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)

To test the efficacy of intrathecal baclofen in various movement disorders, 18 patients with dystonia, head trauma, cerebral palsy, rigidity, or painful spasms underwent a trial of intrathecal baclofen. Ten went on to permanent implantation with an infusion pump to provide long-term treatment. Patients with a component of spasticity, painful spasms, or focal dystonias did best, and no response was seen in patients with rigidity due to anoxic encephalopathy. A videotape of responses is provided.
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PMID:Intrathecal baclofen for motor disorders. 855 24

We reported a rare case who had hypoxic-encephalopathy causing frontal apraxia of gait. The patient, a 34-year-old female, was admitted in July, 1994, complaining of difficulty in walking after anoxic brain damage caused by ventricular arrhythmia. She had difficulty in raising her feet, which appeared to be rooted to the floor. There was no evidence of motor paralysis, spasticity, rigidity or sensory loss, but she did show frontal lobe signs such as foot grasp reflex and Gegenhalten. Cranial MRI showed slight atrophy of the frontal lobe. On T2 weighted image, high-intensity areas were detected at the posterior internal capsule and corona radiata. Single photon emission CT (123I-IMP) demonstrated a low perfusion area which included the inferomedical part of the frontal lobe. After 8 months of hospitalization, her postural instability and unsteady gait slowly improved without treatment as frontal signs such as foot grasp reflex disappeared. We speculate that her apraxia of gait may result from grasp reflex and Gegenhalten.
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PMID:[A case of frontal gait apraxia caused by hypoxic encephalopathy]. 916 59

A 50 year old woman presented with a subacute onset of vertigo and diplopia followed by an encephalopathy with confusion, spasticity, ataxia, myoclonus, and multiple branch retinal arteriolar occlusions and unilateral sensorineural deafness. Brain biopsy confirmed multiple microinfarcts with no vasculitis. After the procedure she had a right iliofemoral deep vein thrombosis and was found to be heterozygous for the factor V Leiden mutation. She was treated with anticoagulants and made a marked recovery with no relapses 6 months after presentation. This case extends the age range at which Susac's syndrome can present, and raises the possibility that the condition may be associated with abnormalities of coagulation.
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PMID:Microangiopathy of the brain and retina with hearing loss in a 50 year old woman: extending the spectrum of Susac's syndrome. 1020 78

A variety of cerebral insults can result in static encephalopathy with developmental delays and relatively fixed motor and cognitive deficits. We describe two boys with static encephalopathy who experienced recurrent episodes of generalized, violent ballism seemingly provoked by relatively minor infectious illnesses or surgical procedures. These episodes first began at ages 14 and 9 years, respectively. The baseline clinical states included relatively mild choreoathetosis plus cognitive impairment, as well as spasticity and/or ataxia. These episodes of ballism developed over hours, remained for weeks, and ultimately returned to baseline. Neuroleptics, anticonvulsants, and benzodiazepines were only partially beneficial; responses corresponded to the degree of sedation. Potential for self-injury or rhabdomyolysis/myoglobinuria led to the use of general anesthetics or neuromuscular blocking agents during selected episodes. Blood, urine, and cerebrospinal fluid studies, magnetic resonance imaging head scans, and electroencephalography revealed no diagnostic clues as to the precise causative factor precipitating these episodes.
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PMID:Violent recurrent ballism associated with infections in two children with static encephalopathy. 1083 Apr 25

We present here 38 patients with athetotic cerebral palsy who has trained in our clinic in recent 5 years. The mean age was 4 years and 4 months. In preterm cases, their gestational ages ranged from 27 weeks to 36 weeks, less than 31 weeks in 74%. MRI showed periventricular leukomalacia in 75%. Their clinical picture was mixed quadriplegia with athetosis and spasticity. Half of the cases were profoundly handicapped in motor ability. Fifteen cases had been born in term. Sixty percent of them had a non-mixed type of cerebral palsy. Five cases had no remarkable risk factor during the perinatal period. Six cases were able to walk with or without support. Hypoxic-ischemic encephalopathy was the main cause of athetotic cerebral palsy in recent years. Twin pregnancy was also an important risk factor, especially in preterm infants. MRI could detect lesions in the thalamus or the basal ganglia in only 17% of the 36 cases examined.
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PMID:[Clinical features of children with athetotic cerebral palsy in relation to their gestational age at birth]. 1114 61

HIV-related encephalopathy is an important problem in vertically infected children with HIV. Infected infants may manifest early, catastrophic encephalopathy, with loss of brain growth, motor abnormalities, and cognitive dysfunction. Even without evidence of AIDS, infected infants score lower than serorevertors on developmental measures, particularly language acquisition. Children with perinatal or later transfusion-related infection generally are roughly comparable developmentally to their peers until late in their course. Symptoms similar to adult AIDS dementia complex are occasionally seen in adolescents with advanced AIDS, including dementia, bradykinesia, and spasticity. Opportunistic CNS infections such as toxoplasmosis and progressive multifocal leukoencephalopathy are less common in children and adolescents than in adults. Increasing evidence suggests that aggressive antiretroviral treatment may halt or even reverse encephalopathy. Neuroimaging changes may precede or follow clinical manifestations, and include early lenticulostriate vessel echogenicity on cranial ultrasound, calcifying microangiopathy on CT scan, and/or white matter lesions and central atrophy on MRI. Differential diagnosis of neurological dysfunction in an HIV-infected infant includes the effects of maternal substance abuse, other CNS congenital infections, and other causes of early static encephalopathy. Initial entry of HIV into the nervous system occurs very early in infection. The risk of clinical HIV encephalopathy increases with very early age of infection and with high viral loads. Virus is found in microglia and brain derived macrophages, not neurons. The neuronal effect of HIV is probably indirect, with various cytokines implicated. Apoptosis is the presumed mechanism of damage to neurons by HIV.
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PMID:Neurological and developmental effects of HIV and AIDS in children and adolescents. 1155 37

To determine the frequency and the natural history of neurological manifestations of dengue infection in Thai children, 1,493 children diagnosed with dengue infection by serology and admitted to the Department of Pediatrics, Chulalongkorn Hospital, Bangkok, Thailand from 1987 to 1998 were reviewed from prospectively recorded medical charts. There were 80 children identified with neurological manifestations, an incidence of 5.4% of all dengue patients. Of these, there were 41 males and 39 females, with ages ranging from 3 months to 14 years. They were categorized into 20 cases of dengue fever, 26 cases of dengue hemorrhagic fever and 34 cases of dengue shock syndrome. All cases experienced the neurological manifestations during the febrile stage of the illness. The patients were classified into an encephalitic group (called "dengue encephalopathy") (42), a seizure group (35) and a miscellaneous group (3). Encephalitic patients presented with alteration of consciousness (83.3%), seizure (45.2%), mental confusion (23.8%), nuchal rigidity (21.4%), spasticity of limbs (9.5%), positive clonus (4.8%), hemiplegia (2.4%) and positive kernig (2.4%), and were older than those in the other groups. Patients in the seizure group presented with seizure (100%) and positive clonus (2.9%). Abnormal laboratory findings included hyponatremia, abnormal liver enzymes and CSF pleocytosis. Dengue IgM and dengue PCR were not demonstrated in 16 CSF specimens. An autopsy finding of a child in the encephalitic group showed histologic evidence of encephalitis, the only case of confirmed dengue encephalitis in this study. One patient with encephalitic symptoms suffered from long-term neurological sequelae. The overall mortality rate was 5%. In conclusion, neurological manifestations including seizure and encephalopathy in children with dengue are not uncommon whereas dengue encephalitis is a rare entity.
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PMID:Neurological manifestations in dengue patients. 1155 87

Cerebral palsy is the most common cause of physical disability affecting children in developed countries. Although cerebral palsy is, by definition, a 'static encephalopathy' the associated musculoskeletal pathology is progressive and current definitions are therefore somewhat inadequate. Understanding the stages of the musculoskeletal pathology is fundamental to understanding current management strategies, including spasticity management, strengthening programmes and deformity correction by orthopaedic surgery. In this review, a number of new management strategies are described, in which spasticity management by intramuscular injections of botulinum toxin type A and deformity correction, by orthopaedic surgery, are combined.
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PMID:Botulinum toxin type A management of spasticity in the context of orthopaedic surgery for children with spastic cerebral palsy. 1185 32

The mechanical properties of isolated single muscle fiber segments were measured in muscle cells obtained from patients undergoing surgery for correction of flexion contractures secondary to static perinatal encephalopathy (cerebral palsy). "Normal" muscle cells from patients with intact neuromuscular function were also mechanically tested. Fiber segments taken from subjects with spasticity developed passive tension at significantly shorter sarcomere lengths (1.84 +/- 0.05 microm, n = 15) than fibers taken from normal subjects (2.20 +/- 0.04 microm, n = 35). Elastic modulus of the stress-strain relationship in fibers from patients with spasticity (55.00 +/- 6.61 kPa) was almost double that measured in normal fibers (28.25 +/- 3.31 kPa). The fact that these muscle cells from patients with spasticity have a shorter resting sarcomere length and increased modulus compared with normal muscle cells suggests dramatic remodeling of intracellular or extracellular muscle structural components such as titin and collagen. Such changes in muscles of patients with spasticity may have implications for therapy.
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PMID:Spastic muscle cells are shorter and stiffer than normal cells. 1254 19

Mutations in the MECP2 (methyl-CpG-binding protein 2) gene are known to cause Rett syndrome, a well-known and clinically defined neurodevelopmental disorder. Rett syndrome occurs almost exclusively in females and for a long time was thought to be an X-linked dominant condition lethal in hemizygous males. Since the discovery of the MECP2 gene as the cause of Rett syndrome in 1999, MECP2 mutations have, however, also been reported in males. These males phenotypically have classical Rett syndrome when the mutation arises as somatic mosaicism or when they have an extra X chromosome. In all other cases, males with MECP2 mutations show diverse phenotypes different from classical Rett syndrome. The spectrum ranges from severe congenital encephalopathy, mental retardation with various neurological symptoms, occasionally in association with psychiatric illness, to mild mental retardation only. We present a 21-year-old male with severe mental retardation, spastic tetraplegia, dystonia, apraxia and neurogenic scoliosis. A history of early hypotonia evolving into severe spasticity, slowing of head growth, breathing irregularities and good visual interactive behaviour were highly suggestive of Rett syndrome. He has a de novo missense mutation in exon 3 of the MECP2 gene (P225L). The clinical spectrum and molecular findings in males with MECP2 mutations are reviewed.
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PMID:Neurodevelopmental disorders in males related to the gene causing Rett syndrome in females (MECP2). 1261 69


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