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Query: UMLS:C0026838 (
spasticity
)
6,471
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We studied 14 Arab infants with infantile spongy degeneration, 13 of whom were products of consanguineous marriages. They presented in infancy with macrocephaly, poor visual behavior or blindness, and axial hypotonia with appendicular
spasticity
. Brain CT and MRI showed diffuse symmetric
leukoencephalopathy
, even before neurologic symptoms. There were relatively normal EEGs. The visual evoked responses (P100) were either absent or delayed early in the course. The brainstem auditory evoked responses showed milder abnormalities, with loss of later components before the earlier ones. Deficient aspartoacylase activity in cultured fibroblasts or brain biopsy confirmed the diagnosis in all patients.
...
PMID:Infantile CNS spongy degeneration--14 cases: clinical update. 224 37
We report 14 cases of a severe familial
leukoencephalopathy
among native North American Indian infants in northern Quebec and Manitoba. Affected infants have hypotonia and mild motor delay, followed by seizures, hypotonia or
spasticity
, eye deviation, and abnormal posture during a febrile illness around 6 months of age. Death follows a rigid, vegetative state that manifests days to months after disease onset and is marked in some cases by prominent autonomic disturbances, blindness, and cessation of head growth. Symmetrical hemispheric white matter lucencies and diffuse hypomyelination of the cerebral hemispheres and brainstem are the radiological and pathological hallmarks. This disease differs from the known diseases of cerebral myelin. An autosomal recessive pattern of inheritance awaits statistical confirmation. The proposed cause is a delay in development or abnormal turnover of central nervous system myelin.
...
PMID:Leukoencephalopathy among native Indian infants in northern Quebec and Manitoba. 323 51
From 1972-1974, 228 children began treatment for acute lymphocytic leukemia and were prospectively assessed for neurologic complications. After CNS irradiation (2,400 rad) and intrathecal methotrexate (MTX), they received weekly intravenous maintenance therapy with MTX alone (40-60 mg/m2; 20 patients) or MTX (10-30 mg/m2) with other drugs (208 patients). Signs of
leukoencephalopathy
appeared in 11 children (nine without CNS leukemia) after 4-15 months of IV MTX alone, and included lethargy, seizures,
spasticity
, paresis, drooling, and dementia. Before or during the clinical onset, EEG frequencies slowed (all ten patients tested). Radionuclide scans showed periventricular accumulation of 99mTc (9/11 patients) and remained abnormal for greater than or equal to six months in eight patients. Cranial computed tomograms or neuropathology findings (five patients each) demonstrated
leukoencephalopathy
(nine patients) and radiation-related microangiopathy (ten patients). Severe neurologic and neuropsychologic dysfunctions were present in four long-term survivors.
...
PMID:Progression of methotrexate-induced leukoencephalopathy in children with leukemia. 693 56
An identical syndrome of cerebral
leukoencephalopathy
and megalencephaly with infantile onset was discovered in 8 children, including 2 siblings. Neurological findings were initially normal or near normal, despite megalencephaly and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) evidence of severe white matter affection. Slowly progressive ataxia and
spasticity
developed, while intellectual functioning was preserved for years after onset of the disorder. MRI characteristics included diffuse abnormality in signal intensity and swelling of the cerebral hemispheral white matter with cyst-like spaces in the frontoparietal and anterior-temporal subcortical areas. MR spectra were relatively mildly abnormal. Screening for inborn errors, especially those that cause either megalencephaly or white matter disease or both was negative. A distinguishing feature of the present disorder is the apparently severe abnormality of the cerebral white matter as demonstrated by MRI, which contrasts with the remarkably slow course of functional deterioration.
...
PMID:Leukoencephalopathy with swelling and a discrepantly mild clinical course in eight children. 769 31
A 55-year-old mildly hypertensive woman died after having developed a subcortical dementia during the past 9 years, with focal neurological signs. She presented at the age of 46 years with short episodes of dizziness and diplopia, suggesting that transient ischemic attacks involved the posterior fossa structures. Over the next 8 years, she developed difficulty in walking, urinary incontinence and seizures. On examination in 1989, she was severely demented. There was tetraparesis, bilateral arm and leg
spasticity
with hyperreflexia and bilateral Babinski signs. She showed epilepsia partialis continua involving the eyes, left hemiface and limbs. CT showed hypodensity of the white matter and lacunes in the basal ganglia and centrum semiovale, moderate hydrocephalus with cerebellar and cortical atrophy. Clinical and radiological features were similar to those of Binswanger's disease. Similar cases had occurred in the family affecting the patient's grandfather, father and two brothers, suggesting an autosomal dominant hereditary disease. Postmortem examination disclosed a Binswanger type of
leukoencephalopathy
caused by a peculiar microangiopathy characterized by a slightly basophilic small arterial granular degeneration of the medial sheath associated with the presence of ballooned smooth muscle cells with clear cytoplasm. Electron microscopic study revealed degenerative changes in the parietal vessels with notable increase of basal-membrane-type material and electron-dense granular deposits. These lesions could correspond to a specific familial pathology of the small arteries of the brain. They are identical to those reported in some patients with autosomal dominant inheritance. For other patients with similar clinical features and the same familial pattern, reported as "hereditary multi-infarct dementia'' and "chronic familial vascular encephalopathy'', there are no sufficient objective pathological facts to consider that they have the same disease.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Small arterial granular degeneration in familial Binswanger's syndrome. 814 Aug 99
A Japanese boy with megalencephaly and
leukoencephalopathy
was reported. The clinical characteristics were as follows; slowly progressive megalencephaly starting at 8 months, and motor impairment with ataxia and
spasticity
, with relatively preserved intelligence and well-controlled epilepsy, and the following MRI findings; diffuse
leukoencephalopathy
in the supratentorial white matter with cystic subcortical white matter in the temporal tips and the fronto-parietal lobes. This corresponds to vacuolating
leukoencephalopathy
with megalencephaly, which was recently reported in European countries. In Japan, there were similar case reports previously, however, the patients were diagnosed as having Alexander's disease. It seems that this new
leukoencephalopathy
must also be seen among Japanese.
...
PMID:Slowly progressive cystic leukoencephalopathy with megalencephaly in a Japanese boy. 966 71
We describe an identical syndrome of cystic
leukoencephalopathy
in three Turkish children, including two siblings. The neurological findings were noted within the first months of life and include severe intellectual impairment, motor retardation, and
spasticity
. Magnetic resonance imaging of the brain showed extensive cysts within the anterior temporal lobes, ventricular enlargement and white matter disease. The signal intensities of the cysts' content were identical to those of the cerebrospinal fluid. The patients' screening for known inborn errors of metabolism, especially those characterised by white matter involvement, did not reveal any abnormality. The clinical picture and the magnetic resonance imaging characteristics are unique diagnostic features of a new disease entity so far not described in the literature.
...
PMID:A new leukoencephalopathy with bilateral anterior temporal lobe cysts. 981 May 56
Leukoencephalopathy
with swelling and a discrepantly mild clinical course is a recently identified syndrome described by van der Knaap et al. It is characterised by macrocephaly occurring during the first year of life, initially normal or nearly normal development, slowly progressive ataxia and
spasticity
with initial preservation of intellectual functions. MRI shows diffuse abnormality of signal intensity in the hemisphere white matter with subcortical cyst-like spaces in the fronto-parietal and anterior temporal areas. The case of a 5-year-old boy whose clinical and neuroimaging findings are consistent with this syndrome is reported. The clinical and neuroimaging findings of this case may provide further information about this new syndrome which could possibly be useful also for genetic counselling.
...
PMID:[Leukoencephalopathy with swelling, megalencephalopathy and surprisingly mild course. A case report]. 1076 5
Alexander disease is a rare disorder of the central nervous system of unknown etiology. Infants with Alexander disease develop a
leukoencephalopathy
with macrocephaly, seizures and psychomotor retardation, leading to death usually within the first decade; patients with juvenile or adult forms typically experience ataxia, bulbar signs and
spasticity
, and a more slowly progressive course. The pathological hallmark of all forms of Alexander disease is the presence of Rosenthal fibers, cytoplasmic inclusions in astrocytes that contain the intermediate filament protein GFAP in association with small heat-shock proteins. We previously found that overexpression of human GFAP in astrocytes of transgenic mice is fatal and accompanied by the presence of inclusion bodies indistinguishable from human Rosenthal fibers. These results suggested that a primary alteration in GFAP may be responsible for Alexander disease. Sequence analysis of DNA samples from patients representing different Alexander disease phenotypes revealed that most cases are associated with non-conservative mutations in the coding region of GFAP. Alexander disease therefore represents the first example of a primary genetic disorder of astrocytes, one of the major cell types in the vertebrate CNS.
...
PMID:Mutations in GFAP, encoding glial fibrillary acidic protein, are associated with Alexander disease. 1113 88
Megalencephalic
leukoencephalopathy
with subcortical cysts (MLC) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by macrocephaly, deterioration of motor functions with ataxia, and
spasticity
, eventuating in mental decline. The brain appears swollen on magnetic resonance imaging, with diffuse white-matter abnormalities and the invariable presence of subcortical cysts. MLC was recently localized on chromosome 22q(tel). We have narrowed down the critical region by linkage analysis of 11 informative families with MLC to a region of approximately 250 kb, containing four known genes. One family with two patients who were siblings did not display linkage between the MLC phenotype and any of the analyzed microsatellite markers on chromosome 22q(tel), suggesting genetic heterogeneity and the existence of at least a second MLC locus. The maximum two-point LOD score for the 11 families was 6.6 at recombination fraction .02. Twelve different mutations in seven informative and six uninformative families were found in one of the candidate genes, KIAA0027, which we renamed "MLC1." The gene encodes a putative membrane protein with eight predicted transmembrane domains. The patients of one family were compound heterozygotes for mutations that both introduced stop codons. The mutations further included frameshifts, splice-acceptor mutations, a putative splice-donor mutation, and amino acid substitutions of residues in predicted transmembrane domains. These data provide strong evidence that mutations of MLC1 cause the disease.
...
PMID:Mutations of MLC1 (KIAA0027), encoding a putative membrane protein, cause megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts. 1125 42
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