Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (hypotonia)
5,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Fifteen premature infants with lethal congenital cytomegalovirus infection were studied to determine the clinical, neuroradiological, and neuropathological characteristics of the disease in this population. Nine infants were liveborn but died at a postnatal age of 18 +/- 21 days; 6 infants were stillborn. Clinical findings in liveborn infants included microcephaly (77%), seizures (55%), hypotonia (33%), and multiple contractures (18%). Ophthalmological findings included chorioretinitis, optic atrophy, and corneal opacities. Neuroradiological findings included the postnatal evolution of periventricular calcification in 1 infant, and cerebellar hypoplasia diagnosed by magnetic resonance imaging in 1 infant. Neuropathological findings included periventricular necrosis and calcification (12), associated diffuse calcification frequently involving the convexity of the gyri (6), cerebellar hypoplasia (5), periventricular leukomalacia (2), intraventricular hemorrhage (2), hydrocephalus (2), and porencephalic cyst (1). Intranuclear inclusion bodies within the brain were observed in 4 infants, whereas systemic inclusion bodies were present in all infants. These data indicate several atypical findings in preterm infants rarely reported in term infants, including hypotonia, multiple contractures, periventricular leukomalacia, and optic atrophy.
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PMID:Lethal cytomegalovirus infection in preterm infants: clinical, radiological, and neuropathological findings. 131 11

A 2-year-old boy suffered aphasia, hypotonia, dystonia, and loss of activity and spontaneous speech during an active stage of juvenile rheumatoid arthritis with pericarditis, fever, anemia, and a high antinuclear antibody titer. These neurologic signs slowly improved with corticosteroid treatment but fluctuated over 1 year. The neuroimaging studies revealed irregular mass lesions in the basal ganglia bilaterally mainly involving the globus pallidus. They gradually decreased in size and almost disappeared after 1 year. A stereotactic brain biopsy revealed a slight proliferation of astrocytes. Chorioretinitis was also observed during the clinical course. A chronic inflammatory process involving cerebral vessels was suspected, although angiography did not demonstrate cerebral vasculitis. The possibility of central nervous system lymphoma could not be eliminated. The type of aphasia and the relation to the lesion sites are discussed.
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PMID:Basal ganglia mass lesions in juvenile rheumatoid arthritis. 205 56

The possibility of amplification of human cytomegalovirus (HCMV) DNA in cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) for the diagnosis of HCMV central nervous system (CNS) infection in infants was studied. Single-step PCR, nested PCR and PCR-Digene were used to assay CSF specimens from 37 patients. Criteria for patient inclusion in the study were: 1. clinical manifestations suggesting CMV neuroinfection such as seizures, hypertonia, hypotonia, intracranial calcification, microcephaly, chorioretinitis; 2. any of the following symptoms: anaemia, hepetomegaly, prolonged cholestatic jaundice, or hepatitis, splenomegaly, thrombocytopenia, intrauterine hypotrophy; 3. serologic presentation, and/or positive results for CMV infection obtained by single-step PCR and PCR-Digene in urine and/or blood. PCR-Digene results were positive in 6 CSF samples. Four CSF samples were positive by nested PCR and 1 CSF sample by single step PCR. We found that the double PCR was about ten or more times more sensitive than single PCR and the PCR-Digene was only three times more sensitive than nested-PCR. The results were correlated with serology. Thirty-three out of 37 examined patients were seropositive (ELISA IgG); ELISA IgM gave positive results in 9 patients. In control studies, cells infected with other members of the herpes virus family were negative with these methods, which suggest that amplification combined with primers from the IE and the L-region of CMV is specific. In conclusion, nested-PCR seems to be the best method for early diagnosis of CMV infection in CSF due to an absence of false positive results and its high specificity and sensitivity.
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PMID:Detection of cytomegalovirus in infant cerebrospinal fluid by conventional PCR, nested PCR and PCR-Digene. 1193 Sep 94