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Query: UMLS:C0016719 (
Friedreich's ataxia
)
2,098
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In a previous study, the authors identified final plosive voicing contrast as the highest single error source in
dysarthria
associated with
Friedreich's Ataxia
in a group of Irish English-speaking participants. This study aimed to determine the acoustic features underlying misperceptions of voicing status and implications for clinical management. Words with final plosives were extracted from recordings of ten speakers with
Friedreich's Ataxia
. Various measures of the syllable rhyme were compared with intelligibility scores. Vowel duration, voicing in the closure, F1 frequency at mid-vowel and a drop in F1 at vowel termination accounted for 58% of the variance in the relevant intelligibility scores, with vowel duration being most heavily implicated. While inappropriate vowel duration is the factor most likely to lead to misperceptions of final plosive voicing status, other factors may overcome its effect. Therapeutic intervention with this population should be based on a comparison of intelligibility assessment with acoustic measurement.
...
PMID:Voicing status of word final plosives in Friedreich's Ataxia dysarthria. 1785 54
An increasing number of inherited neurodegenerative diseases are known to be caused by the expansion of unstable trinucleotide repeat tracts. Spinocerebellar ataxia type 8 (SCA8) has been identified as being partly caused by a CTG expansion in an untranslated, endogenous antisense RNA that overlaps the Kelch-like 1 (KLHL1) gene. Clinically, SCA8 patients show similar features to those with the other SCAs, including limb and truncal ataxia, ataxic
dysarthria
and horizontal nystagmus, all of which are signs of dysfunction of the cerebellar system. However, allele sizes within the SCA8 proposed pathogenic range have been reported in patients with ataxia of unknown etiology, in individuals from pedigrees with other SCA or
Friedreich's ataxia
, and in patients with Alzheimer's disease, schizophrenia or parkinsonism. These observations suggest that mutation of the SCA8 locus might affect neurons other than the cerebellum. Antisense transcripts are known to regulate complementary sense transcripts and are involved in several biologic functions, such as development, adaptive response, and viral infection. In order to test whether SCA8 affects the KLHL1 expression by antisense RNA in brain cells, we examined the expression pattern of KLHL1 and SCA8 in human tissues and in mouse brain regions. SCA8 expression was colocalized with KLHL1 transcript in many brain regions whose functions are correlated to the clinical symptoms of SCA8 patients. These findings lead to the hypothesis of a possible relevance that SCA8 transcript downregulates KLHL1 expression through an antisense mechanism, which then leads to SCA8 neuropathogenesis.
...
PMID:SCA8 mRNA expression suggests an antisense regulation of KLHL1 and correlates to SCA8 pathology. 1870 37
It has been reported that patients with spinocerebellar degenerations (SCDs) have cognitive dysfunction as well as limb and truncal ataxia,
dysarthria
and dysphagia. We review cognitive dysfunction in common types of SCD, including spinocerebellar ataxia types 1, 2, 3, 6, and 17, dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy,
Friedreich's ataxia
, and multiple system atrophy. There are few studies that address cognitive function in SCD. Although there are few comparison studies among the various SCDs, cognitive dysfunction may be more common and severe in spinocerebellar ataxia type 17 and dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy. While cognitive dysfunction in SCD appears to represent frontal dysfunction, the mechanisms of cognitive dysfunction have not been directly clarified. Nevertheless, various lesions, including those in the cerebrocerebellar circuitry, cortico-striatal-thalamocortical circuitry, and the frontal lobe, may influence cognitive function to various degrees for each disease.
...
PMID:Cognitive impairment in spinocerebellar degeneration. 1929 12
Friedreich ataxia
is the most frequent hereditary ataxia, with an estimated prevalence of 3-4 cases per 100,000 individuals. This autosomal-recessive neurodegenerative disease is characterized by progressive gait and limb ataxia,
dysarthria
, lower-limb areflexia, decreased vibration sense, muscular weakness in the legs, and a positive extensor plantar response. Non-neurological signs include hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and diabetes mellitus. Symptom onset typically occurs around puberty, and life expectancy is 40-50 years.
Friedreich ataxia
is usually caused by a large GAA-triplet-repeat expansion within the first intron of the frataxin (FXN) gene. FXN mutations cause deficiencies of the iron-sulfur cluster-containing subunits of the mitochondrial electron transport complexes I, II, and III, and of the iron-sulfur protein aconitase. Mitochondrial dysfunction has been addressed in several open-label, non-placebo-controlled trials, which indicated that treatment with idebenone might ameliorate hypertrophic cardiomyopathy; a well-designed phase II trial suggested concentration-dependent functional improvements in non-wheelchair-bound children and adolescents. Other current experimental approaches address iron-mediated toxicity, or aim to increase FXN expression through the use of erythropoietin and histone deacetylase inhibitors. This Review provides guidelines, from a European perspective, for the diagnosis of
Friedreich ataxia
, differential diagnosis of ataxias and genetic counseling, and treatment of neurological and non-neurological symptoms.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and treatment of Friedreich ataxia: a European perspective. 1934 27
Dysarthria
in
Friedreich Ataxia
(FA) is difficult to quantify. This study evaluated a series of performance measures for speech in 22 patients with genetically confirmed FA and 16 age-matched controls. Tests included the PATA examination, the PATAKA examination, the Oral Motor component of the Boston Aphasia examination, the Boston Cookie Theft description task, and the Assessment of Intelligibility of Dysarthric Speech. All measures, except the Cookie theft description task, demonstrated significantly lower scores for patients with FA when compared with controls and correlated with measures of disease progression. Thus, four of five measures capture speech dysfunction in FA and may provide feasible, inexpensive, quantitative testing for therapeutic monitoring in FA.
...
PMID:Clinical measures of dysarthria in Friedreich Ataxia. 2059 23
Friedreich ataxia
is an autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disorder characterized by ataxia of all four limbs,
dysarthria
, and arreflexia. A variety of measures are currently used to quantify disease progression, including the
Friedreich Ataxia
Rating Scale, examiner-rated functional disability scales, self-reported activities of daily living and performance measures such as the timed 25-foot walk, 9-hole pegboard test, PATA speech test, and low-contrast letter acuity vision charts. This study examines the rate of disease progression over one and two years in a cohort of 236
Friedreich ataxia
patients using these scales and performance measure composites. The
Friedreich Ataxia
Rating Scale and performance-measure composites captured disease progression, with a greater sensitivity to change over 2 years than over 1 year. The measures differed in their sensitivity to change and in possible bias. These results help to establish norms for progression in FRDA that can be useful in measuring the long-term success of therapeutic agents and defining sample-size calculations for double-blind clinical trials.
...
PMID:Measuring the rate of progression in Friedreich ataxia: implications for clinical trial design. 2006 31
Friedreich ataxia
(
FRDA
) is typically characterized by slowly progressive ataxia, depressed tendon reflexes,
dysarthria
, pyramidal signs, and loss of position and vibration sense with onset before 25 years. While several atypical forms of
FRDA
are recognized, profound vision deficit is rare. We describe here a 41-year-old man with profound vision deficit and episodic complete blindness associated with marked optic atrophy, spastic paraparesis, and sensory neuropathy without ataxia whose diagnostic evaluation revealed compound heterozygosity for two frataxin mutations, a 994 GAA repeat intronic expansion and c.389G > T (p.G130V) missense mutation. This case emphasizes that
FRDA
should be considered for individuals with significant vision deficit with optic atrophy and sensory neuropathy, even in the absence of ataxia. This case also raises the additional, related concern that prior studies may underestimate the frequency and varieties of variant forms of
FRDA
.
...
PMID:Atypical, perhaps under-recognized? An unusual phenotype of Friedreich ataxia. 2016 37
The aims of this study were to: (1) evaluate the perceptual speech dimensions, speech intelligibility and
dysarthria
severity of a group of individuals diagnosed with
Friedreich's ataxia
(
FRDA
); (2) determine the presence of subgroups within
FRDA
dysarthria
; (3) investigate the relationship between the speech outcome and the clinical factors of disease progression. The study included 38 individuals (21 female, 17 male) with a confirmed diagnosis of
FRDA
. A group of 20 non-neurologically impaired individuals served as controls. Perceptual analysis, investigating 30 different dimensions of speech, was conducted on a speech sample obtained from each participant. In addition, the Assessment of Intelligibility of
Dysarthria
Speech was administered. All
FRDA
participants presented with
dysarthria
with severities ranging from mild to moderate. Cluster analysis revealed 3 subgroups, the first presenting with mild dysarthric symptoms, the second with increased velopharyngeal involvement and the third characterized by increased laryngeal dysfunction.
Dysarthria
severity showed a significant correlation to disease duration but to no other clinical measure. The findings support the notion of subgroups in
FRDA
dysarthria
, representing distinct impairments of the speech mechanism and perhaps reflective of differing evolutions beyond the cerebellum.
...
PMID:Dysarthria in Friedreich's ataxia: a perceptual analysis. 2042 64
Ataxia with vitamin E deficiency (AVED) is a rare autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disease, due to mutations in TTPA gene (Arita et al. in Biochem J 306(Pt. 2):437-443, 1995; Hentati et al. in Ann Neurol 39:295-300, 1996), which encodes for alpha-TTP, a cytosolic liver protein that is presumed to function in the intracellular transport of alpha-tocopherol. This disease is characterized clinically by symptoms with often striking resemblance to those of
Friedreich ataxia
. The neurological symptoms include ataxia,
dysarthria
, hyporeflexia, and decreased vibration sense, sometimes associated with cardiomyopathy and retinitis pigmentosa (Mariotti et al. in Neurol Sci 25:130-137, 2004). Vitamin E supplementation improves symptoms and prevents disease progress (Doria-Lamba et al. in Eur J Pediatr 165(7):494-495, 2006). Over 20 mutations have been identified in patients with AVED. In the present paper we summarize the recent findings on molecular genetic of this disease including the list of the known mutations.
...
PMID:Ataxia with vitamin E deficiency: update of molecular diagnosis. 2046 73
Articulatory kinematics were investigated using electromagnetic articulography (EMA) in four dysarthric speakers with
Friedreich's ataxia
(
FRDA
). Specifically, tongue-tip and tongue-back movements were recorded by the AG-200 EMA system during production of the consonants /t/ and /k/ as produced within a sentence utterance and during a rapid syllable repetition task. The results obtained for each of the participants with
FRDA
were individually compared to those obtained by a control group (n = 10). Results revealed significantly greater movement durations and increased articulatory distances, most predominantly during the approach phase of consonant production. A task difference was observed with lingual kinematics more disturbed during the syllable repetition task than during the sentence utterance. Despite expectations of slowed articulatory movements in
FRDA
dysarthria
, the EMA data indicated that the observed prolongation of consonant phase durations was generally associated with greater articulatory distances, rather than slowed movement execution.
...
PMID:Kinematic analysis of lingual movements during consonant productions in dysarthric speakers with Friedreich's ataxia: A case-by-case analysis. 2093 72
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