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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Cytochrome c
oxydase deficiency, i.e. a mitochondrial myopathy was diagnosed in a patient suffering from generalized muscle
hypotonia
. The fatal case presented underlines the importance that within the clinical pattern of myopathies the distinct entities should be differentiated.
...
PMID:[Cytochrome C oxidase deficiency]. 216 3
A 16 year old girl showed delayed psychomotor development. In infancy, exercise intolerance, cerebellar signs, deteriorated with increasing intercurrent infections, and disturbances of breathing and cardiac rhythm became manifest. From the age of 7 years there was chronic progressive psychomotor deterioration, with
hypotonia
, a bilateral pyramidal and cerebellar syndrome, and mild epilepsy. CSF pyruvate and lactate levels were elevated, and lactate content was elevated in the urine. There was an abnormally high rise of lactate levels on moderate exercise and an abnormal response to pyruvate loading. Quadriceps muscle biopsies obtained at age 10 and 16 years showed ragged-red fibres, and a decreased cytochrome c oxidase activity and cytochrome aa3 content.
Cytochrome c
oxidase activity in fibroblasts was normal. Clinical signs and symptoms in association with a disturbance of mitochondrial energy metabolism led us to diagnosis of probable Leigh syndrome.
...
PMID:A mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with a partial cytochrome c oxidase deficiency of muscle. 284 25
A 2-month-old boy had progressive generalized weakness,
hypotonia
, and respiratory insufficiency requiring assisted ventilation. At age 3 1/2 months, he started having seizures and recurrent pulmonary infections; he died at age 7 months. Serum lactate was chronically elevated, but there was no aminoaciduria. Histochemical and ultrastructural studies of muscle biopsies at ages 2 and 3 months showed excessive mitochondria, lipid, and glycogen; a third biopsy at 6 months showed marked increase in perimysial fibrous and fat tissue.
Cytochrome c
oxidase activity was 7% of normal in the first biopsy and undetectable in the others. Cytochrome spectra of mitochondria isolated from postmortem muscle showed complete lack of cytochrome aa3. Antibodies were obtained against cytochrome c oxidase purified from normal human heart. Immunotitration and enzyme-linked immunosorbent assay (ELISA) showed decreased immunologically reactive enzyme protein in the patient's muscle, but SDS-PAGE electrophoresis of immunoprecipitates of muscle mitochondrial extracts showed the presence of all cytochrome c oxidase subunits. These data suggest that decreased synthesis of one or more subunits may result in markedly decreased concentration of electrophoretically normal complex IV in skeletal muscle.
...
PMID:Fatal infantile cytochrome c oxidase deficiency: decrease of immunologically detectable enzyme in muscle. 298 57
A 3-day-old girl had a syndrome of lethargy and lactic acidosis. Pregnancy and delivery had been normal; there was no consanguinity or family history of neuromuscular disease. At age 4 1/2 months, she had generalized weakness,
hypotonia
, areflexia, and macroglossia. She developed cyanosis and respiratory failure, and marked cardiomegaly was noted. She died at age 8 1/2 months of cardiac arrest. Results from a muscle biopsy specimen obtained at age 4 1/2 months showed ragged-red fibers and increased glycogen and lipid droplets. With the cytochrome c oxidase reaction, only 5% of the fibers stained positively in the biopsy specimen.
Cytochrome c
oxidase activity was 7.3% of normal in muscle mitochondria and 12.2% of normal in heart mitochondria. Reduced-minus-oxidized cytochrome spectra showed lack of the cytochrome aa3 peak. Immunotitration using antibodies against purified human heart cytochrome c oxidase showed normal amount of cross-reacting material in both heart and muscle. The genetic error could have involved a cytochrome c oxidase isozyme common to heart and muscle.
...
PMID:Myopathy and fatal cardiopathy due to cytochrome c oxidase deficiency. 302 95
A 2-week-old boy had profound generalized weakness,
hypotonia
, hyporeflexia, macroglossia, and severe lactic acidosis. The infant improved spontaneously: he held his head at 4 1/2 months, rolled over at 7 months, and walked by 16 months. At 33 months of age, he had mild proximal weakness. Macroglossia disappeared by age 4 months. Blood lactic acid declined steadily and was normal by 14 months of age. Histochemical and ultrastructural studies of muscle biopsy specimens obtained at 1 and 7 months of age showed excessive mitochondria, lipid, and glycogen; a third biopsy at age 36 months showed only atrophy of scattered fibers.
Cytochrome c
oxidase stain was positive in fewer than 5% of fibers in the first biopsy, in approximately 60% of fibers in the second biopsy, and in all fibers in the third biopsy. Biochemical analysis showed an isolated defect of cytochrome c oxidase activity, which was only 8% of the lowest control level in the first biopsy; the activity increased to 47% in the second biopsy and was higher than normal in the third. In contrast to that in the fatal infantile form of cytochrome c oxidase deficiency, the enzyme defect in this condition is reversible. The biochemical basis for this difference remains to be explained.
...
PMID:Benign infantile mitochondrial myopathy due to reversible cytochrome c oxidase deficiency. 631 69
A case of cytochrome c oxidase deficiency primarily affecting skeletal muscle is described. The child was admitted at 4 weeks due to failure to thrive and examination at that time revealed weakness and
hypotonia
. His condition deteriorated until at 11 weeks respiratory arrest necessitated artificial ventilation and death occurred at 14 weeks. Biochemical investigation showed lactic acidaemia and generalised aminoaciduria. Histochemical examination of muscle obtained at biopsy showed strong reactions for some oxidative enzymes, but by contrast cytochrome c oxidase could not be detected.
Cytochrome c
oxidase activity was less than 5% of control values in an extract of fresh muscle. The reduced-minus oxidised absorption spectra of muscle mitochondrial fractions prepared from post-mortem tissue showed an absence of cytochrome aa3 and a partial deficiency of cytochrome b. Ultra-structural examination showed abnormal mitochondria with loss of cristae and an abnormal granular matrix. The family history suggests autosomal recessive inheritance.
...
PMID:Fatal infantile mitochondrial myopathy due to cytochrome c oxidase deficiency. 631 67
Fatal infantile mitochondrial myopathy with lactic acidosis, morphologically abnormal mitochondria, deficient cytochromes aa3 and b, and a Fanconi-like aminoaciduria has been described. We report two infants, second cousins, with a similar fatal mitochondrial disorder, the cytochrome deficiency limited to skeletal muscle in one child and to liver in the other. The first child at 3 months of age had weight loss,
hypotonia
, external ophthalmoplegia, and a severe lactic acidosis with a high lactate/pyruvate ratio. Electron microscopy of muscle showed marked proliferation of enlarged mitochondria, many containing concentric rings of cristae. In skeletal muscle mitochondria, cytochromes aa3 and b were not detectable but cytochrome cc was found to be normal by spectroscopy.
Cytochrome c
oxidase activity was less than 1% of normal. Mitochondria from kidney, liver, heart, lung, and brain examined postmortem had normal cytochromes and preserved cytochrome c oxidase activity. The second cousin at 5 months of age had weight loss and hepatomegaly but no systemic lactic acidosis. Liver biopsy showed hepatocytes packed with enlarged mitochondria. The liver mitochondria showed deficient cytochromes aa3 and b postmortem, and cytochrome c oxidase activity was less than 10% of normal. Kidney mitochondria had normal cytochromes. Muscles was not studied. The mitochondrial abnormality in the two cousins presumably is related. Unexplained are the mode of genetic transmission or environmental exposure and the apparent involvement of a single different organ in each child.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial cytochrome deficiency presenting as a myopathy with hypotonia, external ophthalmoplegia, and lactic acidosis in an infant and as fatal hepatopathy in a second cousin. 631 75
Three cases of Leigh disease are described. In all three, symptoms began in the first months of life, with muscle
hypotonia
, lactic acidosis, and psychomotor delay. The diagnosis was made on the basis of the clinical characteristics, biochemical abnormalities, and typical brain magnetic resonance imaging with symmetric lesions suggesting bilateral necrosis at the level of the basal ganglia and of the midbrain.
Cytochrome c
oxidase (complex IV of the mitochondrial respiratory chain) deficiency was demonstrated in muscle tissue in all patients and confirmed in skin fibroblasts in patient 3. A genetic heterogeneity was present in these patients since only one had a SURF-1 gene mutation. The clinical, biochemical, and neuroradiologic aspects are discussed. Finally, the finding of facial dysmorphisms in the cytochrome c oxidase deficiency observed in one of the described cases is of extreme interest; to our knowledge, this association has never been reported in the literature.
...
PMID:Leigh disease: clinical, neuroradiologic, and biochemical study of three new cases with cytochrome c oxidase deficiency. 1151 Sep 37
Cytochrome c
oxidase 20 (COX20)/FAM36A encodes a conserved protein that is important for the assembly of COX, complex IV of the mitochondrial respiratory chain. A homozygous mutation (p.Thr52Pro) in COX20 gene has been previously described to cause muscle
hypotonia
and ataxia. In this study, we describe two patients from a non-consanguineous family exhibiting autosomal recessive sensory-dominant axonal neuropathy and static encephalopathy. The whole-exome sequencing analysis revealed that both patients harbored compound heterozygous mutations (p.Lys14Arg and p.Trp74Cys) of COX20 gene. The pathogenicity of the variants was further supported by morphological alternations of mitochondria observed in sural nerve and decreased COX20 protein level of peripheral blood leucocytes derived from the patients. In conclusion, COX20 might be considered as a candidate gene for the complex inherited disease. This observation broadens the clinical and genetic spectrum of COX20-related disease. However, due to the limitation of a single-family study, additional cases and studies are definitely needed to further confirm the association.
...
PMID:Observation of novel COX20 mutations related to autosomal recessive axonal neuropathy and static encephalopathy. 3107 2
Autosomal recessive COX4I1 deficiency has been previously reported in a single individual with a homozygous pathogenic variant in COX4I1, who presented with short stature, poor weight gain, dysmorphic features, and features of Fanconi anemia. COX4I1 encodes subunit 4, isoform 1 of cytochrome c oxidase.
Cytochrome c
oxidase is a respiratory chain enzyme that plays an important role in mitochondrial electron transport and reduces molecular oxygen to water leading to the formation of ATP. Defective production of cytochrome c oxidase leads to a variable phenotypic spectrum ranging from isolated myopathy to Leigh syndrome. Here, we describe two siblings, born to consanguineous parents, who presented with encephalopathy, developmental regression,
hypotonia
, pathognomonic brain imaging findings resembling Leigh-syndrome, and a novel homozygous variant on COX4I1, expanding the known clinical phenotype associated with pathogenic variants in COX4I1.
...
PMID:Biallelic variants in COX4I1 associated with a novel phenotype resembling Leigh syndrome with developmental regression, intellectual disability, and seizures. 3129 Jun 19
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