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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (
dystonia
)
8,418
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two siblings developed a neurological disorder in the first decade characterised by generalised
dystonia
, hypokinesia, and subacute visual loss. CT and serial MRI examinations showed bilateral lesions of the striatum, mainly in the putamen. The classification of these patients is discussed in relation to infantile bilateral striatal necrosis (IBSN),
Leigh's disease
, and Leber's optic neuropathy. The literature shows a clinical and aetiopathogenetic overlap between these syndromes. In our cases parental consanguinity and the involvement of a single generation suggest a new clinical condition with autosomal recessive transmission.
...
PMID:Bilateral striatal necrosis, dystonia and optic atrophy in two siblings. 154 91
A large kindred, in which either Leber's hereditary optic atrophy, or a hereditary spastic
dystonia
, or a combination of both manifested over many generations was restudied after the first report on it in 1964. NMR scans revealed bilateral, and, in two patients with hemidystonia, unilateral necrosis with shrinkage of the putamen, in one case associated with total disappearance of the head of the caudate nucleus. Except for age-appropriate cortical atrophy in one instance, no other changes were observed in the brain, brainstem, and cerebellum. The putaminal necrosis appears as typical "striatal slits" on the NMR scans. It is argued that this rare disease, since the princeps description in 1964 only reported in England (1986) and the U.S.A (1986), is most likely a singular type of mitochondrial encephalopathy: it is associated with Leber's optic atrophy, and the NMR changes observed have been signalled in other mitochondrial encephalomyelopathies, such as
Leigh's disease
and MELAS.
...
PMID:Hereditary spastic dystonia: a new mitochondrial encephalopathy? Putaminal necrosis as a diagnostic sign. 188 May 38
A case of
Leigh's disease
(
subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy
) is reported with such noteworthy features as early onset,
dystonia
, paraparesis the presence of low attenuation areas in both basal ganglias on computerized tomography of the brain and the presence of a high signal intensity in both basal ganglias in T2 weighted image by MR. The electron microscopic findings of muscle biopsy are suggestive of pleoconial mitochondrial myopathy.
...
PMID:A case of Leigh's disease with initial manifestation of dystonia. 228 87
A 21 year old male, well-nourished and non-alcoholic, died after five weeks illness. He had suffered epileptic fits, bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia, bulbar and pontine paralysis, tetraparesia, ataxia and
dystonia
. A CT brain scan showed low density lesions of the striatum bilaterally. Post-mortem studies revealed pathological anomalies compatible with
Leigh's disease
, although the presence of haemorrhages and involvement of the mamillary bodies could also suggest Wernicke's encephalopathy.
...
PMID:Necrotising haemorrhagic encephalomyelopathy in an adult: Leigh's disease. 357 37
A unique disorder is described in seven members of two families in whom
dystonia
was variably associated with subacute visual loss or asymptomatic optic atrophy, and striking bilateral symmetrical lucencies on CT scan, especially involving the putamen. It is possible that this is a variant of
Leigh's disease
. However, there were considerable differences between these patients and those with pathologically proven
Leigh's disease
. This condition must be excluded in all patients thought to have idiopathic
dystonia
, subacute visual failure similar to Leber's optic neuropathy, or a combination of these disorders.
...
PMID:Familial dystonia and visual failure with striatal CT lucencies. 371 13
We studied posthemiplegic hemidystonia in an adult, and generalized
dystonia
in two children. CT and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) studies in the adult revealed infarction of the contralateral putamen and, to a much lesser extent, the head of the caudate nucleus. Both children had subacute encephalopathies (possible
Leigh's disease
), and CT revealed bilateral putamen lesions when generalized
dystonia
was the predominant clinical disorder. These cases and other reports of symptomatic
dystonia
suggest that lesions of the putamen correlate with
dystonia
.
...
PMID:Lesions of the putamen and dystonia: CT and magnetic resonance imaging. 653 74
A 19-year-old man presented with an apparently non-familial neurological disorder that had progressed from the age of 6 years.
Dystonia
of the trunk and limbs with extrapyramidal rigidity, dysarthria, a pyramidal syndrome with spasticity of the lower limbs, bilateral optic atrophy, and nystagmiform ocular movements were present. CT scan demonstrated symmetrical putaminal lesions. The different aetiologies of bilateral striatal lesions are considered, the final diagnosis being a juvenile form of
Leigh's disease
.
...
PMID:[Extrapyramidal rigidity with dystonia, optic atrophy and bilateral putaminal lesions in an adolescent. Juvenile form of Leigh's disease (author's transl)]. 710 Jul 40
A novel point mutation in the ND6 subunit of complex I at position 14,459 of the mitochondrial DNA (MTND6*LDY T14459A) was identified as a candidate mutation for the highly tissue-specific disease. Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy plus
dystonia
. Since the MTND6*LDYT14459A mutation was identified in a single family, other pedigrees with the mutation are needed to confirm its association with the disease. Clinical, biochemical, and genetic characterization is reported in two additional pedigrees. Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy developed in two family members in one pedigree. The daughter had clinically silent basal ganglia lesions. In a second pedigree, a single individual presented with childhood-onset generalized
dystonia
and bilateral basal ganglia lesions. Patient groups that included individuals with
Leigh's disease
,
dystonia
plus complex neurodegeneration, and Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy did not harbor the MTND6*LDYT14459A mutation, suggesting that this mutation displays a high degree of tissue specificity, thus producing a narrow phenotypic range. These results confirm the association of the MTND6*LDYT14459A mutation with Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy and/or
dystonia
. As the first genetic abnormality that has been identified to cause generalized
dystonia
, this mutation suggests that nuclear DNA or mitochondrial DNA mutations in oxidative phosphorylation genes are important considerations in the pathogenesis of
dystonia
.
...
PMID:Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy plus dystonia is caused by a mitochondrial DNA point mutation. 765 63
We report eight patients who had a progressive illness dominated by generalised
dystonia
and who had clinical and imaging features suggestive of
Leigh
's syndrome (LS). Six of the eight cases were male. Early development was usually normal but three cases exhibited impaired mental and/or motor development, and three others had a history of an earlier unexplained encephalopathy or febrile illness. The onset of the
dystonia
occurred at a mean age of 3 years (range 2 months-7 years). All had abnormalities in the basal ganglia on brain imaging; symmetrical bilateral lucencies or calcification were seen in the basal ganglia on computed tomography scan in five cases, and high signal lesions were evident in these regions on T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging sequences in seven cases. Other causes of such changes in the basal ganglia were excluded by appropriate investigations. Raised blood lactate levels were found in four of the eight patients. Muscle biopsies were done in seven patients but histology and histochemistry were normal. The common mitochondrial DNA mutations associated with LS in mitochondrial encephalopathies were not found in the six cases examined. LS presenting as a pure dystonic syndrome is uncommon, but should be considered in the differential diagnosis of symptomatic
dystonia
presenting in childhood.
...
PMID:Dystonia as the major manifestation of Leigh's syndrome. 784 5
We report two brothers with a glutaric aciduria type I (GA-I) identified by Glutaryl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase deficiency in skin fibroblasts. The onset of neurologic abnormalities was at 6 and 9 months of age as an acute Reye-like presentation in one. Because of the hyperlactacidemia, hyperlactatorrachia, mitochondrial abnormalities in muscular cells and a deficiency in complex I and IV of the respiratory chain in isolated mitochondria from muscle, a presumptive diagnosis of
Leigh syndrome
was made. We analyze the difference between both disorders. GA-I should be suspected in patients with acute
dystonia
and psychomotor regression, lactic acidosis and hypodensity of the basal ganglia.
...
PMID:[Complex I and IV deficits in the mitochondrial respiratory chain in two siblings with type I glutaric aciduria]. 794 28
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