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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two children are described who suffered from episodes of metabolic acidosis and progressive mental and motor deterioration. The patients showed periodic elevation of blood lactate, pyruvate and alanine, which was accompanied by vomiting,
hypotonia
or convulsions. The concentrations of lactate and pyruvate in cerebrospinal fluid were found to be increased. Liver biopsies revealed a decrease in pyruvate carboxylase activity and normal pyruvate decarboxylase activity. No inhibitor of TPP-ATP phosphoryl transferase was detected in urine from the patients. These findings suggest that congenital lactic acidosis due to pyruvate carboxylase deficiency is probably a different disease entity from
Leigh
's encephalomyelopathy. A possible mechanism of brain damage caused by a defect in pyruvate carboxylase is postulated.
...
PMID:Congenital lactic acidosis due to pyruvate carboxylase deficiency: absence of an inhibitor of TPP-ATP phosphoryl transferase. 20 66
A female infant was seen at the age of 2 months because of
hypotonia
, delayed motor development, and lactic acidosis, and she died at age 13 months due to respiratory failure. In a muscle specimen taken at 11 months and in a liver specimen obtained 1.5 hours postmortem, we found decreased activities of cytochrome c oxidase and long-chain acyl coenzyme A dehydrogenase. Neuropathological changes were typical for
Leigh
's
subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy
. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a combined defect of complex IV of the respiratory chain and of the long-chain specific acyl coenzyme A dehydrogenase of beta-oxidation in muscle and liver.
...
PMID:Cytochrome c oxidase deficiency and long-chain acyl coenzyme A dehydrogenase deficiency with Leigh's subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy. 131 9
A female infant showing lacticacidemia,
hypotonia
, and neurodegenerative disease died at 7 mo of age. Autopsy revealed lesions typical of
Leigh disease
, both in the basal ganglia and in the brain stem. A maternal aunt and uncle died 1 year and 5 mo, respectively, after following a similar clinical course, while another uncle, presently 33 years of age, has retinitis pigmentosa and ataxia and is mentally retarded. PCR restriction-digest analysis of mtDNA isolated from the proband revealed a T-to-G change at position 8993, creating a new AvaI restriction site. The mutation present in the ATP 6 gene results in the substitution of an arginine residue for a leucine. The indexed patient had greater than 95% abnormal mtDNA in her skin fibroblasts, brain, kidney, and liver tissues, as measured by laser densitometry. The maternal aunt who died at age 1 year had greater than 95% abnormal mtDNA in her lymphoblasts. The uncle with retinitis pigmentosa had 78% and 79% abnormal mtDNA in his skin fibroblasts and lymphoblasts, respectively, while an asymptomatic maternal aunt and her son had no trace of this mutation. The mother of the index case had 71% and 39% abnormal mtDNA in her skin fibroblasts and lymphoblasts, respectively, showing that the heteroplasmy can be variable, on a tissue-specific basis, within one individual. This shows that mtDNA mutations at 8993 can produce the clinical phenotype of
Leigh disease
in addition to the phenotype of ataxia and retinitis pigmentosa described by Holt et al.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Heteroplasmic mtDNA mutation (T----G) at 8993 can cause Leigh disease when the percentage of abnormal mtDNA is high. 830 53
A one-year-old boy suffering from intermittent lactic acidosis, muscular
hypotonia
, horizontal gaze paralysis and spasticity in both legs had low activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex associated with low amounts of immunoreactive E 1 alpha and E 1 beta.
Leigh syndrome
was diagnosed on the basis of the clinical and biochemical abnormalities and the typical lesions observed on MRI of the brain. Treatment with a ketogenic diet was associated with clinical and biochemical amelioration. A striking improvement of the cerebral lesions was observed by neuro-imaging.
...
PMID:Leigh syndrome associated with a deficiency of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex: results of treatment with a ketogenic diet. 164 Oct 82
Fourteen new cases of cytochrome oxidase (COX)-associated
Leigh syndrome
(LS) are combined with 20 reported cases to describe the clinical, laboratory, and radiological features of this devastating metabolic condition. Three clinical stages are identified. Most patients have normal neurological development during the first 8-12 months (stage I). Somatic complaints are common, including chronic diarrhea, recurrent vomiting, anorexia, and decelerating body and head growth. The second stage evolves during late infancy and early childhood when motor regression becomes evident. Eye signs, altered breathing patterns, pyramidal, extrapyramidal, and cerebellar signs emerge and sudden clinical deterioration occurs during intercurrent infectious or metabolic stress. The last stage may extend from 2 to 10 years and is manifested by extreme
hypotonia
, swallowing difficulties and undernutrition. Feeding assistance is necessary and seizures may occur. The CSF lactate concentration is consistently elevated and MRI abnormalities are seen in the subcortical structures. COX deficiency affects most tissues, but is not always generalized. For example, 3 patients with a cardiomyopathy had normal COX activity in cultured skin fibroblasts. Nearly normal amounts of cross-reacting material are present by ELISA and immunoblot analyses. Parental consanguinity has been found in several families, the hereditary pattern is recessive and males are affected more commonly (2:1). The biomolecular abnormality causing COX deficiency in LS is unknown, but the available evidence implicates a nuclear-encoded protein that affects the structure or the stability of the holoenzyme complex.
...
PMID:Cytochrome c oxidase-associated Leigh syndrome: phenotypic features and pathogenetic speculations. 165 84
A case of
Leigh disease
in a 3-year-old girl is reported. The child had regression of the psychomotor development, muscular
hypotonia
, weak tendinous reflexes, opsoclonus, tremor of the whole body, hypertrichosis, autonomic system disturbances. Laboratory investigations demonstrated raised serum lactic acid level. Postmortem histological examination of the brain confirmed the diagnosis of
Leigh disease
established before death.
...
PMID:[Leigh disease in a 3-year-old girl]. 180 61
The purpose of the study was differential diagnosis of lactic acidosis in 44 children aged from 2 weeks to 4 years. In all of them the lactate level in repeated determinations exceeded 27 mg/100 ml. From the point of view of clinical manifestations the children were divided into three groups: 26 with hepatomegaly and hypoglycaemia (I), 6 with ataxia and retardation of somatic development (II), 12 with mental retardation and muscular
hypotonia
(III). Together with basic biochemical studies other tests were done, if necessary, including glucose and alanine loading, lactate determination in cerebrospinal fluid, analysis of urinary organic acids by the GC-MS method, morphological examinations of muscle biopsy material, enzymatic determinations in liver biopsy material. In group I glycogenosis was suspected and its type was finally established after biochemical and enzymatic tests (types I, Ib, III, VI, VIa, XI). In one case fructose-1,6-diphosphatase deficiency was suspected. In group II the clinical manifestations resembled
Leigh
's syndrome. The tests demonstrated an inhibition of glucose formation from alanine, and lactate level in the cerebrospinal fluid was evidently raised above that in the serum. Gasometric index showed the presence of respiratory alkalosis with metabolic compensation rather than primary lactate acidosis. In group III, with considerable clinical variety of signs, in only nine out of 12 children the cause of lactate acidosis could have been established (pathological changes of mitochondria in 4 cases, secondary increase of lactate without pathogenetic importance in 4, and 3-hydroxy-3-methylglutaric acidosis in 1 case. In conclusion it is thought that this combination of diagnostic methods is useful in differential diagnosis of congenital lactate acidosis in children.
...
PMID:Congenital lactic acidosis in children--differential diagnosis in 44 cases. 184 18
Leigh's disease
is one of the mitochondrial encephalomyopathies. This article presents a 7-month-old baby boy who had been well-being since birth until 6 months of age when episodic downward gaze of both eyes with limitation of horizontal eye movement were noted. This episode of cranial nerve palsies lasted about 4-5 days and subsided spontaneously. The second attack was noted one month later, to be associated with
hypotonia
and truncal ataxia. Episodic hyperventilation with resultant gasping and myoclonus was noted at the third attack but spontaneous respiration resumed soon with persistent ophthalmoplegia and truncal ataxia. Lumbar puncture, brain MRI, amino acid assay and cardiac echo all showed negative finding. The oral glucose lactate stimulation test revealed an elevation of lactic acid, brain stem evoked potential indicated bilateral obscure 4th and 5th waves, and muscle biopsy showed ragged red fibres with aggregation of structurally abnormal mitochondria noted under electron microscope. Coenzyme Q, thiamine and carnitine had been given before biochemical study; however, the neurological symptoms did not show any improvement. Biochemical study finally revealed normal respiratory chain enzymes including NADH-coenzyme Q reductase, succinate coenzyme Q reductase and cytochrome c oxidase while other enzymes were technically unavailable for study. Unfortunately the patient died at 18-month-old due to respiratory failure.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy presenting with clinical Leigh's disease: report of a case. 184 64
A 5-month-old male infant was referred to us for evaluation of progressive
hypotonia
. He had growth retardation, feeding difficulty and general weakness. Brain sonography and computed tomography demonstrated symmetrical lesions in the caudate, lenticular nuclei, thalamus and hypothalamus, suggesting bilateral necrosis. Lactate and pyruvate levels in the blood and cerebral spinal fluid were persistently elevated. A biopsy of the quadriceps muscle showed increased subsarcolemmal mitochondrial enzyme activity on light microscopy. Electron microscopy of the muscle showed deformed and bizarre mitochondria. The patient eventually died at the age of 8 months. Autopsy showed bilateral necrotic foci in the caudate, lenticular nuclei, thalamus, hypothalamus, midbrain, and pons. Histopathologic findings included spongiform degeneration of the affected brain tissue. The characteristic clinical and pathological findings confirmed this case as subacute necrotizing encephalo-myelopathy of
Leigh
's type. To our knowledge, this is the first autopsy-proven case of
Leigh's disease
in Taiwan.
...
PMID:Subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy (Leigh's disease): report of a case. 198 41
This 6-year-old girl was admitted with insufficient involuntary breathing and generalized
hypotonia
. T2-weighted MR images showed bilateral symmetrical tubular hyperintense lesions in the medio-caudal part of the medulla oblongata that correlated well with demyelination and gliosis in the regions of the reticular formation and the nucleus solitarius found at autopsy. The typical lesions of
Leigh's disease
in the basal ganglia were not present, which made the diagnosis uncertain prior to the histopathological findings. MRI was very helpful in deciding on further management of the patient.
...
PMID:Brainstem lesion revealed by MRI in a case of Leigh's disease with respiratory failure. 234 19
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