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)

The article describes pregnancies and labors of five women with myotonic muscular dystrophy and their four severely involved infants, and reviews the pertinent literature. Three of the four neonatal cases died by 3 weeks of age of respiratory failure or aspiration; the fourth infant is now 4 months old and has respiratory and swallowing difficulties. The symptoms of myotonic dystrophy worsen during pregnancy. A high rate of fetal loss occurs due to spontaneous abortion, prematurity, and neonatal involvement with the disease. Prolonged labor has been described as a consistent complication, but the evidence does not justify this conclusion. Although many neonates with myotonic dystrophy are asymptomatic, severely affected newborns have a recognizable disorder unrelated to the severity of the maternal disease. The most common clinical manifestations in the neonate are arthrogryposis involving predominantly the lower extremilies, generalized hypotonia and weakness, and pharyngeal weakness. Less constant features include polyhydramnios, facial diplegia, diaphragmatic paralysis, respiratory failure, decreased motility of the gastrointestinal tract, congenital cataracts, and electrocardiographic abnormalities.
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PMID:Clinical effects of myotonic dystrophy on pregnancy and the neonate. 77 28

Myotonic dystrophy should be included in the differential diagnosis of neonatal respiratory failure accompanied by hypotonia. The effect of this disorder in an infant who died from it 49 hours after birth is described, and the importance of examining the mother of a possible case is emphasized.
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PMID:Neonatal respiratory failure due to myotonic dystrophy. 116 72

Metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) is a neurodegenerative disorder with autosomal recessive inheritance, in which cerebroside sulphate (sulphatide) accumulates in the central and peripheral nervous systems due to a deficiency of arylsulphatase A. This article presents a 2-year-old boy who had occasional shortness of breath, horizontal nystagmus and unstable gait for 3 months prior to the entry. He was admitted to our hospital due to shortness of breath, frequent apnea, generalized hypotonia and conscious disturbance. The lumbar puncture, brain CT scan, serum amino acid analysis, urine organic acid assay and nerve conduction velocity of lower extremities all showed negative findings. The electron microscopic finding of muscle elicited lipid deposition. The auditory brainstem response showed bilateral impairment. The routine EEG revealed diffuse slow waves. The brain MRI showed widespread low signals over the white matter of bilateral frontal and parietotemporal areas of the cerebral hemispheres, as well as the white matter of the bilateral cerebellar hemispheres, and the brain stem in the T1-weighted image corresponding the high signals in T2-weighted image. The blood leukocyte lysosomal enzyme activity test revealed arylsulphatase A deficiency. Rapid progressive neurological deterioration was noted since admission. Unfortunately, the patient expired due to respiratory failure in the final.
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PMID:Late infantile form metachromatic leukodystrophy: report of one case. 129 37

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.
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PMID:Cytochrome c oxidase deficiency and long-chain acyl coenzyme A dehydrogenase deficiency with Leigh's subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy. 131 9

Cf the 87 survivors of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation over a 10-year period, 67 participated in a follow-up study which included neurologic examination (n = 67), cognitive testing (n = 67), and audiologic assessment (n = 33). Matched control subjects for those older than 5 years were also evaluated. Outcome was defined as normal for cognitive scores greater than or equal to 85 and normal neurologic examination results, suspect for cognitive scores 70 through 84 or nonfocal neurologic findings such as hypertonia/hypotonia, and abnormal for cognitive scores less than 70 or abnormal neurologic examination results. Of the 10 school-aged children studied, 9 were normal and there were no differences in mean cognitive scores between subjects and controls (IQ subjects = 109 +/- 12 [SD], IQ controls = 107 +/- 13). For preschoolers aged 2.7 through 4.11 years, the mean cognitive score was 91 +/- 11 and 7 (70%) were normal. For infants 6 through 30 months, the mean cognitive score was 101 +/- 22 and 27 (57%) were normal. A total of 7 children (21% of those studied) had abnormal audiologic assessments. Three children demonstrated mild high-frequency and 4 moderately severe high-frequency sensorineural hearing loss which was bilateral in 3 and of undetermined laterality in 1. Abnormal neurodevelopmental outcome was significantly associated with cerebral infarction and chronic lung disease. Outcome was not related to demographic or perinatal variables, illness severity prior to extracorporeal membrane oxygenation, or underlying diagnosis. Neurodevelopmental outcome among survivors of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation in this series is consistent with previous reports of morbidity among neonates with severe respiratory failure treated conventionally.
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PMID:Ten years of extracorporeal membrane oxygenation: neurodevelopmental outcome. 170 57

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.
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PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy presenting with clinical Leigh's disease: report of a case. 184 64

A term newborn male with severe hypotonia and contractures was found to have dense bilateral cataracts. He died at age 3 days of respiratory failure. Amino acidopathies and disorders of peroxisome function were excluded, and results of serologic studies and placental histopathology, specifically seeking evidence of intrauterine infection, were normal. Autopsy showed changes in the skeletal muscles consistent with congenital muscular dystrophy and a small focal anomaly of the cerebral cortex. These findings either represent a new syndrome or raise further questions about broadening the spectrum of known congenital muscular dystrophy syndromes with associated eye and brain anomalies.
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PMID:Lethal congenital muscular dystrophy with cataracts and a minor brain anomaly: new entity or variant of Walker-Warburg syndrome? 186 58

High frequency oscillatory ventilation (HFOV) was attempted in ten infants with severe respiratory failure not responding to conventional ventilation (CV); it was, therefore, used as a rescue measure. HFOV was successful in improving the respiratory status of seven infants, all with hyaline membrane disease (HMD). Five of these infants survived, of the remaining two, one died of massive peri/intra-ventricular haemorrhage and the other of cholestasis associated with total parenteral nutrition. It was unsuccessful in three infants, one with meconium aspiration, the second died within two hours commencing HFOV and the third with severe depression and hypotonia.
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PMID:High frequency oscillatory ventilation in neonates with respiratory distress. 188 79

A boy who had experienced generalized muscle weakness and hypotonia since early infancy was diagnosed as having nemaline myopathy on the basis of muscle biopsy at 3 years of age. At 8 years of age, he developed severe respiratory failure and required respiratory support during sleep. Because of recurrent pneumothorax, he underwent thoracic surgery, at which time biopsy specimens were obtained from the respiratory and truncal muscles. The histologic findings of the respiratory muscles included marked variation in fiber size with a notable increase in fibrous tissue, type 2 fiber deficiency, elevated acid phosphatase activity, and a disorganized intermyofibrillar network. The findings from the truncal muscles were similar to those of the biceps brachii muscle: little variation in fiber size, numerous nemaline bodies in all fibers, and type 1 fiber predominance. The preferential damage to the respiratory muscles was probably responsible for the sudden onset of severe respiratory failure.
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PMID:Respiratory muscle involvement in nemaline myopathy. 196 32

We reported two siblings of Leber's congenital amaurosis associated with increased level of very long chain fatty acid (VLCFA) in blood. Case 1, a 3 1/2-year-old boy had congenital blindness, severe psychomotor retardation, hepatomegaly, profound hypotonia, loss of deep tendon reflexes, muscular atrophy and weakness, and non-convulsive status epilepticus characterized by a sudden respiratory failure, and also showed a flat electroretinogram, non-pigmentary retinal degeneration, severe atrophy of the brain stem and cerebellum, hepatic fibrosis, decreased motor and sensory conduction velocities and atlanto-axial instability. Sural nerve biopsy revealed severely decreased number of total myelinated fibers without remarkable demyelination or remyelination. Case 2, an elder sister of case 1, with pigmentary retinal degeneration, hepatomegaly and pericarditis had died at 3 months. Autopsy revealed hypomyelination and heterotopy of the cerebral white matter, hepatic fibrosis, renal microcysts and normal adrenal cytoarchitecture. In case 1, the level of VLCFA was increased twofold and sevenfold of controls in serum and in red cell membrane, respectively. Phytanic or trihydroxycholestanoic acid was not detected in the serum and bile. Normal shaped peroxisomes were definitely recognized in biopsied liver by means of electronmicroscopic histochemistry. From the above findings, these patients was thought to be a new variant of peroxisomal disorders relating to degradation of VLCFA, other than Zellweger syndrome, infantile Refsum disease and infantile adrenoleukodystrophy. It was concluded that peroxisomal functions should be studied in cases of Leber's congenital amaurosis.
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PMID:[Two siblings of Leber's congenital amaurosis with an increase in very long chain fatty acid in blood: relationship between peroxisomal disorders and Leber's congenital amaurosis]. 278 58


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