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Query: UMLS:C0026838 (spasticity)
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The neuropathology of the Rett syndrome is summarized utilizing a format of clinical pathological correlations, describing the pathology at specific anatomic sites which could correlate with the well defined clinical signs and symptoms in the Rett syndrome; decreased head and body size, autism, gait dysfunction, spasticity, movement and breathing disorder. Published reports of altered morphology in the cerebral cortex, basal ganglia, substantia nigra, cerebellum, spinal cord, muscle, nerve, pituitary gland and somatic organs are supplemented by the author's observations. These include studies of dendritic morphology employing Scholl analysis of Golgi preparation, and quantitation of cerebellar Purkinje cells. The possible pathoetiology of the Rett syndrome is considered, particularly, in relation to the ultrastructural demonstration of altered mitochondria and accumulations of lipidic bodies in several tissues.
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PMID:The neuropathology of the Rett syndrome. 162 39

A chart review of 23 girls diagnosed with the Rett syndrome (RS), seen at Oregon Health Sciences University-Child Development and Rehabilitation Center was conducted to identify specific motor problems. Hypotonia, loss of transitional movements, ataxia, motor apraxia, spasticity, kyphoscoliosis, and foot deformities proved to be characteristics of this syndrome. Clinical experience of the author and other therapists involved in the treatment of girls with RS suggests that physical therapy is useful in the management of these patients to maintain or increase motor skills and control deformities. Therapy techniques the author has found useful are presented and responses unique to RS patients are described.
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PMID:Motor disabilities in the Rett syndrome and physical therapy strategies. 234 13

Two young males in their thirties are reported with a clinical history and examination indistinguishable from typical females with the Rett syndrome. Both had normal early development. The first patient had a regression by the end of the second year. He was late in walking, had prominent hand-wringing from the age of 4 years, and non-progressive dystonia from the age of 14 years. He is still ambulatory. Seizures which started at the age of 18 months have been easily controlled. The second patient has had a severe seizure disorder since the age of 7 months. In his early teens, he lost ambulation and his height and weight fell below the 2nd percentile. He has severe foot dystonia without spasticity. Both patients have a normal head size and no evidence of atrophy on a CT scan of the brain. Both had kyphoscoliosis in their teens. It is difficult to evaluate the incidence of such cases. Little attention being paid to the normal early development, they hide behind vague diagnoses such as cerebral palsy, static encephalopathy, and behavior disorder. Dystonia is often confused with spasticity, the lack of paralysis is not appreciated, apraxia and hand wringing are assumed to be self-stimulatory behaviors.
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PMID:The Rett syndrome in males. 234 22

Rett syndrome is a progressive neurologic condition, affecting only girls and characterized by acquired microcephaly, dementia, seizures, autistic behavior, spontaneous hyperventilation, spasticity, hyperreflexia and a peculiar characteristic stereotypic movement disorder. A review of 35 EEGs (obtained over 0-8.5 years of follow-up) in 9 such patients revealed a striking age-related change in the electroencephalographic pattern. Often initially normal, the EEG shows a variety of epileptiform abnormalities but intact background activity between 3 and 5 years. Between 5 and 10 years of age, the background activity exhibits some slowing, epileptiform abnormalities persist and paroxysmal high-amplitude theta activity occurs over extended periods, related to spontaneous hyperventilation. After 10 years, there is a general reduction in the epileptiform activity but further slowing of the background rhythms is usually observed. As all other laboratory tests are mostly normal in Rett syndrome, EEG promises to be a powerful tool in confirming the diagnosis in a compatible setting, in follow-up of these patients, and in objective evaluation of any future therapeutic interventional modalities in this serious and common condition.
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PMID:Electroencephalographic findings in Rett syndrome. 242 89

Diagnostic criteria for Rett syndrome (RS) were developed by representatives of the International Rett Syndrome Association and the Centers for Disease Control for use in future clinical and epidemiological studies. Necessary criteria are: normal prenatal and perinatal period; normal psychomotor development through the first 6 months of life; normal head circumference at birth, with subsequent deceleration of head growth; loss of purposeful hand skills; severely impaired expressive and receptive language; apparent severe mental retardation; and gait apraxia and truncal apraxia/ataxia. Supportive criteria include breathing dysfunction, seizures, spasticity, scoliosis, and growth retardation. The diagnosis of RS is considered tentative until 2 to 5 years of age. The differential diagnosis includes other disorders associated with mental retardation, cerebral palsy, and seizure disorders. These diagnostic criteria for RS should foster reliable communication among investigators and enhance the epidemiological and clinical research of this important disorder.
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PMID:Diagnostic criteria for Rett syndrome. The Rett Syndrome Diagnostic Criteria Work Group. 245 7

The purpose of Occupational, Physical and Music Therapy in the treatment of girls with Rett syndrome is to maintain and maximize function. Specific approaches to the problems of ataxia, spasticity, spinal deformity, loss of ambulation, loss of hand function, loss of contact with the environment, feeding, irritability, and family coping are discussed.
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PMID:The role of therapy in Rett syndrome. 308 86

This is a presentation and discussion of clinical and laboratory data obtained on 13 girls with Rett syndrome, a progressive neurological disorder. The condition is thought to be far more prevalent than earlier reported. Family history in one patient showed presence of abnormal hand movements, increasing spasticity and psychomotor retardation in a paternal great grandaunt who died at 7 years. In the absence of chromosomal or biochemical markers, the characteristic disorder of hand movements can be used to distinguish this entity from other mental retardation, cerebral palsy and autism conditions. This report addresses the uniformity of clinical expression and highlights the differences between autism and Rett syndrome. Precocious puberty and respiratory alkalosis were not found in our patients. Feeding disorders were commonly present, and are often difficult to manage. The importance of diagnosis is emphasized as it influences long term management.
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PMID:Rett syndrome: studies of 13 affected girls. 308 8

Rett syndrome is a progressive encephalopathy observed only in girls, who are apparently normal until 6 to 12 months of age. It is characterized by autism, dementia, ataxia, stereotypic hand movements, hyperreflexia, spasticity, and seizures. Eight of 10 females with Rett syndrome evaluated at the Alfred I. duPont Institute have C-shaped neuromuscular curves averaging 29 degrees (range 22-48 degrees). Curve progression was seen in all eight patients and occurred despite bracing in four, averaging 21 degrees (range 12-31 degrees). Five patients, two of whom were braced, have undergone posterior spinal fusion with segmental instrumentation for curves ranging in size from 49 to 105 degrees (average 67 degrees).
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PMID:Scoliosis in Rett syndrome. 335 Sep 46

Rett syndrome, named after Rett's first description in 1966, evolves typically in 3 stages: after normal early psychomotor development up to the age of 6-24 months, stagnation and regression occur over a few months resulting in severe dementia, loss of speech, of social response and of purposeful hand use. This is accompanied by particular stereotyped hand movements and usually also by deceleration of head growth. The further course is often stable for a prolonged period, or only slowly progressive. Common features are seizures, episodic hyperpnea, scoliosis, spasticity and vasomotor disturbances of lower limbs. Rett syndrome has been observed only in girls, all cases (with 2 exceptions) being sporadic. This is probably explained by a X-linked dominant new mutation lethal in males. The pathogenesis is still unknown: no consistent metabolic, morphologic or neuroradiologic abnormalities have been found. According to some epidemiologic investigations, Rett syndrome affects about 1:15,000 girls and is thus responsible for a considerable proportion of severely retarded girls. Within one year the authors have retrospectively diagnosed 15 cases, which is assumed to represent only about a third of patients in Switzerland.
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PMID:[Rett syndrome: a progressive neurological syndrome in girls]. 370 8

Familial cases of Rett syndrome (RS) are rare. No significant differences have been reported in the clinical courses of concordant monozygotic twins with RS. We present the variability of clinical expression in two Japanese sisters with classic RS. The younger sister, currently 6 years and 6 months old, never stood or walked alone, showed severe spasticity, growth retardation, and microcephaly and developed sleep-wake rhythm disturbance from age 4 years and seizures from age 5 years. The elder, currently 7 years and 9 months old, walked alone and had mild spasticity, no growth retardation, normal sleep-wakefulness rhythm and no seizures. RS is most likely to be transmitted as an X-linked dominant, male-lethal (XDML) disorder, although this is still contested. If RS is an XDML disorder, lyonization may account for variability of expression in the sisters.
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PMID:Classical Rett syndrome in sisters: variability of clinical expression. 940 98


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