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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A clinical, neurological and electroencephalographic investigation was undertaken in 29 previously cytogenetically verified hemizygous males with the fra(X) form of mental retardation (age range 3.5 to 59 years); in addition, 6 heterozygous females were examined. All male patients displayed the known physical aspects of this syndrome together with associated abnormalities of the palate, skeleton, connective tissue and endocrine system. The most prominent neurological features were different forms of oculomotor disturbances, minor motor and pyramidal signs,
incoordination
, muscle
hypotonia
, gait and speech abnormalities. There was no increased frequency either in seizures or in epileptic EEG discharges. Some patients had a slowing of background activity in EEG. About 50% of all patients displayed autistic-like behaviour, short attention span and/or hyperactivity. In accordance with the literature, the findings indicate that there are no neurological, electroencephalographic or neuroradiological features which occur specifically in this syndrome. The need to differentiate the findings from those resulting from encephalopathic mechanisms during the gestational and perinatal period is stressed. A distinct typing of seizures and EEG changes is needed in each patient, before definite conclusions about an association of seizures and fra(X) syndrome are drawn. In view of the lack of correlation between IQ and the clinical-neurological measures, a more practical approach to quantifying the mental impairment is proposed.
...
PMID:Clinico-neurological investigations in the fra(X) form of mental retardation. 270 58
Forty girls with Rett syndrome were included in a study of behaviour, with particular regard to the hands, before, during and after regression. Data was taken from examination of each girl, and in some cases from detailed developmental histories given by parents, and films taken before, during and after regression. The important findings are shown in two tables and described. Pre-regression abnormalities included
hypotonia
, jerky
incoordination
, an excess of patting or waving activity and involuntary movements which included alternate opening and closing of the fingers and twisting of wrists or arms. Hand use did not progress beyond the ten- to twelve-month stage. Language did not develop beyond the stage of one word utterances. When well-developed, the stereotyped hand movements were simple and clumsy, consisting of tapping, rubbing and clasping, with the hand moved as a unit. Before regression hands were usually separate, during regression usually together and thereafter with increasing age inclined to separate again. Voluntary hand use was observed when girls were relaxed and strongly motivated, particularly during musical interactions. The characteristic abnormalities of behaviour in pre-regression Rett syndrome, and hand behaviour in later childhood should allow earlier and more accurate diagnosis.
...
PMID:The hands, and the mind, pre- and post-regression, in Rett syndrome. 343 24
Two unrelated females, age 15 and 5 years respectively, were studied cytogenetically because of severe mental retardation, seizures and ataxia-like
incoordination
. A similar deletion of the proximal long arm of chromosome 15 was found in both patients. Re-evaluation showed no voracious appetite or obesity; normal size of hands and feet, minimal to no
hypotonia
by history or examination and facial features not typical of the Prader-Willi syndrome. However, the facial appearance of the girls was similar to each other with mild hypertelorism. The similarity of these girls and dissimilarity to Prader-Willi syndrome suggest a different syndrome, perhaps the result of deletion of a different segment of 15q. The findings of ataxic-like movements, frequent, unprovoked and prolonged bouts of laughter and facial appearance are more compatible with the diagnosis of Angelman syndrome.
...
PMID:Is Angelman syndrome an alternate result of del(15)(q11q13)? 368 21
We report on a 13-year-old girl with late infantile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL) in whom PET scanning with [18F]-2-fluoro-2-deoxy-D-glucose ([18F]/FDG) was performed. Early psychomotor development was normal. At the age of 2 years, neurological signs such as
hypotonia
and
incoordination
appeared, followed by visual failure and ataxia. At the age of 4, funduscopic examination showed macular degeneration and papillary atrophy. At the age of 9, myoclonic jerks were observed; subsequently, generalized seizures together with failing vision, mental deterioration, and visual and auditory hallucinations appeared. Brain MRI showed severe cortical and subcortical atrophy. A skin biopsy detected the presence of 'finger-print' inclusions in the cytoplasm of smooth muscle fibers. Late infantile NCL (Jansky-Bielschowsky disease) was diagnosed. FDG/PET revealed a severe reduction of metabolism in all the cortical and subcortical structures. A regional analysis of the distribution of the tracer revealed marked bilateral hypometabolism, particularly in calcarine, lateral, occipital, and temporal cortices and in the thalamus.
...
PMID:Positron emission tomography in neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (Jansky-Bielschowsky disease): a case report. 757 68
Urodynamic investigation was performed in 12 men, 3 to 8 months after cystoprostatectomy for bladder cancer and bladder substitution, using a detubularized ileal segment as described by Studer-Zingg. All patients underwent a standard urodynamic evaluation and extramural ambulatory urodynamic monitoring (e.a.m.). Ten patients were continent by day and 3 were incontinent during the night to a degree that necessitated use of a condom catheter. Three patients awakened every 3 hours to void and 6 had to void 1-2 times nightly. The residual urine was over 100 ml in 3 patients; it was low or absent in the remainder. Micturition was achieved by straining, with a maximum flow rate of 13 ml per second or greater, except in 2 patients. In 2 patients a urethral narrowing was found at the urethro-ileal anastomosis, and in 1 of them an
incoordination
between the neobladder and the pelvic floor required the use of a urethral catheter and a subsequent protocol of pelvic floor rehabilitation. The incidence of nocturnal incontinence was 56.6%. In 2 patients urethral pressure profile revealed
hypotonia
, with a maximum urethral closure pressure (MUCP) < 45 cm H2O. During e.a.m. study pressure values in the neobladder usually ranged below 15 cm H2O and exceeded 35 cm H2O in only 1 patient who complained of daytime and nocturnal incontinence. Neobladder compliance was normal in all cases. In order to achieve a complete rehabilitation after operation, the patient should be instructed to follow a careful training in order to prevent overdistention of the neobladder by voiding at regular intervals and to obtain continence.
...
PMID:Orthotopic ileal bladder substitute after radical cystectomy: urodynamic features. 792 Jun 82
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 studied 13 patients with lipoamide dehydrogenase (LAD) deficiency, originating from seven Ashkenazi Jewish families. Their disease was characterized by recurrent attacks of vomiting, abdominal pain, and encephalopathy accompanied by elevated liver transaminases, prolonged prothrombin time, and occasionally associated with lactic and ketoacidemia or with myoglobinuria. Two patients who presented neonatally suffered from residual neurological damage with attention deficit hyperactive disorder, mild ataxia, motor
incoordination
, muscle
hypotonia
, and weakness. Nine patients who presented in early childhood or later suffered from exertional fatigue between decompensation episodes but were otherwise asymptomatic. Two patients died because of intractable metabolic acidosis and multi-organ failure. In all patients LAD activity was reduced to 8 to 21% of the control in muscle or lymphocytes. In four patients LAD protein in muscle was reduced to 20 to 60% of the control. Direct sequencing of the cDNA of the LAD gene showed that 12 of the 14 mutated alleles carried the G229C mutation and two carried an insertion mutation 105insA (Y35X). The patients who presented neonatally and had more severe sequelae were compound heterozygotes for the two mutations; patients who presented in early childhood or later were homozygous for the G229C mutation. Using an allele-specific oligonucleotide hybridization technique, nine heterozygotes for the G229C mutation were identified among 845 anonymous individuals of Ashkenazi Jewish origin disclosing a carrier rate of 1:94. Because of the significant morbidity associated with the disease, screening for the G229C mutation among Ashkenazi Jewish couples should be considered.
...
PMID:Molecular basis of lipoamide dehydrogenase deficiency in Ashkenazi Jews. 993 85
To develop an experimental model of thromboembolic stroke without intracranial surgery, an autologous blood clot was delivered to the middle cerebral artery (MCA) via the internal carotid artery in cynomolgus monkeys. Male cynomolgus monkeys, in which a chronic catheter had been earlier implanted in the left internal carotid artery, were used. The clot was flushed into the internal carotid artery under sevofluorane anesthesia. A neurologic deficit score was assigned after MCA embolization. After 24 h, cerebral infarct size and location were determined by the TTC staining method. Cerebral blood flow (CBF) was measured prior to and after MCA embolization, using positron emission tomography (PET). After embolization, long-lasting and profound extensor
hypotonia
of the contralateral upper and lower limbs, and mild to severe
incoordination
were observed. Contralateral hemiplegia was observed over the following 24 h. In gross morphologic observation of the brain, the lesions involved mostly the caudate nucleus, putamen, globus pallidus and insular cortex. CBF was maximally reduced in the left MCA territory, but not in the right MCA territory. This model is relevant to thromboembolic stroke in human in neurologic dysfunction and histopathologic brain damage.
...
PMID:Experimental thromboembolic stroke in cynomolgus monkey. 1116 65
The purpose of these studies was to characterize the effects of agonists of the CB(1) cannabinoid receptor on cerebellar function in mice. We used two measures specific for cerebellar function: gait analysis and the bar cross test. CB(1) receptor agonists CP55940, Win 55212-2, Delta(9)-tetrahydrocannabinol, arachidonylethanolamide (AEA), and two AEA analogs with high affinity for the CB(1) receptor (arachidonyl-2-chloroethylamide and arachidonylcyclopropylamide) all produced increases in gait width, a measure of truncal ataxia. All of the CB(1) agonists tested significantly increased the number of slips on the bar cross test, which is consistent with motor
incoordination
. Pretreatment with the CB(1) receptor antagonist SR141716 attenuated both the change in gait width and number of slips induced by CP55940 and AEA. Neither cannabidiol nor Win 55212-3 affected these measures, further evidence that this effect is mediated by the CB(1) receptor. Pretreatment with the dopamine receptor agonists apomorphine or bromocriptine did not attenuate the diminished performance on the bar cross or the gait abnormality induced by CP55940. These data indicate that the assays used in this study are specific for cerebellar-mediated behavioral deficits, and that these deficits are not mediated by the basal ganglia or cannabinoid-induced alterations in nigrostriatal dopaminergic transmission. Other well known effects of cannabinoids in mice, such as hyperreflexia exemplified by jumping or "popcorn" behavior and postural
hypotonia
are discussed in relationship to cerebellar dysfunction and a working model of the effects of CB(1) receptor activation on cerebellar circuitry is presented.
...
PMID:Cannabinoid CB(1) receptor agonists produce cerebellar dysfunction in mice. 1130 52
We report a patient with a syndrome of MR/MCA who was the product of a highly consanguineous family. The patient was the result of a union between a man and his daughter. The daughter was in turn the product of a mating between this same man and his mother. Major findings include: severe psychomotor and mental retardation, microcephaly with cerebral dysgenesis and cerebellar hypoplasia, early
hypotonia
and late hypertonia, short stature, early swallowing
incoordination
with aspiration pneumonias, distinctive face with striking hypertelorism, hypospadias, cryptorchidism, overlapping fingers, and rocker-bottom feet. Chromosome and metabolic studies were normal. The severity and uniqueness of his phenotype suggests a new, probably private, autosomal recessive disorder due to homozygosity for one or more loci.
...
PMID:Provisionally unique autosomal recessive syndrome due to significant consanguinity. 1150 58
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