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)

Two cases of cervical myelopathy, which exhibited peculiar vasomotor symptoms ("acro-erythro-cyanosis") on distal regions of the four limbs are reported. Continuous reddening, swelling and skin temperature increase were observed on both hands and feet in case 1, a-44-year-old man, and on both hands in case 2, a-47-year-old man. Cold stimulation resulted in cyanosis and decrease of skin temperature on the affected regions paroxysmally. The condition of skin at room temperature may be caused by arteriectasia of arterioles due to hypotonia of vasomotor fibers, and this was similar to erythromelalgia. On the other hand, cold stimulation may have led to this condition, where the contraction of skin arterioles due to hypertonia of vasomotor fibers was added to the dilation of venule, and this was similar to acrocyanosis. Consequently, we provisionally named the vasomotor symptoms in the present cases as "acro-erythro-cyanosis". The other neurological signs were as follows. Case 1: mild weakness in right upper and lower limbs and left small hand muscles, mild superficial and deep sensory disturbance on bilateral palms and soles and decrease of vibration on bilateral lumbar regions and thereunder. Case 2: mild weakness of right small hand muscles, superficial sensory disturbance on distal regions of bilateral upper and lower limbs and a decrease of joint position sense on right hand. Myelography and metrizamide CT myelography revealed a high-degree deformity of the spinal cord due to the herniated disks between C4 and C5 in case 1 and between C3 and C4 in case 2.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:["Acro-erythro-cyanosis"--peculiar vasomotor symptoms due to cervical hernial myelopathy]. 235 Sep 26

Trinucleotide repeat expansion in the Machado-Joseph disease (MJD) gene has been found in 26 patients from 20 unrelated Japanese families. Expanded alleles had 68 to 84 repeats, whereas normal alleles had 14 to 37 repeats. The age of onset was inversely correlated with the repeat length. To evaluate in detail the relationship between the repeat length and clinical features, we subdivided the 26 patients into three groups on the basis of the repeat length (group 1, 78 repeats or more; group 2, 74 to 77 repeats; group 3, 73 repeats or less). Group 1 and group 2 had common features of spasticity, hyperreflexia, Babinski sign, bulging eyes, facial myokymia and extrapyramidal signs as well as cerebellar ataxia and ophthalmoplegia. It should be noted that group 1 showed more prominent pyramidal and extrapyramidal signs than group 2. In contrast, group 3 showed hypotonia, hyporeflexia and sensory disturbance in addition to cerebellar ataxia and ophthalmoplegia. These findings suggest that the repeat length plays an important role in phenotypic variation. DNA analysis for the MJD mutation was clearly useful for making an accurate diagnosis in patients without bulging eyes, facial myokymia, dystonia or marked spasticity.
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PMID:The relationship between trinucleotide repeat length and phenotypic variation in Machado-Joseph disease. 883 72