Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Thirty-three patients with glycogen abnormalities and myocardial disease were studied. 27 of them has type II glycogen disorders (Pompe's disease, with an intralysozymal deficit of acid maltase) and 6 with type III glycogen disorders Forbes disease, with a deficit in amylo-1-6-glucosidase). The picture of a type II abnormality in the infant is very standard: early onset, often neonatally; the association with asystole and muscular
hypotonia
and a characteristics clinical picture; invariable cardiomegaly and typical ECG findings (short PR interval, high voltage complexes). Death occurs before one year of age, treatment has limited effect, and attention is centred on the early discovery of heterozygotes and of diagnosis antenatally. The possibility of an obstructive type (4 out of 24) and a type with endocardial fibroelastosis (3 out of 24) must be emphasised. In the late onset myopathic form of type II disorder (3 cases), involvement of the myocardium is always found, but is of secondary importance in determining the clinical picture and natural history. The same can be said of type III disorders in which, despite the infrequency of asystole or significant cardiomegaly, a hypertrophic cardiomyopathy which may be obstructive can lead to sudden death in infancy (2 cases out of 6).
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1978 Apr
PMID:[The myocardiopathies of glycogenosis]. 14 22
First described by Crocq (1896) the clinical pattern of acrocyanosis is well known and its diagnosis is easy but acrocyanosis is a nosological frame with multiple aspects and a constitutional basis of microvasculotissular dysregulation. Acrocyanosis is made of capillarovenular
hypotonia
and stasis with a large and permanent opening of arteriovenous glomic anastomosis (J.F. Merlen, 1952).
J
Mal
Vasc 1983
PMID:[Paradoxical aspects of acrocyanosis and its pathogenesis]. 634 96
Fifty-eight consecutive patients were investigated for spontaneous chest pain without symptoms of effort angina, previous myocardial infarction or other signs of cardiac disease, to determine the incidence of oesophageal spasm. The character of the chest pain, its context and the results of resting ECGs were analysed. An ECG recorded during chest pain was available in 23 cases and exercise stress testing was performed in 43 cases. Coronary angiography was carried out in all patients. The coronary arteries were normal or showed little change in 44 patients. Further investigations were ordered: oesophageal manometry (42 cases), echocardiography 44 cases) and ergometrine provocation tests (44 cases). The patients were then divided into 4 groups: 23 patients (40 p. 100) with coronary artery disease; either atheroma (14 cases) or spasm (9 cases); 8 patients (13,5 p. 100) with non-coronary cardiac pathology (myocardial hypertrophy or mitral valve prolapse); 15 patients (26 p. 100) with oesophageal spasm alone; 12 patients (20,5 p. 100) with no obvious organic disease. Often simulating spontaneous angina, clinically and electrocardiographically, oesophageal spasm may sometimes be distinguished (6 out of 15 cases) by the finding of painful dysphagia on swallowing ice-cold liquid. The condition is confirmed by oesophageal manometry which shows abnormalities of oesophageal contraction. In addition, 13 out of 15 patients in our series had
hypotonia
of the gastro-oesophageal sphincter. Dyskinetic phenomena and this
hypotonia
should be taken into consideration in the treatment of this condition.
Arch
Mal
Coeur Vaiss 1984 Nov
PMID:[Esophageal spasm: a common cause of spontaneous precordial pain]. 643 62