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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (
dystonia
)
8,418
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An autopsy case of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) associated with central pontine myelinolysis (CPM) is reported. A 73-year-old male patient suffered from gait disturbance for about 5 years. The clinical features were characterized by gradual development of supranuclear ophthalmoplegia, tremor, bradykinesia, rigidity, neck
dystonia
, dementia and pseudobulbar palsy at the advanced stage of his illness. Treatment with levodopa did not improve his neurological signs and symptoms. PSP or multiple system atrophy was considered as a clinical diagnosis of the patient. He died of pneumonia, acute pancreatitis and liver dysfunction in November 1985. The main neuropathological findings were neuronal loss and gliosis with neurofibrillary tangles of globose type in the globus pallidus, subthalamic nucleus, substantia nigra and dentate nucleus, and at the base of the pons, bilateral and symmetrical demyelination was found. In addition, myelin staining revealed circumscribed
pallor
in the cerebral white matter. The histologic diagnosis was PSP associated with CPM. An association of PSP with CPM is rare in the elderly and possible etiologic factors of both diseases were discussed.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of progressive supranuclear palsy with central pontine myelinolysis]. 187 Feb 89
Progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) is a syndrome of supranuclear ophthalmoplegic palsy, pseudobulbar palsy, rigidity of the limbs, nuchal
dystonia
, and dementia in which the gaze palsy is the hallmark of the disease. Most neurologists are reluctant to consider the diagnosis unless visual problems exist. Since the earliest complaints of PSP are said to be variable and subtle, accurate diagnosis is often delayed and initial pathologic changes of the disease not well studied. Two patients came to autopsy with dementia, gait disturbances, and/or dysarthria but no eye findings by history or physical exams. Symptoms had been attributed to metastatic cancers. At autopsy prominent globose neurofibrillary tangles with variable cell loss, microglial nodules, and neuronophagia were found in the locus ceruleus, third cranial nerve complex, nucleus supratrochlearis, nucleus centralis superior, and nucleus basalis of Meynert with mild
pallor
of the globus pallidus, mild cell loss in the dentate nucleus of the cerebellum, and sparing of the superior colliculus. The diagnosis of early PSP was made. These cases serve to 1) detail the more limited neuropathologic changes in early PSP, 2) reemphasize that the earliest clinical symptoms of PSP are not gaze palsies, and 3) remind clinicians to consider PSP in their differential diagnosis in patients with gait disturbances, dementia, and/or dysarthria, and 4) document PSP in association with carcinoma in two cases.
...
PMID:Early progressive supranuclear palsy: pathology and clinical presentation. 272 Oct 44
We report three children with benign paroxysmal torticollis (BPT) and review the literature. BPT represents a self-limited disorder that occurs mainly in infancy and in females. The condition is characterized by recurrent spells of torticollis which may, or may not, be accompanied by other symptoms such as vomiting,
pallor
, ataxia, irritability and drowsiness. The diagnosis of BPT should be established clinically, although, in some cases, it is necessary to rule out conditions such as posterior fossa tumor, cervical dislocation, ocular palsy,
dystonia
due to side effects of drugs, or Sandifer's syndrome. The etiology of the syndrome remains unknown and, at present, there is no effective therapy.
...
PMID:[Benign infantile paroxysmal torticollis. Apropos of 3 cases]. 305 50
We report the clinicopathological features of 203 cases of pathologically proven multiple system atrophy (MSA) from 108 publications up to February 1995. The majority of patients showed symptoms in their early fifties, and men were more commonly affected than women (ratio of 1.3:1). Most patients suffered from some degree of autonomic failure (74%). Parkinsonism was the most common motor disorder (87%), followed by cerebellar ataxia (54%) and pyramidal signs (49%). The response to levodopa was poor in most patients, but there was a subgroup with a good response, who also often developed axial levodopa-induced dyskinesias. Other characteristic features included severe dysarthria, stridor, and, in a few patients, contractures and
dystonia
(antecollis). Mild or moderate intellectual impairment occurred in some cases, but severe dementing illness was most unusual. The main pathological change comprised cell loss and gliosis in the putamen, caudate nucleus, external pallidum, substantia nigra, locus ceruleus, inferior olives, pontine nuclei, cerebellar Purkinje cells, and intermediolateral cell columns of the spinal cord. However, other neuronal populations were also involved to varying degrees, such as the thalamus, vestibular nucleus, dorsal vagal nucleus, corticospinal tracts, and anterior horn cells. Characteristic glial and/or neuronal cytoplasmic inclusions were identified in all cases in which they were sought, irrespective of clinical presentation. Akinesia correlated with the degree of nigral and putaminal cell loss, whereas rigidity was related only to the later. Tremor was unrelated to cell loss at any site. Ataxia correlated with the degree of olivopontocerebellar atrophy. Pyramidal signs were associated with pyramidal tract
pallor
. Our analysis also confirmed an association of postural hypotension with intermediolateral cell column degeneration.
...
PMID:Multiple system atrophy: a review of 203 pathologically proven cases. 908 71
Benign paroxysmal torticollis of infancy (BPTI) is a disorder characterized by recurrent episodes of head tilt secondary to cervical
dystonia
. Attacks are often accompanied by vomiting,
pallor
, and ataxia, settling spontaneously within hours or days. Episodes begin within the first 12 months of life and resolve by 5 years. We report four patients with BPTI. Symptoms started from 3 months of age, with head tilting lasting between 10 minutes and 2 months; the shorter episodes were followed by vomiting, apathy, and unsteadiness. Head tilt became less prominent after infancy, replaced by vertigo and eventually by migraine headaches. Two patients came from a kindred with familial hemiplegic migraine linked to CACNA1A mutation. BPTI may be regarded as a migraine aura equivalent. The syndrome poses interesting questions regarding varying phenotypic expression of calcium channelopathies at different stages of development.
...
PMID:Benign paroxysmal torticollis of infancy: four new cases and linkage to CACNA1A mutation. 1216 87
Clinical lateralizing signs are the phenomena which can unequivocally refer to the hemispheric onset of epileptic seizures. They can improve the localization of epileptogenic zone during presurgical evaluation, moreover, their presence can predict a success of surgical treatment. Primary sensory phenomena such as visual aura in one half of the field of vision or unilateral ictal somatosensory sensation always appear on the contralateral to the focus. Periictal unilateral headache, although it is an infrequent symptom, is usually an ipsilateral sign. Primary motor phenomena like epileptic clonic, tonic movements, the version of head ubiquitously appear contralateral to the epileptogenic zone. Very useful lateralization sign is the ictal hand-
dystonia
which lateralizes to the contralateral hemisphere in nearly 100%. The last clonus of the secondarily generalized tonic-clonic seizure lateralizes to the ipsilateral hemisphere in 85%. The fast component of ictal nystagmus appears in nearly 100% on the contralateral side of the epileptic focus. Vegetative symptoms during seizures arising from temporal lobe such as spitting, nausea, vomiting, urinary urge are typical for seizures originating from non-dominant (right) hemisphere. Ictal
pallor
and cold shivers are dominant hemispheric lateralization signs. Postictal unilateral nose wiping refers to the ipsilateral hemispheric focus compared to the wiping hand. Ictal or postictal aphasia refers to seizure arising from dominant hemisphere. Intelligable speech during complex partial seizures appears in non-dominant seizures. Automatism with preserved consciousness refers to the seizures of non-dominant temporal lobe.
...
PMID:[Brain lateralization and seizure semiology: ictal clinical lateralizing signs]. 1876 78
Wilson's disease (WD) has varied phenotypic presentations. Here we report the case of a 16-year-old boy who presented with a history of multiple pathological fractures, severe joint deformities, hepatic dysfunction, cognitive decline and limb
dystonia
. On examination, the patient had pinched out facies,
pallor
and leukonychia totalis. Bilateral Kayser Fleischer (KF) ring was present. Musculoskeletal examination revealed pectus carinatum, bilateral genu valgus and gun-stock deformity of the left elbow joint. Splenomegaly and moderate ascites were present. Neurological examination revealed mild rigidity and intermittent episodes of dystonic posturing of all four limbs. On this basis a diagnosis of WD with
dystonia
with cirrhosis of liver with portal hypertension with renal tubular acidosis with renal rickets was thought likely. Investigations confirmed the diagnosis. The patient was started on treatment but he did not improve. He suffered aspiration pneumonia during his hospital stay and succumbed to the illness.
...
PMID:Pathological fractures as an initial presentation of Wilson's disease. 2357 56
We describe the molecular basis of a distinctive syndrome characterized by infantile stress-induced episodic weakness, ataxia, and sensorineural hearing loss, with permanent areflexia and optic nerve
pallor
. Whole exome sequencing identified a deleterious heterozygous c.2452 G>A, p.(E818K) variant in the ATP1A3 gene and structural analysis predicted its protein-destabilizing effect. This variant has not been reported in context with rapid-onset
dystonia
parkinsonism and alternating hemiplegia of childhood, the 2 main diseases associated with ATP1A3. The clinical presentation in the family described here differs categorically from these diseases in age of onset, clinical course, cerebellar over extrapyramidal movement disorder predominance, and peripheral nervous system involvement. While this paper was in review, a highly resembling phenotype was reported in additional patients carrying the same c.2452 G>A variant. Our findings substantiate this variant as the cause of a unique inherited autosomal dominant neurologic syndrome that constitutes a third allelic disease of the ATP1A3 gene.
...
PMID:CAOS-Episodic Cerebellar Ataxia, Areflexia, Optic Atrophy, and Sensorineural Hearing Loss: A Third Allelic Disorder of the ATP1A3 Gene. 3011 Dec 36