-weighted and proton density images. Diagnosis is confirmed by demonstrating deficiency of beta-galactosidase. Adult (Type 3) GM1 Gangliosidosis commonly presents with generalized dystonia with prominent facial dystonia, severe speech disturbances, and normal eye movements. Bone marrow frequently shows Gaucher-like foam cells. MRI shows typical lesions in the putamen. Deficiency of beta-galactosidase in fibroblasts confirms the diagnosis.
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PMID:Clinical features of adult GM1 gangliosidosis: report of three Indian patients and review of 40 cases. 1538 93

Bilateral perisylvian polymicrogyria (BPP) is a malformation of cortical development, frequently associated with severe dysarthria or anarthria. BPP patients are therefore often labeled as severely retarded, but a detailed neuropsychological profile has not been reported to date. In a series of 14 patients, we demonstrated that only a minority had extremely low intelligence, and that some aspects of cognitive function correlated with the extent of the cortical disorganization. Early age at seizure onset correlated positively with Performance IQ scores (P<0.05) and negatively with the extent of the lesion (P<0.01), reflecting that patients with more severe BPP are more likely to have early seizure onset, resulting in greater interference with ongoing cognitive development. Receptive and expressive language skills were found to be equally poor. Frontal lobe function and memory abilities were relatively well preserved, suggesting that the observed cognitive profiles were related, at least in part, to specific areas of cortical dysfunction and not only to global dysfunction.
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PMID:Cognitive functioning in bilateral perisylvian polymicrogyria (BPP): clinical and radiological correlations. 1582 Mar 49

Although unilateral lesion studies concerning the opercular part of primary motor cortex report clinically severe motor deficits (e.g. anarthria, masticatory paralysis), functional lateralization of this area has not yet been addressed in neuroimaging studies. Using BOLD-FMRI, this study provides the first quantitative evaluation of a possible cortical lateralization of symmetric chin movements (rhythmic contraction of masticatory muscles) in right-handed healthy subjects and presurgical patients suffering tumorous lesions in the opercular primary motor cortex. Data were analyzed according to "activation volume" and "activation intensity". At group level, results showed a strong left-hemispheric dominance for chin movements in the group of healthy subjects. In contrast, patients indicated dominance of the healthy hemisphere. Here, a clinically relevant dissociation was found between "activation volume" and "activation intensity": Although "activation volume" may be clearly lateralized to the healthy hemisphere, "activation intensity" may indicate residual functionally important tissue close to the pathological tissue. In these cases, consideration of BOLD-FMRI maps with the exclusive focus on "activation volume" may lead to erroneous presurgical conclusions. We conclude that comprehensive analyses of presurgical fMRI data may help to avoid sustained postoperative motor deficits and dysarthria in patients with lesions in the opercular part of primary motor cortex.
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PMID:Cortical lateralization of bilateral symmetric chin movements and clinical relevance in tumor patients--a high field BOLD-FMRI study. 1756 Jan 28

Progressive nonfluent aphasia (PNFA) is one of the 3 clinical presentations of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD), the other 2 being frontotemporal dementia and semantic dementia (SD). PNFA and SD, both representing relentlessly progressive language impairment in the realm of FTLD, may share a large part with primary progressive aphasia (PPA). A salient distinction between PPA and PNFA or SD is that PPA includes another clinical type, namely, logopenic/phonemic aphasia (LPA), which is not represented in FTLD. This is primarily because LPA is usually caused by Alzheimer's disease (AD) and the brunt of the lesion is localized at the left temporo-parietal region of the brain. Further, PNFA/SD should be limited to the clinical consequencies of FTLD while PPA is more generous with regard to its causal pathology. By definition, PNFA is an expressive language impairment which is characterized by effortful speech, phonemic errors, grammatical impairment, and word-finding difficulties. Reading and writing may be comparatively impaired. Comprehension of single word meaning is normal, while comprehension of sentencies may sometimes be impaired. PNFA should be differentiated from SD, LPA, and pure progressive apraxia of speech (AOS or alternatively referred to as aphemia or anarthria). SD may be distinguished from PNFA by virtue of its fluency, characteristic loss of word meaning and absence of agrammatism. LPA is similar to PNFA, yet differs in that there is preservation of grammatical skills and speech motor function that is devoid of AOS and/or dysarthria. AOS is an impairment at the level of speech motor programming without language impairment. Thus, there may be a double dissociation between AOS and PNFA i. e., PNFA may or may not accompany AOS and vice versa. PNFA is associated with a localized lesion in the left frontotemporal area of the brain. Immunohistochemical investigations have revealed that ubiquitin/TAR DNA binding protein-43 (TDA-43) positive and tau negative pathology, mostly FTLD with ubiquitin-positive inclusions (FTLD-U) type 3, accounts for 90% of PNFA cases, while the remaining 10% may be caused by tauopathy. Therapeutic attempts for PNFA are currently unsuccessful.
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PMID:[Clinical types of FTLD: progressive nonfluent aphasia; comparative discussions on the associated clinical presentations]. 1993 81

Central pontine myelinolysis (CPM) and extrapontine myelinolysis (EPM) are osmotic demyelination syndrome. A 45-year-old man with a history of alcoholism visited the ER with dysarthria and dysphagia for 2 days. These symptoms occurred 3 days after he had stopped drinking alcohol. The neurological symptoms progressed to anarthria, pseudobulbar palsy and gait disturbance. During admission, the electrolyte studies were within the normal range. Diffusion-weighted images revealed high signal intensities in the pons, thalamus and basal ganglia. Apparent diffusion coefficient image showed low signal intensities in the pontine lesion, but isosignal intensities in the extrapontine lesion. The symptoms gradually improved after 1 month with only conservative treatment. The 1 month-follow-up MRI showed significant reduction of the previous extrapontine lesions. These findings suggest that cytotoxic edema is central to the pathogenesis of CPM, but vasogenic edema plays an important role in the pathogenesis of EPM occurring during alcohol withdrawal.
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PMID:Central pontine and extrapontine myelinolysis that developed during alcohol withdrawal, without hyponatremia, in a chronic alcoholic. 2022 3

Dysarthria has a drastic impact on the quality of life of ALS patients. Most patients suffering from dysarthria are offered speech therapy. Communication devices are prescribed less frequently. In the present study we investigated the impact of these therapeutic arrangements on quality of life in ALS patients. Thirty-eight ALS patients with dysarthria or anarthria, who underwent speech therapy and/or used communication devices answered three standardized questionnaires (Beck Depression Inventory - II (BDI), SF-36 Health Survey questionnaire (SF-36) and ALS Functional Rating Scale-revised (ALSFRS-R)) and were further interviewed about their experience with and benefit of speech therapy and communication devices. Most of the patients described a high impact of the communication device on their quality of life while the influence of speech therapy was rated less. By multiple regression analysis we confirmed an independent positive effect of communication device use on depression and psychological distress. In conclusion, communication systems improve or at least stabilize quality of life and mood in dysarthric ALS patients, and should be provided early in the disease course.
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PMID:Speech therapy and communication device: impact on quality of life and mood in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. 2287 Oct 79


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