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 describe a Chinese American family with a hereditary syndrome consisting of retinopathy, nephropathy, and stroke, affecting 11 members spanning three generations. Ophthalmologic evaluations revealed macular edema with capillary dropout and perifoveal microangiopathic telangiectases. Several members had renal abnormalities with proteinuria and hematuria. Initial manifestations were visual impairment and renal dysfunction; neurologic deficits occurred in the third or fourth decade of life. Symptoms included migraine-like headache, psychiatric disturbance, dysarthria, hemiparesis, and apraxia. Neuroimaging consistently demonstrated contrast-enhancing subcortical lesions with surrounding edema. Ultrastructural studies showed distinctive multilaminated vascular basement membranes in the brain and in other tissues, including the kidney, stomach, appendix, omentum, and skin. Genetic analysis ruled out linkage to the CADASIL locus on chromosome 19. Distinct from CADASIL, hereditary endotheliopathy with retinopathy, nephropathy, and stroke (HERNS) is an autosomal dominant multi-infarct syndrome with systemic involvement.
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PMID:Hereditary endotheliopathy with retinopathy, nephropathy, and stroke (HERNS). 937 16

CADASIL disease (Cerebral Autosomal Dominant Arteriopathy with Subcortical Infarcts and Leukoencephalopathy) was described in 1991 by Tourmier-Lasserve. Two years later the same authors described its association with chromosome 19; nonetheless, the mutations in gene Notch3 were not described until 1996. Clinical findings depend on the age at onset. The early form of the illness is found in young patients, generally less than 30 years old, and the main clinical manifestation is a migraine headache with subcortical lesions in the white matter, while in the later form ischemic events and behavioral symptoms are predominant. Anatomo-pathological findings in CADASIL include the presence of osmophilic granular deposits in vessel walls, skin, muscles and cerebral arteries. We present a patient with CADASIL and cavernous angioma. We studied a 40-year-old woman who underwent surgery for a left temporal-parietal cavernous angioma, with aphasia as the only symptom, two years before admission. Her family history showed that her father had suffered from vascular dementia. She was admitted to our hospital with right-side hemiparesis and dysarthria. A CT scan showed the presence of ischemic vascular lesions and former surgery sequelae. The duplex scan of the neck vessels and a transesophageal echocardiogram ruled out an embolic source. Laboratory tests including VDRL, HIV, prothrombotic profile and rheumatologic screening tests were normal. An MRI in T2W and FLAIR showed the presence of multiple subcortical cerebral lesions and hyperintensity in the white matter (leukoencephalopaty). We found a left acute putaminal-capsular infarct in the diffusion-MRI. The MRA was normal. Analysis of the cerebrospinal fluid was unremarkable. A molecular DNA test was performed, and a nucleotide substitution in position 583 in exon 4 of gene Notch3 was detected. This mutation was found only in CADASIL patients. The association with cavernous angioma has not been previously reported, and we believe that it was unrelated to CADASIL, either clinically or genetically. To our knowledge, this is the first case of CADASIL diagnosed by molecular DNA test in our country.
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PMID:[Cadasil: a case with molecular diagnosis]. 1196 50

A cerebral arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy is described with a pedigree suggestive for an autosomal dominant condition. In contrast to the vasculopathy designated with the acronym CADASIL, no deposits of granular osmiophilic material were detected in the vasculature and no point mutations in the NOTCH 3 gene were found. The disease occurred in a family living near Hamburg, Germany, and affected 11 women and 11 men over the last six generations. Onset of the disease was between the age of 12 and 50. Clinical symptoms included gait disturbances, dysarthria, sensomotoric deficits and a progressive dementia. Migraine-like complaints and epileptic seizures were observed in one case each. Cranial computer tomography and magnetic resonance imaging scans showed large confluent areas with decreased density in the white matter and small necroses in the brain stem, the basal ganglia and the white matter. A correlation with factors predisposing for vascular diseases could not be demonstrated. In five cases an autopsy was performed which disclosed an angiopathy affecting predominantly the penetrating arteries with consecutive lacunar infarcts, diffuse demyelination and rarefication of the subcortical white matter and degeneration of the pyramidal tracts. Histologically, the vessels showed concentric and excentric intimal proliferation, an elastosis and hyalinosis, splitting of the lamina elastica interna and a degeneration of the tunica muscularis. Electron microscopy revealed fragmentation and thickening of the basal lamina but electron-dense granules characteristic for CADASIL were not detected.
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PMID:Subcortical angiopathic encephalopathy in a German kindred suggests an autosomal dominant disorder distinct from CADASIL. 1522 37

Basilar-type migraine (BTM) is a type of migraine with aura symptoms resulting from brain stem or bi-hemispheric structures but without motor elements. There are no precise data on the frequency of BTM. The main cohort of the patients includes young people and children with female predomination. The onset of the disease usually occurs before the age of 25. The diagnosis of BTM is based on the finding of two migraine attacks accompanied by a specific aura, with dysarthria, vertigo, tinnitus, impaired hearing, double vision, visual aura elements, ataxia of a cerebellar type, loss of consciousness, and bilateral paresthesias. In the differential diagnosis one should consider the pathology of posterior fossa, diseases with recurrent vertigo, complex epileptic seizures, CADASIL and MELAS syndromes, and alternative hemiplegic migraine with cerebellar symptoms and signs. In the prophylaxis sodium valproate and calcium-entry blockers and, especially in the prophylaxis of vertigo, betahistine chloride are used.
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PMID:[Basilar-type migraine: pathophysiology, symptoms and signs, and treatment]. 1641 73

The present study enrolled a Chinese family that comprised 34 members and spanned three generations. Eight members were diagnosed with cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy, and disease diagnoses corresponded with autosomal incomplete dominance inheritance. The primary clinical manifestations included paralysis, dysarthria, and mild cognitive deficits. Magnetic resonance imaging revealed diffuse leukoencephalopathy with involvement of bilateral anterior temporal lobes, in particular the pons. In addition, multiple cerebral infarction was identified in the proband. Sural nerve biopsy findings of the proband revealed granular osmophilic material deposits in the extracellular matrix, which were adjacent to smooth muscle cells of dermal arterioles. Screening exons 2-4 for NOTCH 3 mutations by direct sequencing did not reveal any abnormalities.
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PMID:Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy in a Chinese pedigree: A case report using brain magnetic resonance imaging and biospy. 2576 4