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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (
hypotonia
)
5,860
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Measurement of pyruvate and lactate produced from
glucose
by confluent skin fibroblast cultures from 95 patients with lactic acidemia revealed 10 in whom the lactate/pyruvate ratio (L/P) was increased (L/P = 57 to 232) compared with that observed in control cell lines (L/P = 18 to 35). Mitochondria prepared from these cells revealed two types of respiratory chain defect. In four patients the deficient activity was present in NADH-coenzyme Q reductase (14% to 21% of controls), and in six the deficiency was in cytochrome c oxidase (21% to 28% of controls). The four patients with NADH-coQ reductase deficiency presented early with lactic acidosis, respiratory failure, anorexia, and
hypotonia
; all four died within 7 months. The group with cytochrome oxidase deficiency had a somewhat later (18 months to 2 years of age) presentation with milder lactic acidemia, but also with
hypotonia
and anorexia. They had delayed development, beginning to walk and talk at 18 to 24 months, and then slowly regressed. Although an investigation of central nervous system disorders in this latter group has not been possible, the clinical progression fits into the broad category of Leigh disease. We conclude that in these two groups respiratory chain defects can be detected and localized by the use of skin fibroblast cultures.
...
PMID:Clinical presentation of mitochondrial respiratory chain defects in NADH-coenzyme Q reductase and cytochrome oxidase: clues to pathogenesis of Leigh disease. 302 93
18F fluorodeoxyglucose (18FDG) and positron tomography (PT) were used in 20 full term babies with seizures or
hypotonia
to describe regional cerebral
glucose
metabolism. Among babies with seizures, birth asphyxia was the most common cause. PT was performed at age 6-17 days. One hour before PT, 18FDG (50-100 microCi/kg) was injected intravenously. Ten or more PT sections were obtained in each infant. The areas of the brain that were metabolically the most active were the cortex and the thalami. Six cortical areas and a white matter reference area were selected for analysis of relative rates of
glucose
metabolism as indicated by relative rates of fluorine-18 activity. Cortical fluorine-18 activity was highest in the pericentral (sensorimotor) regions and lowest in the frontal regions. The overall cortex/white matter ratio for fluorine-18 activity averaged 1.78 +/- 0.44 (SD). Four patterns of regional cerebral
glucose
metabolism were distinguished: 1) bilateral symmetry, 2) loss of metabolic definition, 3) hemispheral asymmetry, 4) focal hyper- or hypometabolism. Patterns 1) and 2) correlated with a history of birth asphyxia, a diagnosis of hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy and the absence of focal echoes on cranial ultrasound. Hypodense areas on CT could be associated with either high or low fluorine-18 relative activity on PT. The prognostic significance of the presently reported patterns of cerebral
glucose
metabolism remains to be determined.
...
PMID:Patterns of cerebral glucose metabolism using 18FDG and positron tomography in the neurologic investigation of the full term newborn infant. 326 90
Septo-optic dysplasia (De Morsier's syndrome) is a common cause of congenital optic nerve hypoplasia. Associated abnormalities such as hypothalamic/pituitary dysfunction,
hypotonia
or spasticity, may result in affected children presenting for surgical procedures under general anaesthesia. A 3.5-year-old boy with the undiagnosed condition had his Achilles tendons elongated under an uncomplicated general anaesthetic. The postoperative period was complicated by coma and a major convulsive seizure which responded to
glucose
and steroids. The importance of awareness of this condition in short children with poor visual acuity who require general anaesthesia is stressed, and the presenting features of seven other cases are demonstrated.
...
PMID:Anaesthesia and septo-optic dysplasia. Implications of missed diagnosis in the peri-operative period. 343 62
An environmental factor acting on the fetus is thought to cause a neonatal syndrome characterized by marked muscular
hypotonia
, lack of respiratory drive and feeding difficulties, in some infants born to mothers with myotonic dystrophy. Mortality is high, especially amongst those babies born prematurely, but muscle strength and tone improve rapidly in survivors. Nevertheless, most survivors have physical deformities and mental retardation and are thought to develop myotonic dystrophy later. We propose that alterations in maternal insulin secretion (usual in myotonic dystrophy subjects) alter fetal blood
glucose
and amino acid levels and retard growth and maturation of fetal skeletal muscle. This leads to severe muscular
hypotonia
in affected infants. Also, we suggest that infants who die during the perinatal period may not have inherited the defective autosomal dominant gene that causes myotonic dystrophy.
...
PMID:Hyperinsulinemia in myotonic dystrophy: identity of the maternal factor causing the neonatal myotonic dystrophy syndrome. 388 62
An autopsy case of 23-years-old man with Prader-Labhart-Willi syndrome (P-L-W syndrome), who had died by acute renal failure due to burn injury, was reported. P-L-W syndrome was constituted by
hypotonia
, hypogonadism, hypomentia, obesity and other minor anomalies, however, CNS anomaly had not been reported. The patient sat at 3 years of age, walked at 4 years old, began to utter single words at 3-4 years, and he began to obese at 4 years of age. He fulfilled the condition of P-L-W syndrome mentioned above. On his age 15, laboratory findings on admission revealed remarkable diabetic pattern by oral
glucose
tolerance test and intelligence quotient was 28, and the other laboratory findings were within normal limit. During his clinical history, complications of diabetes mellitus, such as diabetic retinopathy and neuropathy, were aggrevated, and upstanding and gait were impossible at 20 years of age. On his age 23, he suffered from burn injury at left lower extremity and he fell in acute renal insufficiency. Five autopsy cases of P-L-W syndrome have been reported so far, however, CNS anomaly has not been observed. Following anomalies in our case was recognized, such as shortness of the frontal lobe, partial micropolygyria of the dentate nucleus, heterotopia of the inferior olivary nucleus, ectopia of Purkinje cell in the molecular layer, heterotopia of middle sized neuron in the deep white matter of the cerebellum and large number of residual nerve cells in the cerebral subcortical white matter.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of Prader-Labhart-Willi syndrome]. 407 78
A newborn is presented with hyperexcitability, drowsiness and later-on with frequent vomiting and muscular
hypotonia
. Examination of the urine by gas chromatography-mass spectrometry lead to the diagnosis of propionic acidemia which was confirmed enzymatically in fibroblasts. Two unusual features were encountered in this case: There were severe bouts of hyperglycemia with blood
glucose
values up to 396 and 747 mg/100 ml; furthermore x-ray studies and autopsy revealed a hypertrophic pyloric stenosis.
...
PMID:[Propionic acidemia associated with hypertrophic pyloric stenosis and bouts of severe hyperglycemia (author's transl)]. 611 Jan 80
Forty patients with the Prader-Willi syndrome have been examined. The typical features begin in gestational life with poor fetal vigor and difficulties with birth and post-partum feeding. The classical features of
hypotonia
, small hands and feet, cryptorchidism can be identified at this time. The delayed milestones, mental retardation and obesity become more prominent later. The average height of the patients in this series who were admitted to the Clinical Study Center was 149 cm and their weight was 114 kg. The weight and height curves show that Prader-Willi individuals are consistently shorter and heavier than normal children. Tests of endocrine function showed normal
glucose
tolerance. Insulin secretion was increased in relation to obesity. The rise in growth hormone (hGH) after injecting insulin to induce hypoglycemia and after the infusion of arginine was comparable to other obese individuals but was low in comparison to normal weight subjects. There was no rise in growth hormone with L-dopa administration, but there was a rise in hGH with the administration of 2-deoxy-D-glucose. The hypoglycemia produced by insulin was greater in the Prader-Willi patient than in obese controls. The rise in TRH (thyrotropin-releasing hormone) following the injection of TSH (thyrotropin stimulating hormone) was greater in the Prader-Willi patients than in the obese controls. Hypogonadism was routine in this series, and the response to LRH (luteinizing releasing hormone) was absent in all tested subjects. Treatment with clomiphene for 30 to 90 days significantly increased the response to LRH in three adult individuals who had not been treated with gonadal steroids previously and who were hypogonadal. Rectal temperature declined in three of the five Prader-Willi patients during exposure to an ambient temperature of 4 degrees C, but none of the three obese controls showed a decline. Food intake averaged 5167 kcal/d when six patients were given trays containing more food than they could eat. Food intake was not reduced when tryptophan was added to the diet. Salivary secretion was reduced in the Prader-Willi patients. A number of pulmonary function tests were significantly reduced in the study patients compared to obese or normal weight controls. The anatomic findings in four autopsied patients with the Prader-Willi syndrome showed no significant differences from those of obese subjects without this syndrome. The chromosomal pattern showed a deletion or translocation at chromosome 15 in 3 of 12 patients in whom this test was performed. These findings in 40 patients with the Prader-Willi syndrome have been compared with the information contained in 159 reports published in the medical literature.
...
PMID:The Prader-Willi syndrome: a study of 40 patients and a review of the literature. 633 43
An analysis is presented of 35 cases of chorea as a symptom of polycythaemia. This analysis reveals: (a) whereas polycythaemia occurs predominantly in males (3:2), polycythaemic chorea (PC) occurs predominantly in females (5:2), at a real ratio of female:male = 4:1, the prevalence being 1-2.5% of polycythaemic patients; (b) PC manifests predominantly after the age of 50 (8 cases before, 27 after 50 years), making polycythaemia the first disorder to be considered in cases of so-called 'senile' chorea; (c) PC is generalised, with predominant involvement of faciolingual and brachial muscles, and associated with muscular
hypotonia
; (d) PC may last from periods of weeks to years, usually responds to haloperidol, venesection or 32P-treatment, but may persist, or recur with treatment, or remit spontaneously, and (e) no relationship exists between the choreatic syndrome and (the rare finding of) a small infarct in the caudate nucleus. The cause of the choreatic syndrome in polycythaemia is presumably to be explained as a neostriatal hyperviscosity syndrome producing venous stasis, reduced brain blood flow and impaired tissular O2/
glucose
metabolism. The state of dopaminergic hyperactivity is presumably enhanced by relatively increased neostriatal catecholestrogens. The hypothesis of polycythaemic excess of dopamine-laden platelets releasing excess of dopamine in the neostriatum needs to be confirmed by laboratory evidence of platelet counts.
...
PMID:Chorea and polycythaemia. 637 Jul
A boy, now 22 months old, is described who presented at the age of 6 weeks with hypoglycaemic coma. The excretion pattern of organic acids in the urine was consistent with glutaric aciduria type II (GA II). A high energy diet low in fat and protein was given. Treatment with riboflavine resulted in an improvement of the metabolite profile, and the patient gained weight. However, a tendency to hypoglycaemia and severe
hypotonia
persisted. Due to muscle weakness, aggravated by infections, artificial ventilation was necessary during three periods. Serum carnitine level was low. Treatment with carnitine, started during the third period of artificial ventilation, led to some improvement of muscle strength, but he still could not breathe without support. Treatment with insulin, combined with further enrichment of the diet with
glucose
, resulted in an increase in muscular strength and in weight gain. Thirteen families with GA II have been described upto now. This is the first patient with a severe form of the disorder wo has survived the 1st year of life. Treatment and metabolic studies are presented.
...
PMID:Glutaric aciduria type II: treatment with riboflavine, carnitine and insulin. 639 38
Two fetuses of a patient affected with myotonic dystrophy were studied ultrasonically from 28 to 34 weeks' gestation. After a 1-hour observation period, an intravenous injection of 25 gm of 50%
glucose
solution was given to the mother. Fetal breathing movements were 0% during the control period and increased to only 10% at 90 minutes after the injection of
glucose
; the episode lasted approximately 30 minutes. The infants, who were delivered at 33 and 35 weeks, had generalized
hypotonia
, normal arterial cord blood gases, and died shortly after birth from pulmonary insufficiency, in spite of maximum ventilatory support. Postmortem pulmonary hypoplasia was confirmed by a lung weight/body weight ratio of less than 0.019. We postulate that fetal breathing activity and its response to the injection of
glucose
may be a potential clinical test by which normal fetuses can be differentiated from fetuses affected by neuromuscular disorders, including myotonic dystrophy.
...
PMID:Absence or impaired response of fetal breathing to intravenous glucose is associated with pulmonary hypoplasia in congenital myotonic dystrophy. 670 17
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