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)

4 cases of nonketotic hyperglycinemia (glycine encephalopathy), one with autopsy, are presented and the literature on 61 cases is reviewed. Major clinical signs include early hypotonia, lethargy and erratic and massive myoclonias with respiratory distrubances, starting during the first days of life after a symptom-free interval. Early death is common. Survivors are severely retarded and exhibit various types of seizures including infantile spasms. The EEG pattern consists initially of periodical paroxysmal bursts on an almost flat tracing, evolving later into a hypsarrhythmic pattern. Spongiosis of the myelinated pathways is the main pathological finding. Elevated CSF glycine seems to be the essential determinant of the neurological disturbances and it is, therefore, suggested that the term glycine encephalopathy be used instead of non-ketotic hyperglycinemia. A classification of disorders associated with hyperglycinemia is proposed.
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PMID:Glycine encephalopathy. 58 64

Twenty-one neonates of over 36 weeks' gestation suffered perinatal asphyxia but not chronic hypoxia. Three clinical stages of postanoxic encephalopathy were distinguished. Stage 1 lasted less than 24 hours and was characterized by hyperalertness, uninhibited Moro and stretch reflexes, sympathetic effects, and a normal electroencephalogram. Stage 2 was marked by obtundation, hypotonia, strong distal flexion, and multifocal seizures. The EEG showed a periodic pattern sometimes preceded by continuous delta activity. Infants in stage 3 were stuporous, flaccid, and brain stem and autonomic functions were suppressed. The EEG was isopotential or had infrequent periodic discharges. Infants who did not enter stage 3 and who had signs of stage 2 for less than five days appeared normal in later infancy. Persistence of stage 2 for more than seven days or failure of the EEG to revert to normal was associated with later neurologic impairment or death.
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PMID:Neonatal encephalopathy following fetal distress. A clinical and electroencephalographic study. 98 69

We reported the first case of typical infantile-type neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis (INCL) in Japan. The patient was a 1-year-old girl presenting with rapidly progressive psychomotor deterioration and blindness. Muscular hypotonia, microcephaly and myoclonic jerks became marked with the progression of her disease. Diminution in amplitude of EEG, VEP and ERG was prominent in the initial stage, but ABR was normal. MRI showed progressive brain atrophy. Electron microscopic examination of the biopsied skin revealed granular matrix, the specific inclusion bodies, in the epithelial cell of sweet glands. Many sea-blue histiocytes were demonstrated in her bone marrow samples. INCL is a common progressive encephalopathy in the Scandinavian countries, but a typical case had not yet been fully reported in Japan. This prompted us to report our case. Future reports are need for the study of INCL in Japan.
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PMID:[The first case of infantile type neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis in Japan]. 141 75

A 5-year-old girl with a previous diagnosis of cerebral palsy, nonprogressive psychomotor retardation, and hypotonia was found to excrete excessive fumaric acid in urine. Fumarate hydratase activity in skin fibroblasts was 10% of the control value. This case underscores the clinical heterogeneity of neurometabolic disorders and the importance of organic acid analysis in the diagnosis of static encephalopathy.
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PMID:Variability of clinical presentation in fumarate hydratase deficiency. 143 28

Four cases of baclofen intoxication are reported, with a review of 33 cases from the literature. Analysis of these 37 cases suggests that there are two types of baclofen intoxication syndrome. Patients with acute intoxication present with four major clinical manifestations: encephalopathy (disturbance of consciousness and/or seizure), respiratory depression, muscular hypotonia, and generalized hyporeflexia. Patients with chronic intoxication present with hallucinosis, impaired memory, catatonia, or acute mania. The acute intoxication syndrome has a faster onset, shorter duration, more severe clinical manifestations, and higher incidence of seizures than the chronic intoxication syndrome. Baclofen intoxication, although it may cause grave encephalopathic manifestations and electroencephalographic findings, has a benign outcome if actively managed.
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PMID:Baclofen intoxication: report of four cases and review of the literature. 157 99

We report on 2 boys (maternal cousins), with severe congenital ataxia with generalized hypotonia, psychomotor retardation and recurrent bronchopulmonary infections. Later, they developed myoclonic encephalopathy and macular degeneration. Serial brain imaging investigations showed a cyst of the septum pellucidum, persistence of the cavum vergae, corpus callosum and cerebellar vermis hypoplasia without cortical atrophy. In the maternal pedigree, 5 males had recurrent bronchopneumonia associated with severe congenital hypotonia and died during the first years of life. Neurophysiological studies, including nerve conduction velocities, brainstem auditory evoked responses, somatosensory evoked potentials were normal. Electroretinogram showed normal wave morphology. Visual evoked potentials were mildly impaired. Extensive screening for metabolic disease gave normal results. Immunologic investigations showed normal T and B cell number, T cell function and immunoglobulin levels in both patients with a reduced level of IgG2 subclass in one.
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PMID:Congenital X-linked ataxia, progressive myoclonic encephalopathy, macular degeneration and recurrent infections. 160 24

Using capillary gas chromatography-mass spectrometry, the effects of birth asphyxia on the urinary organic acid profile of term babies was investigated. Random urine samples were collected on days 1 and 8 from 19 babies with fetal distress, 19 with moderate birth asphyxia and 12 with severe asphyxia causing encephalopathy. Controls were 27 well neonates. Statistically significant abnormalities were found only for the severely asphyxiated group: increased concentrations of lactic, pyruvic, 3-hydroxybutyric, 4-hydroxyphenyllactic and 4-hydroxy-3-methoxymandelic acids, and excretion of four abnormal metabolites, 2-hydroxybutyric, 2-oxoisocaproic, 2-hydroxyisovaleric and 2-oxo-3-methylvaleric acids. Six other babies had increased lactic acid excretion, associated in four with transient 'jitterness' or hypotonia. Organic acid studies may help to grade the severity of perinatal asphyxia in the outcome or intervention studies.
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PMID:Effects of birth asphyxia on urinary organic acid excretion. 161 Sep 44

Neurologic abnormalities occur frequently in children with symptomatic HIV-1 infection (class P2) and include cognitive, language and motor deficits, as well as acquired microcephaly. Neurologic abnormalities can be seen as early as the first 3 months of age and can precede signs of immune deficiency and systemic illness. Hypotonia, delayed or poor head control and decreased vocalizations are some of the early neurologic manifestations of HIV-1 infection. In the majority of cases CNS impairment appears to be related to HIV-1 brain infection although at this time the exact timing of CNS invasion by the virus and the pathogenesis of CNS dysfunction are unknown. Treatment with antiretroviral agents can at least temporarily improve neurologic functioning in some children with HIV-1-related encephalopathy.
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PMID:Neurologic complications of HIV infection in children. 181 29

We describe 14 patients, from 11 families, who have a progressive encephalopathy with early onset. The clinical signs of the disease are severe hypotonia, convulsions with hypsarrhythmia, profound mental retardation, hyperreflexia, transient or persistent edema, and optic atrophy. These findings and the characteristic dysmorphic features allow recognition of these patients, although no basic metabolic defect has been found. Microcephaly and atrophy of the brain develop, especially in the cerebellar and brain stem areas. An autosomal recessive mode of inheritance is likely.
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PMID:Progressive encephalopathy with edema, hypsarrhythmia, and optic atrophy (PEHO syndrome). 207 May 47

We report severe congenital encephalopathy and profound hypotonia associated with necrotizing myopathy, cardiomyopathy, and cataracts in 3 infants, including 2 sisters. Brain scans suggested agenesis of the corpus callosum. Neuropathological findings consisted of severe atrophy of the corpus callosum (not the usual agenesis with longitudinal callosal bundles), atrophy of the white matter, and absence of pyramidal tracts in the medulla. Multiple axonal swellings were present in the white matter and in Purkinje cells. Except for the corpus subthalamicum, gray matter structures were preserved. These findings are considered to be the expression of a primary disorder of axonal development leading to a reduction in interneuronal synaptic contacts. It is suggested that the anomaly may be due to an extension of the normal phenomenon of axonal elimination, related to a primary defect of the axonal cytoskeleton. The concept of a primary axonal disorder may also apply to other, mostly familial, conditions with progressive atrophy of the cerebral white matter and corpus callosum.
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PMID:A disorder of axonal development, necrotizing myopathy, cardiomyopathy, and cataracts: a new familial disease. 231 15


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