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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We report on a 4 generation family of individuals with an X-linked form of mental retardation involving 9 affected males and 5 obligate carrier females. Key manifestations include severe mental retardation, early
hypotonia
with progression to spasticity and contractures,
choreoathetosis
, seizures, presence of a long, narrow face with coarse features, cystic enlargement of the fourth ventricle with cerebellar hypoplasia (Dandy-Walker malformation), and iron accumulation in the basal ganglia with neuroaxonal dystrophy similar to Hallervorden-Spatz disease. Of the 5 known heterozygotes, 3 are dull intellectually, and one of the 3 developed a "presenile dementia." At autopsy she had iron deposition and neuroaxonal dystrophy in the basal ganglia and atrophy of the cerebral cortex. Although the clinical findings among relatives are variable, we conclude that this is a distinct, previously unrecognized X-linked mental retardation syndrome.
...
PMID:New X-linked mental retardation disorder with Dandy-Walker malformation, basal ganglia disease, and seizures. 201 58
Four patients suffered a distinctive neurologic syndrome after undergoing profound hypothermia and complete circulatory arrest for congenital heart lesion repair. Symptom onset was delayed 24-120 hours postoperatively. The syndrome consists of
choreoathetosis
and oral-facial dyskinesias,
hypotonia
, affective changes, and pseudobulbar signs (CHAP). Precise anatomic localization is uncertain. Magnetic resonance imaging of 2 patients did not reveal basal ganglia lesions. Pathogenesis is obscure.
...
PMID:A distinctive neurologic syndrome after induced profound hypothermia. 236 Sep 62
Alternating hemiplegia in childhood (Verret, 1971) is a disorder presenting with frequent episodes of alternating hemiplegia from early infancy. We report a patient with this disorder, along with a pathophysiological study and a discussion about the available therapies for this disorder. The patient, an 11-year-old boy, visited our hospital with episodes of alternating hemiplegia from early infancy. His family history showed that many members suffered from migraine. He was born with asphyxia. Mental and motor developmental delays were seen from early infancy. The hemiplegic episodes with ipsilateral facial palsy had occurred frequently from early infancy. The episodes were frequently induced by emotional stress. The duration of hemiplegia varied from 10 minutes to 3 days. From the age of 11 years, he had begun to have migrainous attacks with or without hemiplegic episodes. Neurological examination revealed slight muscle
hypotonia
,
choreoathetosis
and dystonic movements induced by locomotion, positive Myerson sign, increased deep tendon reflexes and Babinski reflex. CAG, VAG and CAT revealed normal findings. EEG revealed diffuse generalized slowing during hemiplegic episodes. Measurement of regional cerebral blood flow (CBF) by 133Xe inhalation method revealed a slight decrease of bilateral CBF during a quadriplegic episode. Positron emission tomography using C15O2 revealed a slight decrease of CBF at the insula, putamen and claustrum of the left side during a right sided episode. Increased excretion of urinary 5-HIAA was seen during one episode. From our clinical and laboratory findings, we think this disorder may be a special type of migraine. Therapeutic trials of diazepam and flunarizine were both effective, but the initial effectiveness was decreased after 5 months.
...
PMID:[A patient with alternating hemiplegia in childhood]. 273 28
We studied 2 of 4 affected boys with a new disease associated with abnormalities of copper metabolism. The four cases occurred in two generations of a family. This syndrome was similar to Menkes disease in some respects: X-linked recessive inheritance, marked psychomotor retardation with seizures, low serum copper and ceruloplasmin levels, and a block in gut copper absorption. There were also striking differences from Menkes disease. Patients had normal birthweight at term, no hypothermia, and survived beyond the usual Menkes age group with static neurologic disease including
hypotonia
and
choreoathetosis
. In addition, general examination of both children was unremarkable apart from undescended testes and growth retardation. The hair, facies, and skin were normal and there was no radiologic evidence of bony changes. Detailed studies of copper absorption were performed.
...
PMID:An X-linked disease of the nervous system with disordered copper metabolism and features differing from Menkes disease. 719 7
Eighty infants with cerebral palsy including monoplegia, diplegia, quadriplegia, hemiplegia,
choreoathetosis
,
hypotonia
with mental retardation and cerebellar ataxia, underwent Computed Cranial Tomography (CCT). Specific morphological anomalies such as ventricular dilatation with or without diverticulum, cortical atrophy, low density areas and calcifications, occur with varying frequency in each clinical groups. There exists a good correlation between the pathogenesis of the lesions, clinical data and CCT pictures.
...
PMID:Cranial computerized tomography in cerebral palsy. An attempt at anatomo-clinical and radiological correlations. 720 4
We describe six patients from five families, who have a syndrome that, to our knowledge, has not been previously reported. The syndrome is characterized by growth failure, ophthalmoplegia, optic atrophy,
choreoathetosis
, areflexia,
hypotonia
, dysmorphic facies, and severe mental and motor retardation. Some of the children also had microcephaly and seizures. The clinical course is remarkably uniform and slowly progressive. The abnormalities first noted are delayed psychomotor development and poor weight gain, and the others all develop within the first three years of life. The syndrome seems to be hereditary. Extensive laboratory investigation has not yielded an etiology. Until pathologic material is available, the disorder remains a syndrome and the diagnosis is established by the unique combination of neurological abnormalities.
...
PMID:A syndrome of infantile CNS degeneration. 736 33
The clinical findings in six patients from three families with 4-hydroxybutyric aciduria are described. The onset of disease was in early infancy in all cases. All infants presented with severe global delay and severe
hypotonia
, and all patients had seizure disorder. Eye findings included optic atrophy in two patients, and retinitis pigmentosa in one. Three patients had
choreoathetosis
, two had myoclonus and one had severe dystonia. The urine 4-hydroxybutyric acid was 300-1000 times that of normal, and other organic acids related to its further metabolism or to its inhibitory effect on beta-oxidation were also increased. The administration of vigabatrine rapidly reduced the excretion of 4-hydroxybutyric acid promptly, and in the long-term its excretion could be kept at 80-200 times that of normal. However, the clinical course of the disease improved in only two, remained the same in two, and worsened in the remaining two patients.
...
PMID:4-Hydroxybutyric aciduria. 772 83
We presented a case of severe postoperative
choreoathetosis
which occurred in a 3-year-old boy with tetralogy of Fallot early postoperatively but almost completely recovered within two years after the operation. Because of the large coronary arterial branch on the right ventricular outflow, a small outflow incision and deep hypothermia (lowest rectal temperature was 13 degrees C) and short duration of circulatory arrest (8 minutes) were adopted. Postoperative course was uneventful till the onset of
choreoathetosis
on the fifth postoperative day. His symptoms and signs of
choreoathetosis
, oral-facial dyskinesias,
hypotonia
, affective changes and also pseudobulbar signs were becoming serious during the first week from the onset, but afterwards his condition started getting better gradually every week, and every month. Now, 20 months after the operation, he is almost completely recovered except for small and slow involuntary movements. Though investiations including CT, MRI and EEG were all almost normal, regional nonspecific low area of the frontal lobe and cerebellum was detected by SPECT (single photon emission computed tomography) on the 32nd and 94th postoperative days, respectively.
...
PMID:[Postoperative choreoathetosis in a case of tetralogy of Fallot]. 788 49
In a prospective study, we analyzed the intraoperative electroencephalographic (EEG) changes during open heart surgery with deep hypothermia in 66 infants aged 6 months or younger, 70% of whom were neonates. Suppression of amplitude and continuity at the nadir of temperature reduction and following rewarming, and the appearance of periodic paroxysmal activity, was compared with neurologic abnormalities before and following operation, patient characteristics, and operation variables. EEG changes disclosed no relationship to abnormal neurologic findings, age at operation, type of anesthetic, duration of cardiopulmonary bypass (CPB), duration of low-flow CPB or cooling, temperature at circulatory arrest (HCA) or low flow, or nasopharyngeal-venous return temperature differences. EEG suppression following rewarming was associated with the use of thiopentone and duration of HCA. Use of thiopentone was also related to decreased levels of alertness at the end of the first postoperative week. We could not demonstrate any association between operation variables, including duration of HCA, and postoperative neurologic findings which include abnormalities of tone, alertness, seizures, generalized pyramidal signs,
choreoathetosis
, and hemiparesis. Severe
hypotonia
before operation was associated with continuing severe
hypotonia
during the postoperative period. EEG changes during cooling for open heart surgery on infants appear to be physiologic, and these plus EEG suppression following HCA or low-flow CPB are not useful predictors of early neurologic morbidity.
...
PMID:EEG changes during open heart surgery on infants aged 6 months or less: relationship to early neurologic morbidity. 802 60
Three patients with propionic acidemia were studied. The first patient was diagnosed at the age of 9 mo, 3 mo after he developed
hypotonia
and choreoathetoid movements after an upper respiratory tract infection. The second patient was diagnosed at the age of 1.5 mo when she became comatose after nasogastric tube feeding because of failure to thrive. The third patient was diagnosed at the age of 5 d when she presented with feeding difficulties,
hypotonia
, and respiratory insufficiency. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain in all patients revealed delayed myelination and some cerebral atrophy. In the patient with
choreoathetosis
, MRI showed bilateral abnormalities in the signal intensity of the putamen and caudate nuclei. MRI of the other two patients showed normal basal ganglia. Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (1H MRS) from a voxel located in the basal ganglia revealed a decrease in N-acetylaspartate and myo-inositol peaks and an elevation of glutamine/ glutamate. The presence of spectroscopic abnormalities in a stable metabolic condition, in particular the rise in glutamine/ glutamate, indicates that the metabolic balance on cerebral parenchymal level is less optimal than estimated from biochemical analysis of urine, plasma, or cerebrospinal fluid.
...
PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopy of the brain in propionic acidemia: clinical and biochemical considerations. 886 76
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