Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016719 (Friedreich's ataxia)
2,098 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The CSF findings in hereditary ataxias and allief disorders have hitherto mostly been reported as normal if one excludes Refsum's syndrome. The CSF-protein patterns found on isoelectric focusing and quantitative paper electrophoresis were studied in 12 patients with hereditary ataxias and hereditary spastic paraplegia. Using a recently-developed technique of isoelectric focusing of CSF-proteins in flat beds of polyacrylamide gel, the authors could show abnormal CSF-protein patterns in all but 1 of the present cases. The aberrant CSF-protein patterns found showed differences between the syndromes studied. Two unique patterns with conspicuous fractions in the acid range were observed in patients with Marie-Sanger-Brown's ataxia (mother and daughter) and Holmes' ataxia. A third CSF-protein pattern was found in a sibship with Friedreich's ataxia including a double fraction in the acid region (pI 5.9-6.1) in all 4 subjects and a highly alkaline fraction (HAF) with pI about 9.3, in 3 of them. Similar acid fractions (pI 5.9-6.1) were also detected in 3 of 4 patients with hereditary spastic paraplegia, a brother and sister showing a very similar CSF-protein pattern. Double fractions with pI 5.9-6.1 and/or HAF may also occur in other neurological diseases, mostly, however, associated with other distinctive features of their CSF-protein patterns. A possibility in the future of distinguishing hereditary CNS-diseases by examination of the CSF-protein pattern is suggested.
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PMID:Protein patterns of cerebrospinal fluid in hereditary ataxias and hereditary spastic paraplegia. 4 1

In a previous study we reported low values of taurine and aspartic acid in the CSF of patients with Friedreich's ataxia, when the results were compared to the literature. Further studies have revealed that unforetold difficulties with the advertised methodology of sequential multi-sample amino acid analysis were responsible for low values in the determination of these two amino acids in the small volumes necessary for CSF. A corrected method is presented. With the latter method the differences disappear for CSF taurine and aspartic acid, but they remain valid for the previously reported blood and urine values in Friedreich's ataxia. GABA levels are also normal in Friedreich's ataxia CSF.
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PMID:Taurine in cerebrospinal fluid in Friedreich's ataxia. 64 88

The authors describe the results of electrophoresis studies of 111 cerebrospinal fluids from 110 patients with various spinocerebellar degenerative diseases (58 cases of Friedreich's disease, 14 of Pierre-Marie's ataxia, 12 of Strumpell-Lorrain paraplegia, 23 cerebellar atrophies, and 4 cases of Roussy-Levy disease). The degenerative profile of the electrophoresis findings were characterized by an overall reduction in CSF proteins, an increase in pre-albumin, and a reduction in gammaglobulin, and this was noted in 82 cases (73.8 p. 100). Low levels (less than or equal to 0.17 g/l) of proteins were observed in 19 cases (17.1 p. 100), and increased pre-albumin in 43 cases (38.7 p. 100). Reduced gammaglobulin was present in 20 cases (18.0 p. 100), and the cerebrospinal fluid was normal in only 29 cases (26.1 p. 100). These modifications could result from a particular type of physiopathological process of cell degeneration in the nervous system.
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PMID:[Degenerative changes in cerebrospinal fluid electrophoresis recordings during spinocerebellar hereditary degenerative disorders. A study of 111 cases (author's transl)]. 615 84

We report a clinical and biochemical survey of 23 patients with Friedreich's ataxia from southern Italy. They were studied clinically and by means of a clinical rating scale devised by us (Inherited Ataxias Clinical Rating Scale). Laboratory tests, based on the Quebec Cooperative Study, were also performed on our patients. No major clinical or biochemical differences were found between Italian and Canadian patients. Investigation of CSF monoamine metabolites showed that HVA decreased after probenecid and metoclopramide loading.
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PMID:Friedreich's ataxia in the south of Italy: a clinical and biochemical survey of 23 patients. 645 93

Nine patients with typical Friedreich's ataxia had normal levels of pyruvate and lactate in blood, urine, and CSF. Glucose, pyruvate, and lactate levels were also within the reference ranges after oral glucose loading. After intravenous pyruvate loading, the relative increase in blood pyruvate and lactate levels was significantly higher in Friedreich's ataxia patients than in controls. Significant differences between the two groups were also observed in lactate-pyruvate ratios at various times after infusion. The pyruvate loading test can be useful in demonstrating a defect in pyruvate metabolism in Friedreich's ataxia patients.
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PMID:Friedreich's ataxia: intravenous pyruvate load to demonstrate a defect in pyruvate metabolism. 649 99

The introduction of isoelectrofocusing on polyacrylamide gel followed by direct immunofixation, in the analysis of CSF proteins, emphasized the interest in transferrin examination, mainly in order to find eventual abnormalities in patients with neurological diseases. Stibler (1979), using these techniques, demonstrated the presence in CSF of two subtypes of transferrin C, called C1 and C2, transmitted by autosomal codominant inheritance, according to the C1, C2 and C2-1 phenotypes. The rather frequently occurring variant of transferrin in CSF is the C2-1 subtype: a double banded pattern, which is focused at pH 5.9, consisting of two very closely spaced bands with a pI difference of less than 0.1. This transferrin pattern is peculiar to CSF and is absent in the serum of the same subjects. This subtype of transferrin has been observed in various neurological disorders, as well as in healthy populations, by several investigators. They also found a much higher incidence of double tau-transferrin in inherited degenerative neurological diseases, such as Friedreich's ataxia and hereditary spastic paraplegia, than in neurological ailments without a hereditary component. The aim of our study is to verify the incidence of the C2-1 variant of transferrin in a control group and in a mixed group of neurological patients, with particular attention to hereditary degenerative pathologies.
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PMID:CFS transferrin in various neurological diseases. 718 34

A review concerning the characteristics of the cerebellar serotoninergic system is presented. In rat, cat and oppossum, the perikarya of origin are located in the brain stem raphe nuclei and in other brainstem structures. The projections to the cerebellar layers and deep nuclei include synaptic connections, but also non synaptic terminals, especially in a diffuse cortical plexus. Serotoninergic receptors have been described: 5-HT1B in the molecular layer and 5-HT2 in the inferior olive. Serotonin exerts neurophysiological effects on several target cells, directly or indirectly, presynaptically or postsynaptically. A modulatory effect on Purkinje cells is well documented. In thiamine deprived animals, a specific serotoninergic cerebellar syndrome includes a selective degeneration of the serotoninergic cerebellar system, an increase of the 5-HIAA cerebellar values and an exaggerated serotoninergic turnover. In human heredoataxias (Friedreich's ataxia and cerebellar cortical atrophy), serotoninergic disturbances have been observed in the CSF, including low 5-HIAA values and an increased serotoninergic turnover. Therapeutic results have been obtained with L-5-HTP, a precursor of serotonin, in several conditions presenting cerebellar ataxia. L-5-HTP resistance of olivopontocerebellar atrophies may be explained by the destruction of serotonin-sensitive target cells, especially Purkinje cells.
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PMID:The cerebellar serotoninergic system and its possible involvement in cerebellar ataxia. 833 97

Analysis of the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) maps derived from diffusion-weighted MR imaging is emerging as a reproducible, sensitive, and quantitative tool to evaluate brain damage in diseases of the white and gray matter. To explore the potentials of ADC maps analysis in degenerative ataxias, we examined 28 patients and 26 age-matched controls with T1, T2, and diffusion (b values 0-1000 along the three main body axes)-weighted MR images. Twenty-four patients had inherited genetically proven diseases including spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA1) (n = 9), spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) (n = 8), and Friedreich's ataxia (FA) (n = 7), whereas four patients had sporadic adult onset pure cerebellar ataxia (three idiopathic, one gluten intolerance). Area and linear measurements of the CNS structures contained in the posterior cranial fossa (PCF) preliminary enabled classification of the patients in the three morphological categories reflecting the gross pathology findings, namely olivopontocerebellar atrophy (OPCA) (n = 10: six SCA2 and four SCA1), spinal atrophy (SA) (n = 7: all FA), and cortical cerebellar atrophy (CCA) (n = 4: three idiopathic and one gluten intolerance). Seven patients with SCA1 (n = 5) or SCA2 (n = 2) had morphologic changes reminiscent of OPCA, but their values were still in the lower normal range and were classified as undefined. Mean diffusivity (D) maps of the entire brain were generated and D was measured with regions of interest (ROI) in the medulla, pons, middle cerebellar peduncles, and the peridentate white matter. Moreover, after exclusion of the skull with manual segmentation and of the CSF with application of a threshold value, histograms were obtained for D of the brainstem and cerebellum and for D of the cerebral hemispheres. As compared to controls, a (P < 0.001) increase of D was observed in the medulla, middle cerebellar peduncles, and peridentate white matter in OPCA and undefined patients groups who had also significantly increased values of the 25th and 50th percentiles in the brainstem and cerebellum D histogram. In CCA (P = 0.01), an increase of the 25th and 50th percentile of the D value was observed in the brainstem and cerebellum histograms. The SA group showed (P < 0.001) an increased D in the medulla only. A correlation between clinical severity as assessed with the Inherited Ataxias Clinical Rating Scale (IACRS) and the 50th percentile of the D value in the brainstem and cerebellum histogram (r = 0.69) was observed in patients with SCA1 or SCA2. Diffusion MR imaging reveals variable patterns of increase of D in the brainstem, cerebellum, and cerebral hemispheres in degenerative ataxias that match the known distribution of the neuropathological changes.
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PMID:ADC mapping of neurodegeneration in the brainstem and cerebellum of patients with progressive ataxias. 1519 98