Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
An 18-year-old girl with von Gierke's disease associated with a lipid storage
myopathy
is reported. The diagnosis of von Gierke's disease was made from decreased activity in glucose-6-phosphatase in the jejunal biopsy specimen. Neurologically she showed generalized
hypotonia
of the muscles, atrophy of bilateral proximal muscles of the lower extremities, weakness in neck flexors, deltoid and lumbar girdle muscles, and a positive Gower's sign. Muscle biopsy from flexor femoris muscle revealed fatty deposition in type 1 fibers and atrophy of type 2 fibers and the diagnosis of an accompanying lipid storage
myopathy
was made. This case also had a ventricular septal defect confirmed by right cardiac catheterization.
...
PMID:Lipid storage myopathy in von Gierke's disease: a case report. 21 38
Two neonates showing generalized
hypotonia
, weakness of limbs, trunk, and oral musculature died because of muscular respiratory distress. The diagnosis of centronuclear (or myotubular)
myopathy
was established by histological and histochemical techniques. The genetic situation and routine laboratory data including electromyography were compared with similar cases in the literature; findings were inconclusive with respect to this diagnosis. These results indicate the need for a muscle biopsy and the use of histochemical stainings and/or electronmicroscopical investigation for a proper diagnosis in hypotonic newborns under respiratory distress after exclusion of etiologies other than neuromuscular diseases. Still the diagnosis of centronuclear myopathy in a neonate does not allow a precise prognosis. Increased awareness of this disorder and adequate diagnostic workup is needed in order to extend our understanding and to clarify the prognosis.
...
PMID:Neonatal respiratory insufficiency due to centronuclear myopathy. 52 48
An unique
myopathy
described by Ullrich in 1930 was reported in a 4-year-old Japanese boy. Major clinical findings included proximal joint contracture, muscle
hypotonia
, prominent calcaneus, high-arched palate, and normal intelli gence. Muscle biopsy showed rather small muscle fivers with variations in size and proliferation of connective tissue. A review of 15 cases in the literature revealed this type of
myopathy
as a distinctive entity to be classified as a myopathic arthrogryposis multiplex congenita, rather than in the group of muscular dystrophies.
...
PMID:A case of Ullrich's disease (Kongenitale, Atonisch-Sklerotische Muskeldystrophie). 55 39
Two infant siblings (male and female) manifested extreme
hypotonia
and flaccidity at birth and had a rapidly fatal course. In each, rod-like structures were demonstrated within a variety of skeletal muscles, and accumulations of thin filaments were seen in numerous muscle fibers. The possibility exists that this represents a severe and rapidly fatal form of nemaline
myopathy
that should be included in the differential diagnosis of infantile hypotonias.
...
PMID:Nemaline (rod) myopathy: a possible cause of rapidly fatal infantile hypotonia. 58 46
Five cases with type I fiber hypotrophy
myopathy
from two families are reported. The first two cases belong to the type I fiber hypotrophy and central nuclei. Six cases have already been published. In addition to
hypotonia
, obvious thoracic anomalies are associated. The three other cases are members of the second sibship and belong to the type I fiber hypotrophy without central nuclei nor myothony and show the typical phenotypic characters: elongated face and adynamic appearance. Out of these three brothers, two show no progress and the other is getting worse slowly. The pathological findings together with the evolutive-clinic pattern of these patient are confronted with those published by other authors and sugestions are made to differentiate these two forms and to establish their relationships with the other types of congenital myopathies, mainly with centronuclear myopathy and congenital fiber type disproportion.
...
PMID:[Congenital type I fiber hypotrophy myopathy (author's transl)]. 69 16
A sporadic case of central core disease in a 5 1/2-year-old girl is reported. Clinically, a retarded motor development existed, furthermore, a muscle weakness and
hypotonia
of the extremities and trunk, contractures of the hip- and knee-joint,and luxation of both hip-joints. Biopsy specimens are taken from both Mm. gastrocnemii. Muscle fibres show, by morphologic examination, 95 per cent cores, which are characteristic for this
myopathy
. A further abnormality is seen inthe histochemical preparations for phosphorylase, succinate dehydrogenase, NAD diaphorase tetrazolium reductase, myofibrillar ATPase as well as AS-reaction with and without diastase digestion. With these techniques the muscle fibres show an uniform reaction pattern in which the activities of the oxidative andglycolytic enzymes correspond to the type I fibres of healthy persons. The cores show a lack of a activity of the oxidative and glycolytic enzymes as well as are ATPase- and PAS-negative. By reason of this histochemical behaviour it is suggested that the cores are predominantly unstructured. The cause of this disease might be complex disturbances in the neuro-muscular system manifested in the fetal period.
...
PMID:[A case of central core disease. Light microscopic and histochemical studies (author's transl)]. 84 74
A case of centronuclear or myotubular
myopathy
in a 13-year-old boy who was admitted with
hypotonia
and congenital ptosis is reported. Clinical, electromyographic and pathologic studies are discussed. A review of the electron microscopic features and comparison with out findings is included. Review of the literature disclosed near 50 cases of centronuclear myopathy. The diferential diagnosis is discussed.
...
PMID:[Myotubular or centronuclear myopathy; report of a case and review of the literature]. 90 Dec 63
Three children displaying
hypotonia
, cardiac involvement and defects of the mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes are reported. The first case showed severe neonatal
hypotonia
, failure to thrive, hepatomegaly, dilation of the right cardiac cavities, profound lactic acidosis and amino aciduria. The boy died at the age of 7 weeks. In the second case
hypotonia
, severe cardiomyopathy, cyclic neutropenia, lactic acidosis and 3-methylglutaconic aciduria occurred. The boy died at the age of 27 months. The third case presented at the age of 16 months as an acute hypokinetic hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with transient
hypotonia
and mild lactic acidosis. Spontaneous clinical remission occurred. In all cases muscle biopsy was performed. Morphological studies failed to show ragged-red fibers but there was lipid storage
myopathy
and decreased cytochrome c oxidase activity. Biochemical studies confirmed the cytochrome c oxidase deficiency in muscle in all cases. It was associated with complex I III deficiency in case 1 and with severe deficits of all respiratory chain complexes in case 2. Post-mortem studies in case 1 indicated that complex IV was reduced in the liver but not in the heart and quantitative analysis of mtDNA revealed a depletion in muscle. Cases 1 and 2 shared some clinical features with fatal infantile
myopathy
associated with cytochrome c oxidase deficiency, while case 3 displayed a very unusual clinical presentation. The histochemical enzyme reaction of cytochrome c oxidase is useful for the diagnosis of mitochondrial myopathy because ragged-red fibers may be lacking. Finally, biochemical measurement of the different mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes is required because multiple defects are frequent and occasionally related to mtDNA depletion.
...
PMID:Defects of the mitochondrial respiratory chain complexes in three pediatric cases with hypotonia and cardiac involvement. 132 Jun 61
A 2-year-old girl with reducing body
myopathy
was reported. She had no family history of neuromuscular disease. She developed normally with no delay in milestones during infancy. She had no muscle weakness or
hypotonia
up to 2 years of age when she received mumps vaccination. Three days after the injection, she was first noticed to have limb muscle weakness. The muscle weakness progressed rapidly with increasing difficulty in gait and raising the upper arms, particularly the left. Four months later, she had difficulty in keeping her head up and could no longer climb the stairs. On physical examination, she had proximal dominant generalized muscle weakness, with a preferential neck muscle involvement. She walked waddlingly and stood up with Gowers' maneuver. Facial and ocular muscles were intact. No dysarthria, dysphagia or respiratory difficulty was noted. EMG showed myopathic pattern. Serum creatine kinase level was moderately elevated to 739 IU/l. In the biopsied left biceps muscle, there was marked variation in fiber size, but no apparent necrotic or regenerating fibers. The most striking feature was the presence of numerous eosinophilic inclusions which reduced nitroblue tetrazolium (NBT) and were, therefore, stained dark with menadione-linked alpha-glycerophosphate dehydrogenase even without the substrate of menadione, showing the histochemical characteristics of "reducing" body. The bodies were predominantly seen in fibers with disorganized intermyofibrillar networks and with high acid phosphatase activity. On electron microscopy, the reducing bodies consisted of fine granular material with the similar electron density to the chromatin granules and were located mostly around the degenerated nuclei, suggesting the nuclear degeneration playing a role in forming the reducing bodies.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Reducing body myopathy--a case report]. 132 Oct 16
The authors report the case of a female 5-months-old child who presented from the age of two months delayed neuromotor development, marked
hypotonia
, general muscle weakness and bilateral palpebral ptosis. The muscle biopsy revealed many fibers with central nuclei and the diagnosis was centronuclear (myotubular)
myopathy
. The difficult histological characterization of this congenital
myopathy
and the great variability of clinical findings with light, moderate or severe involvement are analysed and discussed.
...
PMID:[Centronuclear (myotubular) myopathy: a case report]. 134 Jun 9
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>