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)

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

Muscle hypotonia and failure to thrive are key symptoms of Prader-Willi syndrome (PWS) allowing diagnosis during infancy already. Improved general care as well as Coenzyme Q(10) (CoQ(10)) and growth hormone (GH) are administered to improve PWS children's outcome. This study aims to investigate psychomotor development of young PWS children in relation to body weight and body composition at baseline as well as to the effects of GH or CoQ(10) therapy. Twenty-six young children (age 1.0 +/- 0.1 years, mean +/- SEM) with PWS genetically proven at age 0.1 +/- 0.1 years (17 deletions, 8 maternal disomy) were divided into three groups: Group 1 on GH therapy (started in 1994-1996, 6 mg/kg/week) tolerating low body weight (<50th centile), group 2 on GH (1997-2000) and group 3 on CoQ(10) (2001-2002, 2.5 mg/kg/day orally), both combined with active early weight management to achieve weight >50th centile. Anthropometry, body composition and Griffith's developmental scores (DQs) were assessed before therapy and after 12 months. DQs were not related to infants' weight, lean mass or genetic background. DQs improved significantly with chronological age and were best in the most recently diagnosed group. Improved psychomotor development, mainly due to progress in locomotor development, did not differ between GH and CoQ(10) treated groups. In conclusion, while only GH has significant effects on growth and body composition, GH and CoQ(10) therapy act equally on psychomotor development of PWS infants. However, improving psychomotor development may merely reflect an age-related phenomenon additionally depending on early diagnosis and introduction of appropriate care.
...
PMID:Developmental profiles in young children with Prader-Labhart-Willi syndrome: effects of weight and therapy with growth hormone or coenzyme Q10. 1825 95

SUCLA2 defects have been associated with mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) depletion and the triad of hypotonia, dystonia/Leigh-like syndrome, and deafness. A 9-year-old Brazilian boy of consanguineous parents presented with psychomotor delay, deafness, myopathy, ataxia, and chorea. Despite the prominent movement disorder, brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) was normal while 1H-magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) showed lactate peaks in the cerebral cortex and lateral ventricles. Decreased biochemical activities of mitochondrial respiratory chain enzymes containing mtDNA-encoded subunits and mtDNA depletion were observed in muscle and fibroblasts. A novel homozygous mutation in SUCLA2, the first one in the ligase coenzyme A (CoA) domain of the protein, was identified. Escalating doses of CoQ10 up to 2000 mg daily were associated with improvement of muscle weakness and stabilization of the disease course. The findings indicate the importance of screening for mitochondrial dysfunction in patients with complex movement disorders without brain MRI lesions and further investigation for potential secondary CoQ10 deficiency in patients with SUCLA2 mutations.
...
PMID:A Novel SUCLA2 Mutation Presenting as a Complex Childhood Movement Disorder. 2765 Oct 38

Leigh syndrome (LS) is most frequently characterized by the presence of focal, bilateral, and symmetric brain lesions Leukoencephalopathy with brainstem and spinal cord involvement and lactate elevation (LBSL) is a rare condition, characterized by progressive pyramidal, cerebellar, and dorsal column dysfunction. We describe a case with infantile-onset neurodegeneration, psychomotor retardation, irritability, hypotonia, and nystagmus. Brain MRI demonstrated signal abnormalities in the deep cerebral white matter, corticospinal and dorsal column tracts, and pyramids, which resemble the MRI pattern of a severe form of LBSL, and involvement of basal ganglia and thalamus that resemble the radiological features of LS. We identified biallelic loss-of-function mutations, one novel (c.756delC, p.Thr253Glnfs*44) and another reported (c.1156C > T, p.Arg386Cys), in NDUFV1 (NADH:Ubiquinone Oxidoreductase Core Subunit V1) by exome sequencing. Biochemical and functional analyses revealed lactic acidosis, complex I (CI) assembly and enzyme deficiency, and a loss of NDUFV1 protein. Complementation assays restored the NDUFV1 protein, CI assembly, and CI enzyme levels. The clinical and radiological features of this case are compatible with the phenotype of LS and LBSL associated with NDUFV1 mutations.
...
PMID:Leigh Syndrome Due to NDUFV1 Mutations Initially Presenting as LBSL. 3318 19