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)

Autosomal dominant olivopontocerebellar degeneration was diagnosed in a family of Scottish ancestry by clinical examination and autopsy. In addition to having progressive cerebellar ataxia, head titubation, and severe dysarthria, the patients are unable to initiate saccadic eye movements. Slow pursuit movements are normal. Reflex movements of the eyes caused by passive rotation or caloric labyrinthine stimulation are not impaired but are not associated with nystagmus. The phenomenon can be classified as supranuclear pseudo-ophthalmoplegia. It differs from congenital ocular motor apraxia in age at onset and the absence of random eye movements. The anatomic lesion responsible for the defect of saccadic eye movements remains to be established.
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PMID:Supranuclear ophthalmoplegia in olivopontocerebellar degeneration. 94 71

A study of chronic proximal spinal muscular atrophy was undertaken with the main aim of obtaining empirical recurrence risks for genetic counselling. Thirty-eight patients and their families were studied. Of these, 33 had similar clinical features and onset of disease in infancy or childhood. A division of these 33 patients by onset before or after 2 years (which was equivalent to whether or not they ever walked normally) gave recurrence risks for sibs which were higher with early onset. Among the sibs of patients with onset before 2 years, the incidence of disease was 1 in 5, due to most patients having an autosomal recessive disorder. A few patients, however, were thought to represent new dominant mutations. Among the families of index patients with onset after 2 years, the incidence of disease in sibs was only 1 in 15, but among their children it as 1 in 8. Both autosomal recessive and autosomal dominant forms therefore occurred in this age group, but it was concluded that nearly half the patients with onset after 2 had non-genetic motor neuron disease. The autosomal recessive form of chronic spinal muscular atrophy generally had onset before 2 years, but occasionally after 2. About a third of the patients never walked, and about half were in wheelchairs by age 10. No genetic heterogeneity within this form was demonstrated. Three remaining patients had distinctive clinical features associated with their proximal weakness, external ophthalmoplegia in one, dysarthria in another, and joint contractures in a third. Only 2 patients had onset in adult life, one of a probable recessive disorder and the other a probable dominant disorder.
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PMID:A clinical and genetic study of chronic proximal spinal muscular atrophy. 118 87

A thirty-two year old female had chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO), exertional fatigue, dysarthria, dysphagia, and bilateral hearing impairment. Histochemical stains, obtained from the right vastus lateralis, showed ragged-red fibers and wide-spread abnormalities in the number, size, and the structure of mitochondria under electronomicroscopic examination. A biochemical analysis showed a low activity of NADH-cytochrome C reductase, NADH dehydrogenase and a normal activity of succinate cytochrome C reductase and cytochrome C oxidase. This data suggests a specific defect in the NADH dehydrogenase of complex I (NADH CoQ reductase). We believe that this is the first biochemically defined mitochondrial myopathy reported in Taiwan and provides additional evidence for the existence of biochemical heterogeneity in mitochondrial disorders of CPEO.
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PMID:Chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia with NADH-CoQ reductase deficiency: report of a case. 132 93

A Japanese woman, aged 42, was admitted because of paroxysmal attacks consisting of paresthesia of the left face, tremor in the right hand, epigastric pain and urinary incontinence. A year prior to the admission, she noticed some difficulty in writing, dysarthria and unsteadiness of walking. These symptoms had been persistent since then. At the end of March, 1991, these symptoms rapidly worsened, and she fell down frequently. She also experienced pain behind both eyes, numbness in her left fingers and toe, urinary frequency and the above-mentioned attacks. Neurological examination disclosed bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia and upbeating nystagmus on upward gaze, titubation in the head, scanning speech, dysmetria in all limbs, exaggerated reflexes in jaw and both legs, bilateral extensor plantar reflexes and ankle clonus. SEP showed delayed cortical response with stimulation of the median nerves bilaterally and of the right posterior tibial nerve. P40 was absent with the left posterior tibial nerve stimulation. VEP was normal. T2-weighted image of MRI showed multiple high intensity areas located around the third ventricle, crus cerebri and the right upper part of the pons. The diagnosis of multiple sclerosis was made. Each paroxysmal attack started with numbness in the left face and burning sensation in the neck. Almost simultaneously tremor in the right hand began. The surface EMG showed the rhythmic contractions in the dorsal hand muscles and wrist extensors at a frequency of 6-7 Hz, and sometimes it revealed synchronized contractions of finger flexors and the dorsal hand muscles. A few seconds later she felt painful sensation in the epigastric region, and the tremor gradually increased in its intensity.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[A case of multiple sclerosis with paroxysmal attacks of facial paresthesia, unilateral hand tremor, epigastric pain and urinary incontinence]. 162 36

A 42 year old man presented with a slowly progressive gait disturbance, generalised weakness, dysarthria, clumsiness and tremor of his hands, and involuntary jerks. Hexosaminidase A activity in plasma, leucocytes and fibroblasts was considerably reduced, establishing the diagnosis of GM2 gangliosidosis. Clinical examination showed two previously unreported features, a clinically evident sensory neuropathy and internuclear ophthalmoplegia.
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PMID:An adult onset hexosaminidase A deficiency syndrome with sensory neuropathy and internuclear ophthalmoplegia. 183 93

We reported two cases of brothers demonstrating oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD). The cases had consanguineous parents and five healthy siblings, which suggested the autosomal recessive inheritance. The initial symptom was slowly progressive blepharoptosis with onset in the third decade. On examination, total external ophthalmoplegia was observed in both patients. Additionally, the elder, a 57-year-old man, exhibited dysarthria, dysphagia and muscular weakness with atrophy of the face, bilateral proximal upper limbs and diffuse lower limbs. The younger brother, a 55-year-old man, displayed muscular weakness and atrophy distributed in the face and four limbs. Muscle biopsy of both cases revealed rimmed vacuoles and spheroid bodies in the atrophic and normal-sized fibers. Biochemical study of the biopsy specimens of the elder brother disclosed the myophosphorylase activity reduced to about 40% of the normal value, although in the younger brother, that activity was normal. OPMD is usually inherited in the autosomal dominant mode, and autosomal recessive OPMD is rare. The onset age of our cases was younger than that of the autosomal dominant OPMD. There were some differences in the clinical manifestation between the presented cases, which could be interpreted as phenotypic variation. The elder brother was thought to be associated with McArdle's disease.
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PMID:[Autosomal recessive oculopharyngeal "muscular dystrophy"--clinical features and association with reduced activity of myophosphorylase]. 191 22

This report describes a rare complication after the resection of a tumor of the posterior fossa, the "one-and-a-half" syndrome. The one-and-a-half syndrome is a disturbance of horizontal eye movements in which patients have lateral gaze palsy in one direction and internuclear ophthalmoplegia in the other direction. The patient was a 54-year-old woman who developed headaches, diplopia, and blurred vision over 6 months. Computed tomographic scans and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated an enhancing, mixed density, midline mass of the cerebellum. After a resection of the mass, an anaplastic astrocytoma, the patient complained of more severe diplopia and facial weakness. An examination disclosed a left one-and-a-half syndrome, left peripheral facial paralysis, dysarthria, dysphagia, mild left hemiparesis, dysmetria of the left upper limb, and truncal ataxia. The brain stem showed no abnormalities on postoperative computed tomographic scans. After 4 months of follow-up, the one-and-a-half syndrome had not improved, even though other signs had improved or resolved. This syndrome is caused by damage to structures within the pontine tegmentum: the medial longitudinal fasciculus, the ipsilateral paramedian pontine reticular formation, or the ipsilateral abducens nucleus. Multiple sclerosis and brain stem infarction are the most common causes of the one-and-a-half syndrome. Less frequently, it is caused by primary and metastatic tumors of the brain stem and cerebellum. Rarely, the one-and-a-half syndrome can develop postoperatively after the removal of tumors of the posterior fossa. The mechanism of pontine tegmental injury remains unknown.
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PMID:"One-and-a-half" syndrome after a resection of a midline cerebellar astrocytoma: case report and discussion of the literature. 196 11

The authors report the cases of two patients who had sudden unilateral alternating and regressive attacks of the cranial nerves. The first patient, a 63 year old diabetic woman, suffered regressive paralysis of the right third nerve, followed two months later by paresthesia of the same side of the face, accompanied by difficulty in swallowing and dysarthria. Six months later, she developed a right facial paralysis while pharyngeal and lingual involvement entirely disappeared. Right carotid angiography revealed stenosis of the middle meningeal artery. Nine months later she developed left-sided ophthalmoplegia followed by a homolateral facial paralysis. The second patient, a 24 year old woman, developed homolateral regressive attacks of the II, V, VII and VIIb, and VIII nerves during recovery from herpes zoster of the right geniculate ganglion. Doppler studies showed inversion of the flow in the right ophthalmic artery. The pathogenesis of these multiple paralyses of the cranial nerves is discussed, a possible cause being ischaemic attacks of the vascular territories of the cranial nerves.
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PMID:[2 cases of vascular syndrome of the cranial nerves of ischemic origin]. 266 Jun 50

Internuclear ophthalmoplegia has been infrequently described in patients with systemic lupus erythematosus. We report a 23-year-old woman with lupus who presented with bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia and skew deviation. Additional neurologic findings included dysarthria, hemifacial weakness, hemiparesis, and dysmetria. Computed tomography of the patient's brainstem was unremarkable while magnetic resonance scanning demonstrated two areas of infarction. Magnetic resonance imaging is superior to computed tomography in both neuroradiographic study of the brainstem as well as evaluation of patients with neurologic complications of lupus.
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PMID:Bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia in systemic lupus erythematosus. 295 86

A report is given of a black family with a dominantly inherited, neuro-retinal degeneration associated with abnormally large mitochondria, in which the cristae are disoriented. The disease is characterised by progressive external ophthalmoplegia, clear-cut macular degeneration, cerebellar dysarthria, spastic paraplegia and finally facial and bulbar weakness. A similar illness has been described in black families and individuals and we suggest that the disease may represent a specific syndrome, possibly confined to blacks, that lies within the spectrum of the so-called mitochondrionopathies.
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PMID:A dominantly inherited progressive disease in a black family characterised by cerebellar and retinal degeneration, external ophthalmoplegia and abnormal mitochondria. 321 38


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