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Query: UMLS:C0026838 (
spasticity
)
6,471
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Alexander's disease
is reported in a 6-month-old infant. The clinical course was characterized by hydrocephalus, irritability and psychomotor retardation, with subsequent seizures and
spasticity
. Findings on ultrasound examination, computerized tomography, magnetic resonance imaging and brain biopsy are presented. The glial nature of the Rosenthal fibers was confirmed by immuno-gold staining. Clinical classification and differential diagnosis are discussed.
...
PMID:Alexander's disease: a case report with brain biopsy, ultrasound, CT scan and MRI findings. 165 Mar 1
A 10-month-old boy with
Alexander disease
is described. He was clinically characterized by early onset of megalencephaly, psychomotor retardation,
spasticity
and recurrent seizure attacks. Pathological examination of the biopsied cerebrum revealed a large number of Rosenthal fibers in the white matter and beneath the pia in association with advanced demyelination. The motor nerve conduction velocity was remarkably delayed, suggesting a possible change of the peripheral nerve. The computerized tomography demonstrated megalencephaly and bilateral symmetrical low density areas in the cerebral white matter, particularly in the frontal region. The preferential involvement of frontal lobes was also confirmed by electroencephalogram and brain scan. The preferential damage of the frontal region in the early stage of the disease may be an important clue to a diagnosis of
Alexander disease
by computerized tomography, brain scan and electroencephalogram.
...
PMID:Alexander disease: clinical, electrodiagnostic and radiographic studies. 725 81
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
Alexander disease
is usually classified according to the age of onset, e.g. an infantile form with onset during the first two years of life, a juvenile form with onset in childhood, mainly school age. It has been recognized, however, that the clinical course can be very variable within these groups. Thus, this clinical classification is not a useful predictor of severity and progression of the disease. This is demonstrated here on the basis of the history of seven own patients and a literature review. Only an onset in very early infancy, during the neonatal period, seemed to be associated with a rather uniform pattern of disease course, often leading to early death. This neonatal form showed very stereotyped symptoms, in part different from later onset: Early, often intractable, generalized seizures; hydrocephalus with raised intracranial pressure due to aqueductal stenosis because of pathological astroglia proliferation; lack of developmental progression but without prominent
spasticity
or ataxia; elevated CSF protein content. This was associated with the well-established neuroradiological findings, e.g. severe white matter affection with fronto-temporal predominance, involvement of basal ganglia and periventricular enhancement as an obligatory symptom. The identification of this early onset form is especially important as seizures and signs of raised intracranial pressure may mislead the diagnosis.
...
PMID:Alexander disease--classification revisited and isolation of a neonatal form. 1083 83
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
Alexander disease
is a rare, degenerative disorder of the central nervous system. It is characterized clinically by
spasticity
, seizures, dementia, loss of developmental milestones, and macrocephaly. Here we describe a 13-year-old boy with
Alexander disease
and severe scoliosis. The patient initially presented at 9 months of age, with profound mental retardation and a history of seizures. When he was 7 years old, a pediatrician had diagnosed
Alexander disease
(hypotonia, macrocephaly, and progressive low-density white matter predominantly in the frontal region on computed tomography examination). From the age of 10, thoracolumbar scoliosis had gradually become severe. Because treatment using a corrective brace would have produced major problems because of the patient's mental retardation, the scoliosis was successfully treated surgically, by careful posterior spinal fusion with instrumentation, and an autologous iliac crest bone graft. A 64 degrees curve was corrected to 18 degrees (72% correction). Scoliosis with
Alexander disease
is considered to be very rare because patients with the disease seldom survive long enough to develop spinal deformities.
...
PMID:Scoliosis in a patient with Alexander disease. 1213 31
Serial neuroimaging studies in
Alexander's disease
were obtained on an African-American girl who died at 4z\x years of age. She presented with macrocephaly, psychomotor retardation,
spasticity
, a seizure disorder, and hydrocephalus. A thorough metabolic evaluation of defined leukodystrophies, including Krabbe's disease, adrenoleukodystrophy, metachromatic leukodystrophy, Canavan's disease, and Leigh disease, was negative. A diagnosis of
Alexander's disease
was made based on the clinical features and ruling out all other possible causes. It was confirmed by pathologic findings of numerous subpial, subependymal, and perivascular Rosenthal fibers throughout the entire cerebrum. Interestingly, autopsy also identified the stenotic sylvian aqueduct owing to Rosenthal fiber accumulation, explaining the origin of hydrocephalus. The evolution of magnetic resonance imaging findings appears to be unique in this disease.
...
PMID:Infantile Alexander's disease: serial neuroradiologic findings. 1217 72
Megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts is one of the newly described white-matter disorders for which recognition has been brought about by advances in imaging technology. The essential diagnostic features include megalencephaly noted in infancy, motor disability in the form of
spasticity
, ataxia, occasional seizures, mild cognitive decline, and slow progression. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) shows bilateral extensive white-matter changes with cysts in the temporal regions. Based on the clinical and MRI features, megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts can be distinguished from other conditions (ie,
Alexander's disease
, Canavan's disease, glutaricaciduria type I) that present in infancy with megalencephaly. Megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts is an autosomal recessive disorder, and mutations in the MLC1 gene have now been shown to cause this condition. Several genotypic and phenotypic variations have been described. In India, megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts occurs predominantly in the Agarwal community. A common mutation in the MLC1 gene has been seen in 31 Agarwal patients, which suggests a founder effect.
...
PMID:Megalencephalic leukoencephalopathy with subcortical cysts. 1457 44
Alexander disease
(AD) is a rare leukodystrophy of the central nervous system of unknown etiology. AD is characterized by progressive failure of central myelination and the accumulation of Rosenthal fibers in astrocytes, and is inevitably lethal in nature. Symptomatically, AD is associated with leukoencephalopathy with macrocephaly, seizures, and psychomotor retardation in infants, and usually leads to death within the first decade. Its characteristic magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings have been described as demyelination predominantly in the frontal lobe. Moreover, dominant mutations in the GFAP gene, coding for glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP), a principal astrocytic intermediate filament protein, have been shown to lead to AD. The disease can now be detected by genetic diagnosis. We report the Korean case of an 8-month-old male patient with AD. He was clinically characterized due to the presence of psychomotor retardation, megalencephaly,
spasticity
, and recurrent seizures including infantile spasms which is a remarkable presentation. Demyelination in the frontal lobe and in a portion of the temporal lobe was demonstrated by brain MRI. Moreover, DNA analysis of peripheral blood showed the presence of a R239L mutation in the GFAP gene, involving the replacement of guanine with thymine.
...
PMID:A case of infantile Alexander disease accompanied by infantile spasms diagnosed by DNA analysis. 1704 38
Alexander disease
is a rare, sporadic leukoencephalopathy characterized by white-matter abnormalities with frontal predominance and, as a rule, clinically associated with megalencephaly, seizures,
spasticity
, and psychomotor deterioration. We describe a boy who was diagnosed as affected by anorexia nervosa because of his refusal to eat, progressive weight loss, and psychologic disturbances. The observation of a hyperintense lesion on T(2)-weighed magnetic resonance images (MRIs) was initially explained as a pontine and extrapontine myelinolysis related to malnutrition. Following MRI and DNA analysis, we diagnosed a juvenile type of
Alexander disease
. Therefore, we can affirm the importance of the history and clinical examination to look for brainstem dysfunction in patients presenting with atypical anorexia nervosa.
...
PMID:Unusual diagnosis in a child suffering from juvenile Alexander disease: clinical and imaging report. 1715 3
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