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Query: UMLS:C0026838 (
spasticity
)
6,471
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 28-year-old man developed slowly progressive dysarthria and gait disturbance over 7 years. Neurological examination revealed marked ataxia of articulation and gait, mild ataxia and
spasticity
of all four limbs without intellectual, visual, auditory, sensory or sphincter dysfunction. No physical signs of adrenal hypofunction were found. However, analysis of fatty acid of plasma sphingomyelin showed an increase in very long chain fatty acids, compatible with the diagnosis of
adrenoleukodystrophy
. Computed tomography disclosed marked atrophy of the cerebellum and pons, and bilateral low-density lesions in the deep while matter of the cerebellum. Magnetic resonance imaging showed these lesions more clearly, as well as other lesions in the middle and superior cerebellar peduncles, despite the absence of cerebral white matter involvement at the time of presentation. This is a rare case of
adrenoleukodystrophy
presenting as spinocerebellar degeneration and showing marked atrophy and several parenchymatous lesions of the cerebellum and brain stem.
...
PMID:Ataxic variant of adrenoleukodystrophy: MRI and CT findings. 151 6
The clinical features of 3 patients from a kindred with
adrenoleukodystrophy
and the analysis of their plasma sphingomyelin are described. Onset of symptoms was between the ages of 33 and 54 years. Ataxic gait and
spasticity
were the only symptoms noted during the early stage of the disorder. Dementia and optic atrophy were present in two of the cases. Baseline plasma cortisol was normal, but adrenocorticotropic hormone was elevated. Analysis of plasma sphingomyelin demonstrated an increase in very-long-chain (C24-C26) fatty acid. This study demonstrates that
adrenoleukodystrophy
may present with spinocerebellar symptoms.
...
PMID:Adrenoleukodystrophy presenting as spinocerebellar degeneration. 254 19
A case of symptomatic adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) heterozygote, manifested by spastic paraparesis, was reported. The patient's 9 year-old grandson had
ALD
, and her 34 year-old daughter, who was the mother of the case of
ALD
, was asymptomatic but accompanied by elevation of serum very long chain fatty acid (VLCFA). The patient's gait disturbance appeared at age 62 and that gradually worsened. On admission, she showed
spasticity
on the lower limbs with bilateral Babinski's reflexes, muscle weakness of the lower limbs and interossei muscles of the hand, and mild sensory disturbance on the distal part of all limbs. Serum VLCFA was markedly elevated. There was no abnormal adrenal function. Sensory and motor nerve conduction velocities were within normal limits. A needle EMG examination disclosed long-duration and high-amplitude potentials. Auditory brainstem response (ABR) revealed elongation of III-V wave intervals bilaterally, and somatosensory evoked potential (SEP) showed delayed N20. Brain CT scan revealed no abnormality but MRI (T2 weighted image) showed mild high intensity areas in the capsula interna and cerebral peduncles. The abnormality of MRI suspected that spastic paraparesis may result from involvement of the corticospinal tract of the cerebrum or brainstem though the symptom has been considered due to the lesion of the spinal cord. Examinations of ABR, SEP and MRI were useful methods to make a diagnosis of symptomatic
ALD
heterozygote.
...
PMID:[A case of symptomatic adrenoleukodystrophy heterozygote manifested by spastic paraparesis of late onset]. 268 Feb 6
A family with
adrenoleukodystrophy
and clinical manifestations of spinocerebellar degeneration was studied. Two adult male first cousins showed progressive limb and truncal ataxia, slurred speech and
spasticity
of the extremities. Brain CT scans demonstrated atrophy of the pons and cerebellum, in both cases. Very long chain fatty acids in plasma and erythrocyte membranes were elevated in the affected patients and intermediately increased in an aunt and the mother of one patient, thereby indicating homozygotes and carriers of
adrenoleukodystrophy
, respectively. This unusual type of
adrenoleukodystrophy
seems to be transmitted as an X-linked recessive trait.
...
PMID:Familial spinocerebellar degeneration as an expression of adrenoleukodystrophy. 346 5
A two year and ten-month-old girl with cerebello-brain stem leukodystrophy is presented. She was hypotonic with
spasticity
and showed delayed motor development until she was twelve months old, when regression of motor activities began. Progressive hypotonia, dysphagia and fatal respiratory abnormalities developed. Auditory brain stem response was absent. Pathological examination revealed primary demyelination with a predilection for the cerebellum, brain stem and spinal cord, in association with changes of the cerebellar cortex, pontine nuclei, inferior olivary nuclei and part of the basal ganglia. Clinical, pathological and biochemical studies revealed that this disease is different from metachromatic leukodystrophy, Krabbe's globoid cell leukodystrophy and
adrenoleukodystrophy
. The clinical entity of cerebello-brain stem orthochromatic leukodystrophy is discussed.
...
PMID:Cerebello-brain stem orthochromatic leukodystrophy with floppiness and bulbar paralysis. 647 80
Ten Japanese boys with childhood adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD), one adult patient with adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN), and two presymptomatic
ALD
boys were treated with dietary erucic acid (C22:1) for more than 12 months; except in a case of childhood
ALD
patient who died 7 months after beginning erucic acid therapy. During erucic acid therapy, the serum levels of very long-chain fatty acid (VLCFA) (C24:0/C22:0) decreased within 1-2 months in all patients, and these levels in four of the patients decreased to the normal range. Neurological examination and MRI findings in all 10 of the childhood
ALD
patients showed progression of the disease while they were receiving the dietary therapy. However, the mean interval between the onset of awkward gait and a vegetative state in diet-treated patients was significantly longer than that in the untreated patients. One AMN patient showed slight improvement of spastic gait and lessened pain in the lower limbs due to
spasticity
. The two presymptomatic
ALD
boys remained intact on clinical examination and on MRI findings for 38 and 23 months, respectively, after starting the diet.
...
PMID:Effects of erucic acid therapy on Japanese patients with X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy. 769 94
X-linked adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN) is a phenotypic variant of
adrenoleukodystrophy
(
ADL
) presenting in early adult life with progressive ataxia and
spasticity
, and on occasion with adrenal insufficiency. We describe a 26-year-old Chinese man with a 2-year history of gait difficulty due to
spasticity
, absent pattern shift visual evoked (VER) responses and posterior white matter lesions on T2 weighted brain magnetic resonance images. His parents are clinically normal and his 24-year-old brother has hyperreflexia in the legs but normal VER latencies. The patient's ACTH levels were elevated and the serum cortisol did not rise with either Synacthen or corticotropin releasing hormone. Assay of his plasma confirmed elevation of very long chain fatty acids (VLCFA) consistent with a defect in peroxisomal VLCFA metabolism. This is the first local report of a patient with AMN.
...
PMID:An index case of adrenomyeloneuropathy in a Chinese man. 776 96
We experienced an 11-year-old boy diagnosed as having adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD), and studied his motor evoked potentials (MEPs) elicited by transcranial magnetic stimulation (TMS). He had intellectual and visual impairment, and MRI revealed high intensity of the parieto-occipital white matter. On evaluation of the long tracts, slight
spasticity
with equivocal Babinski signs was noted: however, the long tracts appeared intact on MRI, and short latency somatosensory evoked potentials (SSEPs) were completely normal. On TMS delivered through a circular coil, MEPs recorded from the relaxed first dorsal interosseous muscle showed that only the duration was significantly prolonged, which may be due to temporal dispersion of descending volleys in the pyramidal tracts, while the latency was not prolonged. TMS in
ALD
was considered sensitive and useful for detecting subtle involvement of the long tracts.
...
PMID:Transcranial magnetic stimulation in an adrenoleukodystrophy patient. 887 55
Infusion of phenol into peripheral nerves is used clinically to manage
spasticity
. It produces relief of symptoms by chemical denervation. We simulated the clinical procedure by bathing the lateral plantar nerve of rats in 7% phenol solution for 20 min. We studied the innervation of muscle spindles in the plantar lumbrical muscles of untreated rats and in rats 4 and 6 weeks after a single phenol block. Spindles were identified by the immunoreactivity of nuclear bag(1) fibers to slow tonic myosin (antibody
ALD
19). The integrity of the sensory and motor reinnervation of spindles was evaluated using a monoclonal antibody specific for a high molecular weight neurofilament protein. Four weeks after phenol block, muscle spindles were difficult to find, as their immunoreactivity to antibody
ALD
19 was reduced. In those spindles studied, most (>80%) were completely denervated. The remainder of which were innervated by afferents only. None received efferent (gamma) innervation. After 6 weeks, spindles were readily identified and nearly all (>90%) received recognizable afferent innervation. A much smaller number (38%) received gamma innervation. Phenol block thus results in a complete denervation of muscle spindles, followed by a fairly rapid sensory reinnervation. Reinnervation by gamma motor neurons is either incomplete or significantly delayed.
...
PMID:Muscle spindle reinnervation following phenol block. 1086 33
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
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