Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0026827 (hypotonia)
5,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Mutation of mitochondrial (mt) DNA at nucleotide (nt) 8993 has been reported to cause neurogenic weakness, ataxia, retinitis pigmentosa (NARP), or Leigh syndrome (LS). We report a family in whom the mutation was expressed clinically as LS and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (CMP) in a boy who presented with a history of developmental delay and hypotonia, and who had recurrent lactic acidosis. The mother's first pregnancy resulted in the birth of a stillborn female; an apparently healthy older brother had died suddenly (SIDS) at age 2 months. MtDNA analysis identified the presence of the T8993G point mutation, which was found to be heteroplasmic in the patient's skeletal muscle (90%) and fibroblasts (90%). The identical mutation was present in leukocytes (38%) isolated from the mother, but not from the father or maternal grandmother. Our findings expand the clinical phenotype of the nt 8993 mtDNA mutation to include hypertrophic cardiomyopathy and confirm its cause of LS.
...
PMID:Leigh syndrome and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy in an infant with a mitochondrial DNA point mutation (T8993G). 804 71

An electro-mechanical device has been used to measure muscle tone in 12 children with cerebellar ataxia and in 12 healthy children matched for age and sex. All the children also had their tone assessed clinically. The machine measurement showed that six (50%) of the 12 ataxic children had hypotonia, one was hypertonic, while five had normal tone. There was significant correlation between estimation of muscle tone by the machine and by clinical examination. The machine will serve as a valuable addition to other devices already being used to measure the other motor deficits encountered in children with cerebellar disease--such as devices that measure gait ataxia, truncal balance, intention tremor and incoordination of the limbs. It is re-emphasized that assessment or confirmation of clinical signs by reliable and reproducible instrumentation, offers a more objective basis for management and follow-up of patients, than clinical testing alone, and eliminates the often-encountered inter-tester discrepancies.
...
PMID:Measurement of muscle tone in children with cerebellar ataxia. 806 75

We report the clinical findings in 19 Finnish patients, including six pairs of siblings, with a new, early onset spinocerebellar ataxia. The slowly progressive clinical symptoms manifested between one and two years of age in previously healthy infants. The first manifestation of children at that age was clumsiness and loss of ability to walk. Ataxia, athetosis and muscle hypotonia with loss of deep tendon reflexes were discovered on clinical examination. By school age ophthalmoplegia and hearing loss were diagnosed, while sensory neuropathy developed by adolescence. In addition, an acute crisis with status epilepticus was a late manifestation. We found a marked decrease in sensory nerve condition velocities, a progressive loss of myelinated fibers in sural nerve specimen, and abnormal background activity in EEG with advancing age. The main finding in neuroradiological investigations was cerebellar atrophy. The occurrence of the disease in siblings and lack of manifestations in parents indicate recessive inheritance.
...
PMID:Infantile onset spinocerebellar ataxia with sensory neuropathy: a new inherited disease. 813 12

Three patients with biotinidase deficiency are described. Two presented at eight weeks of age with anticonvulsant-resistant fits, developmental delay and hypotonia. Treatment has been effective. The third developed ataxia and alopecia at 14 months and died suddenly at 19 months of age. In all three cases the diagnosis was not considered quickly enough. Biotinidase deficiency is a treatable cause of severe neurological problems.
...
PMID:Biotinidase deficiency: early neurological presentation. 805 Jun 27

Pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency is one of the most common causes of encephalopathy associated with lactic acidosis and is known to account for congenital lactic acidosis, recurrent ataxia, and infantile Leigh syndrome. Hitherto, however, peripheral neuropathy has not been regarded as a presenting symptom of pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency. Here, we report on a boy who presented peripheral neuropathy with severe limb hypotonia, absent deep-tendon reflexes, and reduced motor nerve conduction velocities at 8 months of age. Persistent hyperpyruvicemia with normal lactate/pyruvate molar ratios in plasma were highly suggestive of a pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency, and the determination of pyruvate dehydrogenase activity in circulating lymphocytes led to the diagnosis of pyruvate decarboxylase (PDH-E1) deficiency in the proband. Based on this observation, we suggest that pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency should be considered in the diagnosis of peripheral neuropathy in infancy, especially when associated with persistent hyperpyruvicemia, normal lactate/pyruvate molar ratios in plasma, and recurrent episodes of drowsiness and hypotonia of unknown origin.
...
PMID:Leigh syndrome: pyruvate dehydrogenase defect. A case with peripheral neuropathy. 815 Oct 84

Fourteen patients (10 boys, 4 girls) aged from 4 months to 14 years old were diagnosed with mitochondrial disease based on the clinical manifestations together with abnormal muscle mitochondrial morphologies. Their clinical diagnoses included Leigh syndrome, three; Menkes' syndrome, three; Kearns-Sayre syndrome, two; myoclonic epilepsy with ragged fibres, one; and infant-onset progressive myoclonic epilepsy, one; fatal infantile mitochondrial myopathy, one; fatty acid oxidation defect, two; and myopathy with cardiopathy, one. Organs involved other than muscles included central nervous system, ten; heart, six; eye, two; liver, two; and kidney, two. Clinical manifestations varied to include hypotonia, seizures, myoclonus, mental retardation, nystagmus, ataxia, ptosis, ophthalmoplegia, retinal degeneration, muscle atrophy, spasticity etc. Nine had an abnormal rise in lactate after glucose loading. Ragged-red fibres were found in four patients. Abnormal mitochondrial morphology included abnormal accumulation, abnormal cristae pattern of tubular, concentric, or parallel form, some contained osmiophilic inclusion bodies. One patient of Leigh syndrome had had brain necropsy which showed intramyelin splitting of myelinated axons.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestation of mitochondrial diseases in children. 821 54

1. The cerebellum has long been known to participate in movement control. One of the enduring theories of cerebellar function is that it "tunes" and coordinates sensorimotor traffic in other parts of the CNS. In particular, it has been implicated in the control of the sensitivity of muscle spindle stretch receptors through the fusimotor system. 2. The stretch sensitivity of spindle primary endings can be varied approximately over a 10-fold range by fusimotor efferent action. For many years it has been believed that cerebellar dysfunction is associated with reduced drive to the fusimotor system and that this in turn causes hypotonia by reducing the reflex excitation of alpha-motoneurons by spindle afferents. 3. The data on which this hypothesis is based were obtained in anesthetized or decerebrate animals. Little direct information is available on animals or humans performing voluntary movements and exhibiting ataxia or other cerebellar symptoms. 4. We tested the hypothesis by recording from nine muscle spindle afferents in behaving cats before and during reversible inactivation of cerebellar interpositus and dentate nuclei. In normal cats fusimotor action varies with motor task, greatly altering spindle stretch sensitivity. We investigated whether this same range of task-related sensitivity manifested itself during ataxia. 5. We found that the full range of spindle sensitivity was still present during ataxia. We therefore conclude that the cerebellar nuclei studied are not primarily responsible for fusimotor control, nor is the ataxia primarily caused by disordered proprioceptive sensitivity.
...
PMID:Cerebellar ataxia and muscle spindle sensitivity. 829 59

Thirty-four children with lactic acidosis and Leigh encephalopathy due to cytochrome C oxidase (COX) deficiency distributed in 28 families have recently been identified in northeastern Quebec, particularly in the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean (SLSJ) region. The segregation analysis was consistent with an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. The incidence was estimated at 1/2,063 live births between 1979 and 1990, and the carrier rate was estimated at 1/23 inhabitants in SLSJ. In SLSJ, the places of origin of the COX-deficient children and their parents did not show a clustered nonuniform distribution. The genealogical reconstruction of 54 obligate carriers identified 26 ancestors common to all of them. Twenty-two were 17th-century Europeans, suggesting that the COX-deficient gene was introduced in the French-Canadian population by early settlers. These results support the hypothesis of a founder effect for COX deficiency in northeastern Quebec. Clinical findings are reported for 15 of these COX-deficient patients, age 6 mo to 11 years. Moderate developmental delay, hypotonia, ataxia, strabismus, and mild facial dysmorphism were frequent. Eleven children died in episodes of fulminant metabolic acidosis. The patients had elevated blood and cerebrospinal fluid lactate levels, decreased blood bicarbonate levels, and normal blood pH. Leigh disease and microvesicular steatosis of the liver were present in all affected patients for whom postmortem examination was performed. This biochemically uniform group of patients showed a wide range of clinical severity.
...
PMID:Clinical, metabolic, and genetic aspects of cytochrome C oxidase deficiency in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean. 839 91

To evaluate the topographical neurological distribution, patterns of abnormal tone and related functional neuromotor impairment after grade 3 and grade 4 intraventricular/periventricular haemorrhage (IPVH), 33 children with previous grade 3 or 4 IPVH of mean gestational age 30.9 weeks (range 25-40 weeks) and mean birth weight 1743 g (range 866-3600 g) were examined neurologically at 4.7 years (range 0.75-10.8 years). Neurological signs were absent in 10/33 cases which were equally distributed between the grade 3 and grade 4 IPVH groups. The largest single topographical neurological distribution was hemiparesis in 8/23, followed jointly by diplegia (cerebral paraplegia) in 6/23 and triplegia in 6/23 cases and finally quadriplegia in 3/23 cases. Grade 4 IPVH tended to result in asymmetrical syndromes, accounting for 7/8 cases of hemiparesis and 5/6 cases of triplegia, whereas all 3/3 cases of quadriplegia followed grade 3 IPVH. The 6/23 cases of diplegia were shared between the grade 3 and grade 4 IPVH groups. Tone was normal in 7/8 of the hemiparetic subjects. Dystonia was the commonest tone abnormality, affecting 8/23 children with neurological disturbance, followed by ataxia/hypotonia in 4/23 and mixed dystonia/hypotonia in 3/23. Only 1/23 cases had signs of spasticity. Spasticity is rare following severe IPVH. Diplegic children had a better functional neuromotor grade than hemiparetic children, who in turn did better than triplegic children. Ataxia hypotonia resulted in better functional outcome than dystronia, which in turn was more favourable than mixed tone patterns. Cranial imaging by ultrasound (US) or computed tomographic (CT) scanning proved an unreliable prognostic indicator except in the case of hemiparesis, for which US scans correctly predicted the affected side in 5/7 cases. The neurological syndromes following severe IPVH differ from the classical encephalopathy of prematurity, and this should lead to a re-appraisal of the trends in the prevalence of cerebral palsy. Caution should be exercised in the interpretation of cranial imaging with regard to pessimistic prognoses in the presence of changes or undue optimism in their absence.
...
PMID:Heterogeneity of neurological syndromes in survivors of grade 3 and 4 periventricular haemorrhage. 840 2

We recently described an infantile onset spinocerebellar ataxia (IOSCA) in 19 Finnish patients. The classification of hereditary ataxias of unknown etiology is difficult because of the heterogeneity of these diseases. The clinical course of IOSCA is homogeneous. Ataxia, muscle hypotonia, athetosis, and loss of deep tendon reflexes in the legs appeared around the age of 1 year. Ophthalmoplegia and deafness were found by school-age, and sensory axonal neuropathy and optic atrophy by adolescence. An acute crisis with epilepsy was a late manifestation. The female patients had hypogonadism. In order to define the type of hypogonadism and to exclude other endocrine defects we measured serum concentrations of SHBG, DHEAS, prolactine, testosterone/estradiol, FSH and LH in postpubertal patients. ACTH, hCG and GnRH tests were performed to both pre- and postpubertal patients. Growth was analysed, and the brain and pituitary region were examined with magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). The estradiol values were low and FSH and LH values were high in the female patients, which indicates that the hypogonadism was of the hypergonadotropic type. The growth of the female patients was steady without a significant pubertal growth acceleration. The growth and pubertal development of the male patients were normal. The adrenal cortical and thyroidea functions were normal in all patients.
...
PMID:Primary hypogonadism in females with infantile onset spinocerebellar ataxia. 855 18


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>