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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (
dystonia
)
8,418
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The results of selective peripheral denervation in 50 patients with spasmodic torticollis are presented. Of our patients, 76% reported a significant improvement or disappearance of their
dystonia
. The mean follow-up is 25 months. There were no major side effects. We recommend the procedure to patients who primarily have responded to botulinum toxin therapy and had become secondary nonresponders or to those refusing further injections while still responding. The results are much less promising in patients who are primary nonresponders to botulinum toxin. Some remarkable histological findings are presented. The posterior branches of the cervical roots frequently showed signs of severe compression
neuropathy
. In three cases, a functional motor nerve regeneration was proved. Among all surgical options, selective peripheral denervation provides the best result and has the fewest side effects.
...
PMID:Selective peripheral denervation for the treatment of spasmodic torticollis. 793 53
A rare form of Leber hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON) that is associated with hereditary spastic
dystonia
has been studied in a large Dutch family.
Neuropathy
and ophthalmological lesions were present together in some family members, whereas only one type of abnormality was found in others. mtDNA mutations previously reported in LHON were not present. Sequence analysis of the protein-coding mitochondrial genes revealed two previously unreported mtDNA mutations. A heteroplasmic A-->G transition at nucleotide position 11696 in the ND4 gene resulted in the substitution of an isoleucine for valine at amino acid position 312. A second mutation, a homoplasmic T-->A transition at nucleotide position 14596 in the ND6 gene, resulted in the substitution of a methionine for the isoleucine at amino acid residue 26. Biochemical analysis of a muscle biopsy revealed a severe complex I deficiency, providing a link between these unique mtDNA mutations and this rare, complex phenotype including Leber optic
neuropathy
.
...
PMID:Genetic and biochemical impairment of mitochondrial complex I activity in a family with Leber hereditary optic neuropathy and hereditary spastic dystonia. 864 32
This 44-year woman was admitted for weight loss and global intellectual slowing. She had mild chronic alcoholic neuropathy. She was discontinued alcoholic consumption for 6 months and was given disulfiram (1.5 g/day) since then. She developed over a 5-day period acute
neuropathy
, confusion and extrapyramidal symptoms with oculo-cephalogyric and
dystonic movements
and myoclonus. Electromyography revealed a severe polyneuropathy. After disulfiram withdrawal, confusion and extrapyramidal symptoms disappeared within a few days, but sensitivo-motor deficit improved more slowly. Nerve biopsy was suggestive of a pure axonal
neuropathy
.
...
PMID:[Acute and reversible myoclonic encephalopathy, extrapyramidal syndrome, polyneuropathy caused by chronic disulfiram poisoning]. 874 31
A 34-year-old right handed man presented with a bilateral subacute optical
neuropathy
associated with cervical
dystonia
, parkinsonism and supranuclear ophtalmoplegia. Magnetic resonance imaging showed in T2 increased intensity of signal in the dorsal mesencephalum and pons as well as in dorsal part of striata. The 3,460 mutation of mitochondrial DNA was found in a blood sample. This observation adds to the variability of presentation of Leber's "plus".
...
PMID:[Leber "plus" disease: optic neuropathy, parkinsonian syndrome and supranuclear ophthalmoplegia]. 968 25
We describe six patients with classical levodopa-responsive Parkinson's disease (PD) and one case of levodopa-responsive familial juvenile
dystonia
-parkinsonism with fixed contractures of the hands, feet or legs. In most patients contractures became established over a short period (2 months-2 years) but a considerable time after onset of parkinsonism (mean 13 years). Mean disease duration was 17 years, and all patients had severe levodopa-induced dyskinesias, either biphasic or peak dose, in the affected limb prior to onset of the contracture. Nerve conduction studies excluded peripheral ulnar nerve lesions in all patients with one exception, who was found to have a mild bilateral ulnar entrapment
neuropathy
. Transcranial magnetic stimulation performed in five of the seven patients showed shorter mean central motor conduction time in the affected than in the unaffected limb. Results of magnetic resonance imaging of the brain performed in a subgroup of patients were normal, with no evidence to suggest multiple system atrophy, cerebral infarction or focal abnormalities of the basal ganglia. We conclude that hand and feet contractures are not necessarily restricted to parkinson plus syndromes and may complicate otherwise typical PD in the absence of a structural or peripheral nervous cause. Striatal dopaminergic deficiency, particularly long-standing, may have a role in the pathogenesis of limb contractures in PD.
...
PMID:Limb contractures in levodopa-responsive parkinsonism: a clinical and investigational study of seven new cases. 1046 Apr 43
The Mohr-Tranebjaerg syndrome (MIM 304700) and the Jensen syndrome (MIM 311150) were previously reported as separate X-linked recessive deafness syndromes associated with progressive visual deterioration,
dystonia
, dementia, and psychiatric abnormalities. In the most extensively studied Norwegian family, the Mohr-Tranebjaerg syndrome was reported to be caused by a one-basepair deletion (151delT) in the deafness/dystonia peptide (DDP) gene at Xq22. This gene has been renamed TIMM8a. We identified a stop mutation (E24X) in the TIMM8a gene segregating with the disease in the original Danish family with the Jensen syndrome, which confirms that the two disorders are allelic conditions. We also report abnormal VEP examinations and neuropathological abnormalities in affected males from the two unrelated families with different mutations. The findings included neuronal cell loss in the optic nerve, retina, striate cortex, basal ganglia, and dorsal roots of the spinal cord. The demonstration of mitochondrial abnormalities in skeletal muscle biopsies in some patients is compatible with the suggestion from recent research that the TIMM8a protein is the human counterpart of an intermembrane mitochondrial transport protein, Tim8p, recently characterized in yeast. The clinical and neuropathological abnormalities associated with mutations in the TIMM8a gene support that this X-linked deafness-
dystonia
-optic
neuropathy
syndrome is an example of progressive neurodegeneration due to mutations in a nuclear gene necessary for some, yet unknown mitochondrial transport function. We recommend sequencing the TIMM8a gene, thorough ophthalmological examination, and measuring visual evoked potentials in clinically suspected male patients with either progressive hearing impairment,
dystonia
, or visual disability in order to establish an early diagnosis and provide appropriate genetic counselling.
...
PMID:Neuronal cell death in the visual cortex is a prominent feature of the X-linked recessive mitochondrial deafness-dystonia syndrome caused by mutations in the TIMM8a gene. 1180 87
Machado-Joseph disease (MJD) is a dominantly inherited cerebellar ataxia associated with spasticity, ophthalmoplegia,
dystonia
and peripheral neuropathy. Presented here are 5 MJD cases. A morphometric analysis of the histopathology of their sural nerves was carried out to know the relationship between axon size and myelin thickness. MJD cases were identified by polymerase chain reaction. On the basis of the clinical symptoms, there was 1 type I, 2 type II and 2 type III patients. The sural nerves were biopsied for single-fiber, ultrastructural and morphometric analysis. Morphometric parameters such as fiber and axon sizes, myelin thickness and g ratio (axon diameter:fiber diameter) were estimated. The pathological features of the sural nerves in the 2 type III and 1 of the type II patients revealed a loss of myelinated and unmyelinated fibers, and the morphometry studies showed a decreased fiber density, the loss of large myelinated fibers, a smaller size of the axons with thinner myelin sheaths and an increased percentage of myelinated fibers with a g ratio (axon diameter:fiber diameter) above 0.7. However, only subtle pathological changes were noted in the type I patient and the remaining type II patient. Our findings suggested that there is a loss of large myelinated fibers and distal axonopathy with relative hypomyelination in the
neuropathy
of patients with MJD.
...
PMID:Peripheral neuropathy of Machado-Joseph disease in Taiwan: a morphometric and genetic study. 1242 70
We identified the IgG autoantibody ANNA-2 ("anti-Ri") in 34 patients in a 12-year period by immunofluorescence screening of sera from approximately 75000 patients with subacute neurological disorders that were suspected to be paraneoplastic. Detailed clinical information was available for 28 patients (10 men, 18 women). Cancer was diagnosed in 24 patients (86%); 21 had histologically proven carcinoma (10 lung, 9 breast, 1 cervical, 1 bladder), and 3 had an intrathoracic imaging abnormality. Cancer anteceded neurological symptoms in 4 of 28 patients. Cancer detection frequency increased with continued surveillance. Neurological disorders, in decreasing frequency, were brainstem syndrome (including opsoclonus, myoclonus, or both), cerebellar syndrome, myelopathy, peripheral neuropathy, cranial
neuropathy
, movement disorder, encephalopathy, Lambert-Eaton syndrome, and seizures. Four patients had laryngospasm and four had jaw opening
dystonia
(two with neck
dystonia
). Nine (32%) were wheelchair-bound 1 month after neurological symptom onset. Most improved neurologically after immunomodulatory or tumor-directed therapy. Accompanying autoantibodies, found in 73% of sera, included ANNA-1, ANNA-3, CRMP-5-IgG, P/Q-type and N-type Ca(2+) channel antibodies, and muscle-type acetylcholine receptor antibody. Some neurological accompaniments of ANNA-2 may reflect potentially pathogenic humoral or cell-mediated responses to coimmunogenic tumor antigens, for example, Lambert-Eaton syndrome (P/Q-type Ca(2+) channel antibody) and peripheral neuropathy (ANNA-1 effector T cells).
...
PMID:Anti-neuronal nuclear autoantibody type 2: paraneoplastic accompaniments. 1273 Sep 91
Autosomal recessive juvenile parkinsonism (ARJP/PARK2) is a distinct clinical and genetic entity characterized by early-onset levodopa-responsive parkinsonism, foot
dystonia
, sleep benefit, and hyperactive tendon reflexes. We report a patient with genetically confirmed ARJP, who showed mild sensory disturbance and diminished deep tendon reflexes in the advanced stage. Nerve conduction studies revealed a sensory dominant
neuropathy
, which has not been described in ARJP. We suggest that peripheral neuropathy may occur in patients with advanced ARJP due to the loss of parkin protein function, although the function of parkin in the peripheral nervous system remains to be clarified.
...
PMID:Sensory neuropathy in autosomal recessive juvenile parkinsonism (PARK2). 1278
A 3 year review of neurologic admissions into the adult medical wards at the UCH, Ibadan, Nigeria between January 1998 and December 2000 is presented. The study design involved the scrutiny of the records of all the neurological admissions, male and female to the medical ward. The identified cases were then classified and only cases confirmed as neurological were further analysed. Stroke, predominantly non-hemorrhagic accounted for 50.4% of cases for the period of study. Stroke is therefore the most common cause of adult neurologic admissions on medical wards of UCH. Central nervous system infections, comprising mainly of tetanus and meningitis accounted for 14.2% (111) and 12.4% (97) of case respectively. The myelopathies were the cause of neurologic admissions in 8.1% (63) of cases followed by seizure disorders. Headache was the reason for admission in 0.9% (7) of cases. Parkinsons disease, hypertensive encephalopathy, Guillian Barne syndrome, seasonal ataxic
neuropathy
, cavernous sinus thrombophlebitis, normal pressure hydrocephalus were rarely the cause of admission. Similarly,
dystonia
, and cerebral malaria recorded 0.13% (1) of cases each. A case is made for the establishment of regional stroke units in Nigeria.
...
PMID:A 3-year review of neurologic admissions in University College Hospital Ibadan, Nigeria. 1452 26
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