Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (dystonia)
8,418 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

67 cases of various functional disorders of the diencephalon were examined by EMI scanner. The patients were composed of 38 cases of parkinsonism, 7 cases of thalamic syndrome, 6 cases of choreoathetoid movement, 2 cases of dystonia, 11 cases of involuntary movement of unknown etiology and 1 case of torticollis, tic, and ballismus, respectively. In parkinsonism, 79% showed diffuse cerebral atrophy, 5% had focal low density in the substantia nigra and the thalamus, whereas 16% remained normal. Pre- and postoperative assessment with CT scan was briefly discussed with reference to stereotactic surgery of the diencephalon.
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PMID:Role of computerized transverse axial tomography on stereotactic surgery of the diencephalon. A preliminary report of 67 cases. 105 97

This report describes an infant diagnosed aged twenty-five months as having glutaric aciduria Type 1 (GA 1). Initial presentation was with isolated macrocephaly at four months of age. Severe hypertonia, and dystonia, within 24 hours of minor head injury occurred at nineteen months of age. Serial cranial imaging showed subdural fluid collections, and increasing underlying cerebral atrophy, mainly frontal and temporal. Confirmation of the clinical diagnosis required repeated blood and urine analysis by high performance liquid chromatography and gas chromatography/mass spectrometry; diagnosis was later confirmed enzymologically. Treatment with riboflavin, L-carnitine, vigabatrin and baclofen, produced some symptomatic relief; a low protein diet, nitrazepam and sodium valproate appeared of less obvious use. The rationale for these attempts at treatment is discussed. The possible role of quinolinic acid in the genesis of the fronto temporal and striatal atrophy is discussed and measurement of the quinolinate concentration in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of this case and age-related controls is presented.
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PMID:Glutaric aciduria type 1 an atypical presentation together with some observations upon treatment and the possible cause of cerebral damage. 149 52

Nineteen cases are described, including 12 cases from three different families and 7 nonfamilial cases, in which multisystem neurological disease was associated with acanthocytosis in peripheral blood and normal plasma lipoproteins. Mild acanthocytosis can easily be overlooked, and scanning electron microscopy may be helpful. Some neurologically asymptomatic relatives with significant acanthocytosis were identified during family screening, including some who were clinically affected. The mean age of onset was 32 (range 8-62) yrs and the clinical course was usually progressive but there was marked phenotypic variation. Cognitive impairment, psychiatric features and organic personality change occurred in over half the cases, and more than one-third had seizures. Orofaciolingual involuntary movements and pseudobulbar disturbance commonly caused dysphagia and dysarthria that was sometimes severe, but biting of the lips or tongue was rarely seen. Chorea was seen in almost all symptomatic cases but dystonia, tics, involuntary vocalizations and akinetic-rigid features also occurred. Two cases had no movement disorder at all. Computerized tomography often demonstrated cerebral atrophy. Caudate atrophy was seen less commonly, and nonspecific focal and symmetric signal abnormalities from the caudate or lentiform nuclei were seen by magnetic resonance imaging in 3 out of 4 cases. Depression or absence of tendon reflexes was noted in 13 cases and neurophysiological abnormalities often indicated an axonal neuropathy. Sural nerve biopsies from 3 cases showed evidence of a chronic axonal neuropathy with prominent regenerative activity, predominantly affecting the large diameter myelinated fibres. Serum creatine kinase activity was increased in 11 cases but without clinical evidence of a myopathy. Postmortem neuropathological examination in 1 case revealed extensive neuronal loss and gliosis affecting the corpus striatum, pallidum, and the substantia nigra, especially the pars reticulata. The cerebral cortex appeared spared and the spinal cord showed no evidence of anterior horn cell loss. Two examples of the McLeod phenotype, an X-linked abnormality of expression of Kell blood group antigens, were identified in a single family and included 1 female. The genetics of neuroacanthocytosis are unclear and probably heterogeneous, but the available pedigree data and the association with the McLeod phenotype suggest that there may be a locus for this disorder on the short arm of the X chromosome.
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PMID:Neuroacanthocytosis. A clinical, haematological and pathological study of 19 cases. 199 79

Thirty-eight patients with biochemically proven Wilson's disease underwent magnetic resonance-imaging (MRI) of the brain as well as neurological examinations. The patients were scanned using spin-echo (SE) sequences; the neurologist was looking for typical symptoms: dysarthria, tremor, ataxia, rigidity/bradykinesia and chorea/dystonia. Pathological MR findings believed secondary to this uncommon inherited disorder of copper metabolism were found in twenty-two subjects. Focal abnormalities were seen in the lenticular, thalamic and caudate nuclei as well as in brain stem and white matter; these lesions were best demonstrated on T2-weighted sequences as hyperintense areas. In eight patients we found diffuse brain atrophy with consecutive widening of the ventricular system. Five subjects showed mild, nineteen severe neurologic deficits. Generally there was no correlation between MR findings and clinical neurological symptoms; the impairment of cell-metabolism causing functional alterations of the brain precedes morphological changes. During treatment with the copper chelator D-penicillamine there seemed to be a phased course of disease. Shortening of T1-relaxation due to paramagnetic influence of copper was not seen; a possible explanation could be intracellular deposition--a proton-electron-dipolar-dipolar-interaction would therefore be impossible.
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PMID:Cranial MRI in Wilson's disease. 221 6

Nine cases of progressive supranuclear palsy are reported in this paper. There are 6 males and 3 females in this series. The average age at admission was 62 years. The clinical features of those cases are: (1) onset at the presenile with gradual progression, (2) supranuclear vertical ophthalmoplegia, especially downgaze paresis, (3) disarthria, (4) gait disturbances, (5) dystonia and rigidity of the limbs, (6) clumsiness and ataxia, (7) masked face, (8) bilateral pyramidal signs and (9) mental disturbances. The CT scan in this series showed dilatation of the ventricular system, enlargement of the Sylvius fissure and cortical sulci. There was also enlargement of quadrigeminal and cisterns in the CT scan. The CT diagnosis were cerebral atrophy in 9 cases and brainstem atrophy in 8 cases in this series.
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PMID:[Progressive supranuclear palsy]. 263 3

Case report of a 7 1/2-year-old girl considered as being normal until the age of 2 years. From then on she progressed with gait disturbance, mental deterioration, dystonic movements, convulsions and dysarthria. She died of bronchopneumonia one year later. CT scan showed hyperdensity at the putamen, with no signs of cerebral atrophy. Pathological examination disclosed an intense red coloration of the putamen and axonal "spheroids" at electron microscopy.
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PMID:"Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome--infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy" complex. Case report. 340 85

The therapeutic responses of seven children with Wilson's disease who presented with neurological disease were evaluated. Neurological abnormalities comprised intellectual deterioration in 7, conduct disorder in five, dystonia in three, choreoathetosis in three, seizures in one and hemiparesis in one. Lethargy and weight loss were present for several months in 6 children. Four children had clinically demonstrable liver disease which was fatal in two. Electroencephalography performed in two children was normal. Computed tomography (CT) of the brain in three children showed cerebral atrophy in all and areas of low attenuation in the basal ganglia which resolved on treatment in one. All patients were treated with penicillamine but, in four, triethylene tetramine (TETA) was substituted because of adverse effects. Neurological abnormalities in these patients were reversible.
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PMID:Neurological abnormalities in Wilson's disease are reversible. 356 99

Thirty-one patients with Wilson's disease were evaluated with detailed neurologic and medical examinations. Mean age (+/- SD) at onset was 21 +/- 5 years and at examination was 28 +/- 6 years. Of the 90% of patients who were first treated with penicillamine, 31% deteriorated initially despite therapy, and half never recovered to pretherapy baseline. At the time of our evaluations, the most common neurologic findings were dysarthria (97%), dystonia (65%), dysdiadochokinesia (58%), rigidity (52%), gait and postural abnormalities (42%), and tremor (32%). Chorea and dementia were rare. Twenty-two patients underwent magnetic resonance imaging. All but one of the 19 symptomatic patients had abnormal scans. The three asymptomatic patients had normal scans. Most lesions were seen in the caudate, putamen, subcortical white matter, midbrain, and pons. Generalized brain atrophy was also common. Lesions were less common in the thalamus, cerebellar vermis, midbrain tegmentum, globus pallidus, red nucleus, and dentate nucleus. Dystonia and bradykinesia correlated with putamen lesions, and dysarthria correlated with both putamen and caudate lesions.
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PMID:Clinical assessment of 31 patients with Wilson's disease. Correlations with structural changes on magnetic resonance imaging. 382 91

We studied a 68-year-old man who died after 13 years of progressive dementia, rigidity, bradykinesia, mild tremor, stooped posture, slow and shuffling gait, dystonia, blepharospasm, apraxia of eyelid opening, anarthria, aphonia, and incontinence. At autopsy, he had generalized brain atrophy with large deposits of iron pigment in the globus pallidus, caudate, and substantia nigra. Axonal spheroids were found in the globus pallidus, substantia nigra, medulla, and spinal cord. The neurochemical analysis of the brain revealed marked loss of dopamine in the nigral-striatal areas, with relative preservation of dopamine in the limbic areas. This is the oldest case of familial Hallervorden-Spatz disease reported and the first with neurochemical analysis of the brain.
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PMID:Late-onset Hallervorden-Spatz disease presenting as familial parkinsonism. 396 11

Eight infants developed a progressive disorder of the central nervous system with bilateral spasticity and dystonia, acquired microcephaly, and a rapid course toward profound deterioration and death. All the patients had abnormal cerebrospinal fluid with mild but persistent lymphocytosis. Computed tomography showed various combinations of bilateral symmetrical calcifications in the basal ganglia, progressive brain atrophy, and deep white matter hypodensities, the first two being present in all families but not in every individual patient. The disorder is familial and probably genetic in origin, although some features, especially the pleocytosis, may erroneously suggest an inflammatory condition.
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PMID:A progressive familial encephalopathy in infancy with calcifications of the basal ganglia and chronic cerebrospinal fluid lymphocytosis. 671 92


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