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Query: UMLS:C0026838 (
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6,471
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 13-year-old girl with
Fahr disease
(infantile form) was reported. Her parents were consanguineous. Her elder sister had mental retardation and
spasticity
of the lower limbs, and died at 23 years of age. The patient suffered from infantile spasms at 3 month. She was bed-ridden, nonverbal, microcephalic and blind. Cranial CT revealed massive calcifications in the basal ganglia, periventricular white matter, dentate nucleus and cerebellar white matter. EEG showed a suppression-burst pattern. At 13 years, she died of pneumonia and hyperammonemia. Microscopic examination of brain showed perivascular non-arteriosclerotic ferro-calcinosis. The periventricular granules are 1-4 mu or 12 mu in diameter. This pathological change was observed only in the central nervous system above midbrain. No calcifications were found in the pituitary and the vessels of pia mater. Also a reduced ornithine transcarbamylase activity was found in the liver, which was probably not related with cerebral calcifications. Infantile form of
Fahr disease
is rare and may be heterogeneous in etiology. However, clinical manifestations and pathological findings were similar to those in previous reports of
Fahr disease
in childhood. It is one of the disorders causing infantile spasms.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of Fahr disease (infantile form)]. 152 May 12
We described a 41-year-old woman with idiopathic, symmetrical, non-arteriosclerotic, intracerebral calcification (
Fahr's disease
), associated with multiple myeloma. CT scans revealed severe calcification in the basal ganglia, floors of cortices, subcortical white matter, brainstem and cerebellum without calcification in the spinal cord. Cerebral angiography showed no evidence of arteriosclerosis. The cerebral blood flow measured by SPECT, parathyroid function and calcium metabolism were within normal range. The initial symptom was dystonia and
spasticity
in the left leg, when she was 30 years old, followed by gait disturbance, speech impairment, micrographia and dementia. M-proteinemia was pointed out when she 32 years old. M-proteinemia, which was due to primary benign monoclonal immunoglobulinemia (PBMI), made progress slowly, followed by multiple myeloma when she was 40 years old. Periodical CT scans revealed that the intracerebral calcification had worsened gradually through 8 years. Neurological abnormality had also progressed slowly. In literature, there has not been any report about
Fahr's disease
associated with PBMI and multiple myeloma. Our present study is the first to radiologically prove that the intracerebral calcification in
Fahr's disease
progresses gradually through its course.
...
PMID:[A case of idiopathic, symmetrical non-arteriosclerotic, intracerebral calcification (Fahr's disease) associated with M-proteinemia, followed by multiple myeloma]. 178 68