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 report a 65-year-old woman with progressive dysarthria, dysphagia, weakness, and gait disturbance. The patient was well until 59 years of age (January of 1986) when she noted bilateral ptosis. One year later, she noted a gradual onset of difficulty in speech (articulation). Her speech slowly deteriorated and she noted weakness in chewing power and difficulty in swallowing in addition. In October 1987, she developed emotional incontinence. In January of 1988, she started to drag her left foot. She was admitted to our hospital on June 13 of 1988. On admission, she was alert and general physical examination was unremarkable. Neurologic examination revealed no dementia; her higher cerebral functions appeared intact. Ptosis was present bilaterally more on the right. She showed difficulty in opening her eyes on command; no contraction of the frontal muscles was seen upon attempted eye opening. There was a moderate limitation in the vertical gaze. Forced laughing and crying were seen. Facial muscles were moderately weak without apparent atrophy. The movement of the soft palate was very weak, and swallowing disturbance was more prominent for liquid staff. The tongue appeared somewhat small, however, no fasciculation was noted. Her step was small and the posture was stooped. Retropulsion was present, however, Romberg's sign was absent. No muscle atrophy was apparent, however, diffuse mile to moderate muscle weakness was noted in all four limbs. Cerebellar sign was absent. Deep tendon reflexes were exaggerated bilaterally, and Babinski sign was present on the left side. Sensation was intact. Routine blood tests were unremarkable as was a cranial CT scan. Her ptosis did not improve after 10 mg of edrophonium injection. CSF was also normal. She was transferred to another hospital but her neurological disabilities further progressed. In 1989, she was totally unable to move her limbs; she could only move her eyes; still consciousness was clear without dementia. She developed respiratory difficulty and expired on July 25, 1992. She was discussed in a neurological CPC, and the opinions were divided into ALS and primary lateral sclerosis (PLS). The chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient might have had the pyramidal form of ALS. Postmorten examination revealed marked myelin pallor in the anterior as well as lateral corticospinal tracts. Pyramidal tract degeneration was prominent starting at the level of the cerebral peduncle and was continued to be seen until the level of lumbar cord. The number of anterior horn cells showed only slight decrease in the cervical level, however, it was normal in the lumbar cord.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[A 65-year-old woman with dysarthria, dysphagia, weakness, and gait disturbance]. 777 10

Ophthalmoplegia and dementia are not usually observed in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. We report the case of a 60-year-old female with ophthalmoplegia and frontal-type dementia which appeared at an early stage of her illness that presented with dysarthria and weakness in the upper extremities. Notable autopsy findings in the central nervous system were, in addition to the degeneration of upper and lower motor neurons, moderate neuronal loss and spongy degeneration in layer II of the frontal cortex with prominent astrocytosis, and moderate neuronal loss with astrocytosis in both the substantia nigra and the red nucleus. Central chromatolysis of a few neurons in the oculomotor nucleus was seen. This case is considered to be a new subtype of motor neuron disease.
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PMID:Motor neuron disease with dementia and ophthalmoplegia. A clinical and pathological study. 853 Sep 84

A 40-year-old male patient is presented who survived Marchiafava-Bignami disease and recovered sufficiently to be assessed neurologically and neuropsychologically in some detail. Besides dementia, lack of initiative, and psychomotor retardation here ascribed to extracallosal damage, he showed a number of symptoms of hemispheric disconnection such as left-sided apraxia, poor bimanual coordination in specific laboratory tests, and deficits in the interhemispheric transfer of somaesthetic information. Other commissural functions, such as interhemispheric transfer of tactile, visual and auditory information as well as bilateral coordination in previously overlearned tasks, were nearly intact. The observed dysarthria could be meaningfully discussed in relationship to postcallosotomy mutism. It is concluded, that the partial interhemispheric disconnection syndrome in Marchiafava-Bignami disease lacks functional compensation which is different from the usual course in partial commissural section.
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PMID:Incomplete split-brain syndrome in a patient with chronic Marchiafava-Bignami disease. 784 Aug 88

A 59-year-old man developed a staggering and wide based-gait in July 1990. Dysarthria, hearing loss, vexation and disturbance of memory appeared in January 1991. He consulted our clinic in May 1991, and cerebellar ataxia, neurogenic bladder, and cerebellar atrophy on brain CT were noted. Subsequently, he was followed as OPCA. Brain and spinal cord MRI (T2 and proton weighted images) revealed hypointensity on the surface of the Sylvian fissure, cerebellum, brainstem and spinal cord. We diagnosed this case as superficial siderosis because of the clinical course, i.e. cerebellar ataxia, dementia and sensorineural hearing impairment, and specific findings on MRI. We consider this case idiopathic superficial siderosis because the origin of the bleeding source was unknown. IMP-SPECT showed low perfusion in the cerebellum and frontal lobe where hemosiderin was heavily deposited. RI cisternography revealed a disturbance of CSF absorption even after 48 hours. The basic rhythm on EEG was slow alpha band with sporadic theta waves dominantly in the frontal lobe. His central conduction time on ABR and SEP was delayed, OKN was poorly elicited and ETT exhibited a staircase pattern. The physiological results as well as the clinical manifestations of the present case suggest that hemosiderin deposit on the surface of brain and spinal cord caused serious damage to the underlying structures.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of idiopathic superficial siderosis of the central nervous system]. 789 35

We report a 78-year old woman with 30 years history of rheumatoid arthritis and nephrotic syndrome, who developed right hemiparesis and renal failure recently. The patient was diagnosed as having rheumatoid arthritis in 1965, and had been treated with gold -sol, steroid hormone, and non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs intermittently. Later on her clinical course was complicated by nephrotic syndrome, however, her renal function was well compensated. Otherwise, she was apparently doing well until October of 1988 when she had an onset of anomic aphasia; she was 73-year-old at that time. She was admitted to our hospital; a cranial CT scan at that time revealed a low density area in the left temporal region, and she was diagnosed as suffered from an atherothrombotic infarction involving the left middle cerebral artery territory. She recovered soon and was discharged for out patient follow up with ticlopidine 100 mg/day. She was doing well until December 15, 1990, when she had an acute onset of nausea, vomiting, and speech disturbance; she was admitted to our hospital for the second time. On admission, she was alert, but she had motor aphasia, right hemiparesis, and dysarthria. A cranial CT scan revealed a low density area in the left temporal region extending into adjacent frontal and parietal areas including the angular gyrus; in addition, leukoaraiosis, cortical atrophy, and ventricular dilatation were noted (Fig. 1A, B). She was treated supportively, and she showed improvement in her aphasia, however, moderate weakness remained in her right upper and lower extremities. She was discharged for out patient follow up. She was doing well until May 21, 1993, when she developed difficulty in swallowing and speech. She became unable to take foods orally and she was admitted again on May 31. On admission, she was afebrile and BP was 120/80 mmHg. General physical examination was unremarkable except for pitting edema and multiple contracture of her joints. On neurologic examination, she was alert but appeared to have aphasia and dementia; she could utter only a few simple words, and was able to understand only simple questions.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[A 78-year-old woman with rheumatoid arthritis, right hemiparesis, and renal failure]. 789 38

We report on a 12-year-old Chinese child with type C Niemann-Pick disease, who presented primarily with neurologic symptoms. He started to develop ataxia and dysarthria at the age of six years. Dementia, dysphagia, dystonia and seizures, in that sequence, followed within a couple of years. He was anarthric and bedridden five years after onset. Supranuclear vertical gaze palsy was found at the beginning of the illness. However, no hepatosplenomegaly or other physical abnormality was noted. Bone marrow aspirates revealed foamy storage cells and sea-blue histiocytes. However, sphingomyelinase activity in the cultured skin fibroblast was normal. The characteristic clinical presentations and typical pathologic and histochemical findings meet the diagnostic criteria of type C Niemann-Pick disease. We report the first Chinese case of type C Niemann-Pick disease and review 73 cases reported previously.
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PMID:Type C Niemann-Pick disease: report of a Chinese case. 790 66

We examined the clinical characteristics of six right-handed patients who developed speech motor control disorders after human immunodeficiency virus (HIV) infection. They exhibited an ataxic dysarthria, characterized by irregular articulatory breakdowns in consonant and vowel timing; were slow in timed decision-making tasks; and had impaired procedural learning. Other aspects of the neurologic examination revealed signs of diffuse CNS involvement including action-intention tremors, ataxic gait, and release signs. None developed HIV-associated dementia during 1 year of follow-up. Motor speech control disorder appears to be related to a cerebellar dysfunction.
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PMID:Speech motor control disorder after HIV infection. 796 50

Communication impairments, with or without a swallowing disorder, are common among older adults. Aphasia, which is usually caused by a focal lesion, can affect spoken and written language, auditory comprehension, and reading ability but by itself does not affect intellectual and cognitive abilities. A cognitive-communicative impairment is related to underlying cognitive deficits in memory, attention, or visual perception and is seen with traumatic brain injury and nontreatable dementia. Voice and speech impairments such as dysarthria and apraxia of speech may lead to self-imposed social isolation and depression. Dysphagia may accompany a communication disorder or exist independently. As a primary care physician, your in-office workup can help diagnose a communication disorder and identify candidates for referral to an otolaryngologist and/or speech-language pathologist.
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PMID:Communication disorders: what to look for, and when to refer. 800 59

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.
Dementia
PMID:Vascular subcortical dementias: clinical aspects. 808 75

We report a 79-year-old man who developed progressive gait disturbance and sensory loss. He had been doing well except for hepatitis B virus hepatitis until 72 years of age when he developed angina pectoris for which aorto-coronary bypass operation was performed when he was 73-year-old (1986). In 1990, he developed pulmonary fibrosis for which prednisolone was prescribed. His liver function deteriorated, and the liver function tests suggested liver cirrhosis. He noted an onset of gait disturbance in the middle of June in 1992 when he was 79-year-old. His gait disturbance deteriorated progressively, and he developed edema and loss of sensation in his both legs. He became unable to walk unassisted in the beginning of July. He fractured his right external malleolus after falling down from a chair. He became unable to stand by himself, and he was admitted to the cardiology service of our hospital on July 18, 1992, and the neurology service was asked to see the patient on July 30 of the same month. The patient was well developed and well nourished man in no acute distress. General physical examination revealed slight jaundice, left carotid bruit, and slight pitting pretibial edema. His temperature was 37.3 degrees C. On neurologic examination, he was alert and mentally sound without dementia. He showed a slight weakness in the facial muscles bilaterally and mild dysarthria and dysphagia, however, the other cranial nerves appeared intact. He was unable to stand unassisted. The muscle tone was hypotonic, however, no focal muscle atrophy was noted, nor was observed fasciculatory twitches.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A 79-year-old man with rapidly progressive tetraparesis]. 829 70


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