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

We describe a family with autosomal dominant progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) involving five generations which was confirmed in one patient. The proband presented with progressive slowness at age 53 years, followed by ocular palsy, loss of balance, axial dystonia, dysphagia and dysarthria, and died at age 59 years. Neuropathological examination revealed moderate numbers of neurofibrillary tangles without prominent senile plaques in the cortex, and neuronal loss, gliosis and moderate to severe accumulation of tangles in the basal ganglia and brainstem. Other affected relatives, including the proband's sister, father, paternal uncle, and other members of earlier generations presented with non-characteristic akinetic syndromes, which progressed towards more typical PSP only after several years of disease. A review of the literature revealed six other families with neurodegenerative disorders associated with pathological findings compatible with PSP in at least one member. The clinical symptoms varied greatly between individuals in these families. The pattern of inheritance seems compatible with autosomal dominant transmission, although other patterns of transmission could not be excluded. We conclude that there is an autosomal dominant form of PSP and that the number of hereditary cases may be greater than previously thought. The rarity of familial cases of PSP could be attributed to diagnostic problems, including lack of recognition of atypical cases and death of the gene carriers before the age of appearance of the clinical symptoms. Large families with hereditary PSP could provide an adequate point of departure for investigation of the gene defect responsible for this disease.
...
PMID:Familial progressive supranuclear palsy. Description of a pedigree and review of the literature. 749 73

Machado-Joseph disease (MJD) is a form of dominantly-inherited ataxia originally described in people of Azorean and Portuguese descent. The disorder has subsequently been identified in Japan, Brazil, Australia, and China. Average age of onset is 35 to 40. Core features include progressive ataxia, dysarthria, postural instability, nystagmus, eyelid retraction, and facial fasciculations. Dystonia is often prominent in younger patients. Three distinct phenotypes appear to reflect the clinical spectrum of a single mutant gene. Neuropathology involves afferent and efferent cerebellar systems, with preservation of cerebellar cortex and inferior olive. Spinocerebellar pathways, substantia nigra, and cranial nerve motor nuclei are involved. The disorder is due to an unstable CAG repeat on chromosome 14q32.1. A dominantly inherited ataxia (SCA-3) in families of French and German descent has also been linked to this segment of chromosome 14. The relationship between MJD and the other dominant inherited ataxias is discussed.
...
PMID:Machado-Joseph disease. 761 89

We describe an example of a variant of Hallervorden-Spatz disease, characterized by hypoprebeta-lipoproteinemia, acanthocytosis, retinitis pigmentosa, and pallidal degeneration (HARP syndrome), in an 18-year-old woman who presented with longstanding intellectual subnormality, night blindness, and a 2-year history of orobuccolingual dystonia causing dysarthria and dysphagia. Investigation showed acanthocytosis and hypoprebetalipoproteinemia, and electroretinograms were typical of tapetoretinal degeneration. T2-weighted MRI showed decreased signal intensity in the pallidal nuclei with central hyperintensity, constituting the "eye-of-the-tiger" sign. The patient's sister and mother have a similar lipid disorder but no retinal or neurologic disease. We also report two patients with clinical and radiologic features similar to those of the patient with HARP syndrome but who had normal lipid studies. These various combinations of components of HARP syndrome may be caused by several distinct genetic diseases or may represent variable manifestations of a contiguous gene defect.
...
PMID:Acanthocytosis, retinitis pigmentosa, and pallidal degeneration: a report of three patients, including the second reported case with hypoprebetalipoproteinemia (HARP syndrome). 789 2

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.
...
PMID:Type C Niemann-Pick disease: report of a Chinese case. 790 66

A 45-year-old woman was administered oral and intravenous diphenhydramine 25 mg for the treatment of an allergic reaction. Within 2 minutes she rapidly developed trismus, dysarthria, tremors of the upper extremities, left-sided weakness, and diminished consciousness. She was treated with intravenous diazepam and benztropine with good response. After approximately 12 hours the patient's condition was completely resolved except for minor subjective weakness of her left extremities. Her hospital stay was uneventful, and she was discharged after 4 days after refusing rechallenge with the drug. Several cases of acute dystonic reactions secondary to antihistamines have been reported in the literature, four of which involved diphenhydramine. Such reactions may occur after short- or long-term therapy. Most patients experienced rapidly developing trismus, facial dystonia, dysarthria, and occasionally, decreases in consciousness, motor incoordination, and weakness. Because of the widespread availability of diphenhydramine and other antihistamines to the general public, awareness of this effect is of great importance.
...
PMID:Diphenhydramine-induced acute dystonia. 793 88

Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome is generally considered to be an autosomal recessively hereditary disorder of unknown etiology. Some reported cases have been known to be sporadic. We present a boy who suffered from regressive developmental milestones since he was 2 years and 6 months old. He began to manifest tremors of the upper extremities, followed by unsteady gait, choreoathetosis, dystonia, dysarthria, and dysphagia at 4 years old, and subsequently became completely bedridden at 6 years old. Neurologically, opisthotonus, rigidity of extremities, dystonia, hyperreflexia, profound emaciation, and bilaterally positive Babinski signs were present. The brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) done at the age of 8 years revealed symmetrical low signal intensity over the bilateral globus pallidi in the T2-weighted images coexistent with an area of high signal intensity over the anteromedial portion, known as "eye of the tiger" sign. Another MRI, followed up two years later, did not show marked difference in signal abnormalities over the globus pallidi in the T2-weighted images as compared with that of the previous one. However, progressive neurological deterioration existed.
...
PMID:Clinical and MRI study of the Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome: long-term follow-up of one case. 794 31

A family with a syndrome of mental retardation, dystonic movements of the hands, and dysarthria (MIM no. 309510) was described and mapped to Xp22 by Partington et al. (Am J Med Genet 1988; 30:251-262). The original localization encompassed the distal half of the short arm of the X chromosome, with a peak lod score of 2.1 at the DXS41 locus. The gene localization for this disorder (PRTS) has now been refined using recently characterized dinucleotide repeat markers. The PRTS gene maps between DXS365 and DXS28, an interval estimated to be less than 15 cM. A peak lod score of 3.01 at a recombination fraction of zero was generated by 2-point linkage analysis with the marker DXS989. Dystonic movements may be progressive and could be overlooked in children. Clinical assessments of affected men who are mentally retarded should be critically evaluated for this manifestation, where they belong to families in which the gene localization overlaps with PRTS.
...
PMID:X-linked mental retardation with dystonic movements of the hands (PRTS): revisited. 794 40

The authors present the clinico-pathological findings in a member of a family residing in Akita Prefecture located in the north-eastern region of Japan. Four members in three generations of the family developed ataxia. The autopsied patient was a 42-year-old woman, who, at the age of 25, had developed progressive cerebellar ataxia with pyramidal spasticity and increased deep tendon reflexes predominant in the lower extremities. However, she retained fine movement of the hands and fingers and showed no dysarthria until the age of 35. She could no longer walk unassisted at 38 years old. She showed cerebellar ataxia in both hands and legs, dysarthria, bulging eyes, progressive extraoculomotor palsy with nystagmus, bradykinesia, sensory disturbance, and dystonia in the face, upper extremities, and fingers. Deep tendon reflexes were decreased, especially in the lower extremities. Subacute generalized muscular atrophy developed at the age of 39. She became bedridden and died of pneumonia. The clinical diagnosis was Type-2 of the entity known in Japan as Machado-Joseph disease. At neuropathological examination, the brain weight was 1,250 g. The spinocerebellar system including Clarke's column and the spinocerebellar tracts were degenerated, but the cerebellar cortex and inferior olivary nucleus were spared. Slight-to-moderate degeneration was observed in the pontocerebellar system. In the dentate nucleus, most of the neurons showed what is known in Japan as "grumose degeneration", but there was no neuronal loss or gliosis. The hilus of the dentate nucleus and the superior cerebellar peduncle were intact.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[An autopsied case of type 2 Machado-Joseph's disease or spino-pontine degeneration]. 821 97

A gene (DYT1) for idiopathic torsion dystonia (ITD) was mapped to chromosome 9q34 in non-Jewish and Jewish families; the dystonia in these families usually began in childhood, with the limb muscles affected first. The role of the DYT1 gene in adult-onset and cervical- or cranial-onset ITD is unknown. We examined 53 individuals from four generations of a non-Jewish North American family with adult-onset ITD. There were seven affected family members, with a mean age at onset of 28.4 years (range, 7 to 50 years). In six of the seven, the neck was affected first. All seven developed cervical dystonia, and dysarthria or dysphonia occurred in five. Linkage data excluded the region containing the DYT1 locus, indicating that DYT1 was not responsible for ITD in this family. This study provides evidence that a gene other than DYT1 is responsible for some cases of adult cervical-onset dystonia.
...
PMID:A study of idiopathic torsion dystonia in a non-Jewish family: evidence for genetic heterogeneity. 830 75

We reported a 67-year-old male, who suffered from apraxia and amnesia for 2 years and for muscle rigidity of right extremities for a year. Neurological examination revealed dysarthria, dysphagia, marked dystonia of right arm, hyperreflexia of all limbs and ataxic gait. He also had dementia and many other higher cortical dysfunction mostly due to left hemisphere damage. No impairment of eye movement was disclosed. Brain MRI as well as CT showed the significant brain atrophy in the left parieto-occipital region. A degenerative atrophy was suspected by 123I-IMP-SPECT and 18F-FDG-PET. By FDG-PET, the decrease of cerebral blood flow and glucose metabolism was detected not only affected unilateral cerebral cortex including primary motor area but ipsilateral basal ganglia and thalamus. Although, it is difficult to distinguish clinically CBD from atypical case of Alzheimer's disease, we speculated that in early stage of dementia, significant unilateral hypoperfusion and hypometabolism of basal ganglia and thalamus is characteristic of CBD.
...
PMID:[Clinically diagnosed corticobasal degeneration (CBD)]. 833 74


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>