Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026838 (spasticity)
6,471 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of neonatal Herpes simplex infection is being described, which was diagnosed clinically as well as serologically. It concerns a child, which was born after 35 weeks of gestation. Two days after the delivery the mother showed typically efflorescences of Herpes simplex infection in the abdominal region. On the fifth day after birth the child showed a vesico-bullous exanthema beginning on the head and spreading out on breast and back. On day 14th a serious sepsis-like pattern of the disease with respiratory insufficiency and encephalitic symptoms could be seen. Treatment with Vidarabinphosphat and Acyclovir-Natrium was without definite success. At the age of five months the child showed a pseudobulbar-paralysis with tetra-spasticity. The cranial computer-tomography demonstrated a distinct hydrocephalus e vacuo and the electroencephalography registered only sporadic brain activity.
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PMID:[Herpes simplex infection in the newborn infant]. 298 61

We report a patient with herpes simplex virus encephalitis who presented with left hemiparesis and progressed to aphasia and generalized spasticity. Computerized axial brain tomography with and without infusion of contrast medium was normal, as were the cerebrospinal fluid findings. However, magnetic resonance imaging scan and brain biopsy, were diagnostic of herpes simplex encephalitis.
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PMID:Magnetic resonance imaging in an unusual presentation of herpes encephalitis. 336 12

We present 3 sporadic cases of a subacute to chronic, progressive motor (i.e. weakness, ataxia, spasticity, dysarthria, and dysphagia) and cognitive disorder in adults of both sexes, without proven immunocompromise or malignancy. Neuroimaging studies revealed tiny calcifications with atrophy of the cerebrum, pons, and midbrain in 1 patient, cerebral atrophy in another, and cerebral atrophy and periventricular white matter hyperintensities in the third. Clinical diagnoses included cortico-pontine-cerebellar degeneration, mixed neurodegenerative disorder, progressive supranuclear palsy, diffuse Lewy body disease, and Lyme disease. One atrophic brain revealed widely disseminated, millimeter-sized gray lesions in cerebral white matter and obscured anatomic markings of the basis pontis. The most conspicuous microscopic feature in all was capillaries with focally piled up endothelial nuclei, some of which appeared to be multinucleated, or enlarged, hyperchromatic crescentic single nuclei. Although seen mostly without associated damage, they were also noted with white matter lesions displaying vacuolation, demyelination, spheroids, necrosis, vascular fibrosis, and mineralization; these were most severe in the basis pontis. Immunostains and probes to herpes simplex virus-I, -II, and -8; adenovirus, cytomegalovirus, varicella-zoster, Epstein-Barr virus, measles, JC virus, and herpes hominis virus-6 were negative. Electron microscopy revealed no virions in endothelial cells with multilobed or multiple nuclei and duplicated basal laminae. However, mycoplasma-like bodies, mostly 400 to 600 nm in size, were found in endothelial cell cytoplasm and capillary lumina. Platelets adhered to affected endothelial cells. Polymerase chain reaction and immunohistochemistry of fixed samples for Mycoplasma fermentans were negative; other species of Mycoplasma remain viable pathogenic candidates.
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PMID:A novel cerebral microangiopathy with endothelial cell atypia and multifocal white matter lesions: a direct mycoplasmal infection? 2300 Dec 18

Intrauterine infections with the pathogens, including toxoplasmosis, other (syphilis, varicella, mumps, parvovirus, and HIV), rubella, cytomegalovirus, and herpes simplex (TORCH) in susceptible individuals during pregnancy, result in microcephaly, white matter disease, cerebral atrophy, and calcifications in the fetus. Pseudo-TORCH syndrome is an umbrella term, consisting of several syndromes, resultant from different genetic alterations and pathogenetic mechanisms. Band-like calcification with simplified gyration and polymicrogyria (BLC-PMG) is one of these conditions, resultant from biallelic mutations in the OCLN gene, located in the chromosome 5q13.2. OCLN gene encodes occludin, a tight junction protein, which is expressed in the endothelia. The absence of occludin in the developing brain subsequently results in abnormal blood-brain barrier, thus immune-cell mediated tissue damage and cortical malformation. Herein, we present a pediatric patient who had progressive microcephaly, spasticity, multi-drug resistant epilepsy, PMG and intracranial band-type calcifications, accompanied by central diabetes insipidus and renal dysfunction. Whole exome sequencing revealed a homozygote W58Ffs*10 (c.173_194del) frameshift mutation in the OCLN gene. Of 34 BLC-PMG cases with demonstrable OCLN mutations, only three had renal manifestations, which is responsible for the majority of the demises. This is the first case diagnosed as having central diabetes insipidus and responded to desmopressin treatment to the best of our knowledge, however, this clinical improvement could not prevent the patient from renal dysfunction. The patient deceased at four years of age from sepsis, therefore early diagnosis, optimal follow-up for renal involvement and infection prevention measures are necessary for the patients with BLC-PMG.
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PMID:A homozygote frameshift mutation in OCLN gene result in Pseudo-TORCH syndrome type I: A case report extending the phenotype with central diabetes insipidus and renal dysfunction. 3224 Aug 28