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Query: UMLS:C0016719 (
Friedreich's ataxia
)
2,098
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fourteen patients with the clinical diagnosis of early onset
cerebellar ataxia
with retained tendon reflexes (EOCA) were examined and compared with 11 patients with
Friedreich's ataxia
(FA). The mean age of onset in EOCA was 15.9 +/- 6.0 yrs (FA: 14.0 +/- 5.7 yrs). Annual progression rate and the percentage of patients who were wheelchair-bound was lower in EOCA as compared with FA, although the difference did not reach statistical significance. The latency until becoming wheelchair-bound, however, was significantly longer in EOCA than in FA. The segregation ratio in EOCA was significantly lower than 0.25. Clinically, EOCA and FA patients presented with a progressive cerebellar syndrome. Associated symptoms, such as muscle wasting, sensory disturbances, foot deformity, scoliosis and electrocardiographic abnormalities were encountered less frequently in EOCA than in FA patients. The electrophysiological findings in EOCA were variable and pointed to axonal degeneration in peripheral nerves and central pathways. Posturographic measurements revealed a higher incidence of anteroposterior sway direction in EOCA as compared with FA, suggesting a cerebellar type of ataxia in EOCA. Eleven out of the 14 EOCA patients had cerebellar atrophy in MRI. The characteristic MRI finding in FA was upper cervical cord shrinkage and only minor atrophy of the cerebellum. The demonstration of cerebellar atrophy in the majority of EOCA patients supports the view that EOCA is distinct from FA. It is uncertain, however, whether EOCA is a homogenous disease entity or a group of phenotypically similar syndromes.
...
PMID:Early onset cerebellar ataxia with retained tendon reflexes. Clinical, electrophysiological and MRI observations in comparison with Friedreich's ataxia. 188 66
To investigate subclinical sensory impairment in spinocerebellar degenerations, median nerve somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) were examined in 16 patients with chronic
cerebellar ataxia
who were originally diagnosed by clinical neurologists as having olivopontocerebellar atrophy (OPCA). Two types of abnormal SEP patterns were found in six patients. Two patients had the SEP pattern of peripheral neuropathy, which was also detected by peripheral sensory nerve conduction studies. Four patients had abnormal SEPs seen in patients with the lesions in the central nervous system (dorsal column, medial lemniscus). Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed multiple sclerosis (MS). It is possible that clinically diagnosed OPCA sometimes includes a similar form of
Friedreich's ataxia
with subclinical sensory fiber neuropathy detected by SEPs and peripheral sensory conduction studies. In cases of lesions in the central nervous system demonstrated by both SEPs and MRI, there must be a follow-up in order to make a final diagnosis. In those cases, an alternative diagnosis of MS must be considered when the temporal profile of symptoms and signs characteristic of MS is observed.
...
PMID:Two types of abnormal somatosensory evoked potentials in chronic cerebellar ataxias. 200 66
A clinical, genetic and epidemiological study of hereditary ataxias and paraplegias was conducted within a defined area (Cantabria) in Northern Spain from 1974 to 1986. The series comprised 48 index cases and 65 affected relatives. On prevalence day, 103 patients were alive, giving a prevalence of 20.2 cases per 100,000. There were 24 patients (18 families) with
Friedreich's ataxia
(FA), 12 (6 families) with early onset
cerebellar ataxia
(EOCA) differing from FA, 6 (3 families) with dominantly transmitted late onset
cerebellar ataxia
(LOCA), 11 with 'idiopathic' LOCA, 49 (9 families) with 'pure' hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP), and 1 patient with congenital
cerebellar ataxia
. The prevalence found here is comparable with the highest figures described in previous surveys. This may in part be due to the great number of secondary cases in our series. A high frequency of parental consanguinity occurred in FA patients, 'pseudodominant' inheritance being observed in 1 family. The clinical features were those of classical FA except for later onset and slower course in 1 family, and retained tendon reflexes in the lower limbs in 2 cases. Such data indicate the need for modification of the essential criteria for the disease. EOCA included 4 patients with normoreflexic ataxia and 1 patient with ataxia and luteinizing hormone-releasing hormone deficiency. In addition, there were 7 patients from 2 unrelated families with a homogeneous syndrome characterized by autosomal recessive inheritance,
cerebellar ataxia
, retinitis pigmentosa and sensory neuropathy. This syndrome is therefore a well defined nosological entity to be added to the list of autosomal recessive mendelian phenotypes. The clinical picture of patients with LOCA was either a 'pure' cerebellar or a 'cerebellar-plus' syndrome. Genetic subgroups of 'pure' HSP were autosomal dominant type I in 5 families and type II in 2, and autosomal recessive in 2 families.
...
PMID:Hereditary ataxias and paraplegias in Cantabria, Spain. An epidemiological and clinical study. 204 54
The authors report a clinical review of 16 childhood cases with early-onset
cerebellar ataxia
with retained tendon reflexes. The preservation of tendon reflexes distinguishes this disorder from
Friedreich's ataxia
. The mean age of onset of symptoms was 7.1 years. The main presenting symptom was abnormal gait (100%). Ataxia of gait and limbs and normal or increased tendon reflexes were found in all cases. This disorder is associated with dysarthria, pyramidal signs in the limbs, and in some instances, sensory loss. Other important differences from
Friedreich's ataxia
are absence of optic atrophy, diabetes mellitus, cardiomyopathy and severe skeletal deformity. Sensory nerve conduction was found to be normal, excluding one case. This finding constitutes another aspect of the syndrome different from Freidreich's ataxia. CT scans were normal in 2 of the 4 cases. The remaining two cases showed cerebellar atrophy. Inheritance is probably autosomal recessive in the majority of cases.
...
PMID:Early-onset cerebellar ataxia with retained tendon reflexes. 261 87
Electroretinogram was performed in 18 patients with inherited ataxias. Eight had
Friedreich's disease
, 9 autosomal dominant
cerebellar ataxia
and one early onset
cerebellar ataxia
with retained tendon reflexes. Abnormalities were found in one patient for each group. The most frequent were decreased b-wave amplitude in photopic and scotopic conditions and prolonged implicit time.
...
PMID:Electroretinographic findings in inherited ataxias. 261 24
Central motor conduction to small hand muscles was measured using magnetic stimulation of the motor cortex and electrical stimulation of proximal motor roots in 11 patients with
Friedreich's ataxia
, 10 patients with early onset
cerebellar ataxia
with retained tendon reflexes (EOCA) and 13 patients with late onset degenerative cerebellar disease (LOCD). Central motor conduction was abnormal in 91% with
Friedreich's ataxia
, 70% with EOCA and 38% with LOCD. Central motor conduction abnormalities were not specific to individual disorders but were more severe and were related to disease duration in
Friedreich's ataxia
and EOCA.
...
PMID:Central motor conduction in degenerative ataxic disorders: a magnetic stimulation study. 284 27
The clinical records of 72 patients with spinocerebellar ataxias which had manifested before the age of 20, were examined in a retrospective study. Depending on whether the muscle stretch reflexes in the legs were positive or negative, two groups were distinguished, that of early onset
cerebellar ataxia
with retained tendon reflexes (EOCA) (13 P.) and that of
Friedreich's ataxia
(FA) (59 P.). The clinical course was much worse in the FA patients compared with EOCA. Cardiomyopathy and diabetes mellitus were not a feature of EOCA. Scoliosis and a disturbed position sense in the toes were more frequent in FA cases. The striking differences in clinical signs and course of the diseases justify the differentiation of EOCA from FA, as suggested by Harding in 1981.
...
PMID:[Differential diagnosis of Friedreich ataxia]. 292 87
We recorded somatosensory evoked potentials (SEP) in 15 patients affected by
Friedreich's ataxia
(FA) and in 9 patients with progressive early onset
cerebellar ataxia
(PEOCA). Brainstem auditory evoked potentials (BAEP) were also recorded in 14 FA patients and in five PEOCA patients. SEP results showed clear differences between groups of FA, evidence of peripheral involvement was seen in all patients, with absence of the N9 potential or a major reduction of its amplitude. In patients in whom central responses could be recorded, conduction velocity was normal or near normal up to the brainstem but was reduced from brainstem to cerebral cortex. Four patients with PEOCA had SEP abnormalities similar to those seen in FA. In the five other patients, the amplitude and latency of N9 were normal but conduction velocity was reduced from brainstem to cerebral cortex. In FA, BAEP were abnormal in all patients with a disease duration of four years or more but were normal in four of the five PEOCA patients. Systematic evoked potential recording is useful in the investigation of hereditary ataxias.
...
PMID:Evoked potential studies in Friedreich's ataxia and progressive early onset cerebellar ataxia. 320 13
We describe the computerized tomography findings in 85 patients affected with degenerative ataxias. Cerebellar atrophy was moderate in patients with
Friedreich's disease
(no. 28) and early onset
cerebellar ataxia
with retained reflexes (no. 10) and, in
Friedreich's disease
, it was mostly a late feature. On the contrary, in symptomatic patients with adult onset dominant
cerebellar ataxia
(no. 24), cerebellar atrophy was always present and often marked. However, it was absent in 3 asymptomatic affected relatives. Infratentorial and supratentorial atrophy were frequent findings in idiopathic late onset
cerebellar ataxia
(no. 16).
...
PMID:[Computerized tomography in the study of degenerative ataxia]. 333 Jun 22
Twenty-seven patients with autosomal recessive ataxia were studied. According to diagnostic criteria proposed by Quebec Cooperative Study, fifteen cases were diagnosed as
Friedreich's ataxia
. The remaining twelve cases showed clinical features of the "Early onset
cerebellar ataxia
with retained reflexes". The clinical differences between the two diseases are discussed. The high percentage of patients with "early onset cerebellar ataxia" is underlined.
...
PMID:[Recessive hereditary ataxia with early onset. Clinical study of 27 cases]. 344 70
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