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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (muscular dystrophy)
5,870 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This joint work has studied the cardiomyopathies occurring in hereditary neuro-muscular disorders (270 cases). The Duchenne type of disorder (74 cases) was responsible for asystole (4 cases), for cardiomegaly, and especially for abnormalities of the ECG (59 cases)--Q waves and large R waves in V1 and V6. The cardiomyopathy was of the hypokinetic type, with histological evidence of degeneration of the myocardial fibres. Dystrophia myotonica of Steinart (23 cases) caused conductive disorders (17 cases) which were either atrioventricular or intra-ventricular or both. Studies of the His pathway confirmed that these abnormalities were more diffuse in 5 cases. The main histological feature was interstitial fibrosis. There was a high risk of sudden death; ECG follow-up should be close. Friedreich's disease (20 cases) in its complete form led to later development of obstructive cardiomyopathy, with a systolic ejection murmur, cardiomegaly, and abnormalities of the ECG--left ventricular hypertrophy in the vertical axis, right ventricular and septal hypertrophy, repolarisation disorders similar to those found in coronary artery disease. Histology showed hypertrophy with degeneration of the myocardial fibres and interstitial fibrosis. This complete form was rare (7 cases out of 20); on the other hand, ECG abnormalites were very common (16 cases out of 20). The authors have tried to study the relationships between primary cardiomyopathies (50 cases) and peripheral neuromuscular disorders. 17 of the 39 peripheral muscle biopsies were abnormal, but a well-defined muscular dystrophy could not be found in them.
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PMID:[The myocardiopathies of hereditary neuro-muscular diseases]. 9 58

The microvasculature of the iris was studied in 35 patients with neuromuscular disease and 14 control subjects, using anterior segment fluorescein angiography. Myotonic muscular dystrophy, in which a variety of ocular changes have previously been reported, was found to be associated with both focal and generalized vascular abnormalities. Changes were seen in the fluorescein angiograms of all nine of the myotonic dystrophy patients in which the iris vessels could be seen. No evidence of a microcirculatory disorder was seen in patients with Duchenne's dystrophy, for which a vascular pathogenesis has been proposed. The angiograms of patients with limb-girdle dystrophy, facioscapulohumeral dystrophy, and Friedreich's ataxia were also normal.
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PMID:Abnormal iris vasculature in myotonic dystrophy. An anterior segment angiographic study. 63 56

This study presents the findings from a neuroradiological investigation of the cervical spinal canal in a number of diseases of the nervous system. It concerns the measurement of the sagittal and transversal diameters of the spinal canal at levels C3 through C6. The material for this investigation was made up of two main groups: A) 400 controls and B) 110 patients. The second group consisted of the following: 1) 20 patients suffering from Friedreich's Ataxia, 2) 14 patients with Steinert's disease, 3) 44 patients with lateral amyotrophic sclerosis, 4) 14 patients suffering from Charcot-Marie-Tooth's disease, and 5) 18 patients with muscular dystrophy. The results are as follow: 1) In patients with Friedreich's Ataxia both the sagittal and transversal diameters are smaller than those of the controls. 2) On the contrary, in Charcot-Marie-Tooth's disease the sagittal diameter is larger than the controls. 3) The transversal diameter in patients with muscular dystrophy is smaller than the controls and 4) the sagittal diameter of the vertebral canal decreases from the top (C3) downwards (C6) while the transversal diameter increases.
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PMID:[Radiological study of the cervical spinal column in some neurological degenerative diseases (author's transl)]. 85 12

This is a clinical report of a rare case of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease associated with dilated cardiomyopathy. A seventy-seven-year-old Japanese male first visited our outpatient clinic with a ten-year history of muscular weakness in his bilateral lower extremities and gait disturbance characterized by classical features of peroneal muscular atrophy and inverted champagne bottle legs. Biopsy findings of the m. quadriceps femoris and the n. gastrocnemius revealed clustered atrophy of myofibrils and segmental demyelinization mingled with remyelinization. Because of his other problem of dilated cardiomyopathy, he had been treated with salt restriction, digitalis, diuretics and vasodilators, until his third hospitalization, when he developed terminal stage of severe congestive heart failure. Despite our intensive cardiac care, the patient died because of profound pump failure. Autopsy findings disclosed a remarkably dilated left ventricular chamber and an increased total heart weight of 600 grams. Grossly, the cross sectional view of the left ventricle revealed diffuse, but not homogenous fibrosis that was most prominent in the posterior wall. On light microscopic examination, the left ventricular myocardium revealed diffusely scattered muscular degeneration interlaced with fibrosis. Although large epicardial coronary arteries revealed only mild intimal atheromatous thickening, most of the small intramuscular coronary arteries were free from atherosclerosis. Neither diabetic nor amyloid lesions could be detected. It has been well known that cardiomyopathy is often associated with various forms of muscular dystrophy and Friedreich's ataxia.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease associated with dilated cardiomyopathy: an autopsy case report]. 204 12

Genetic cardiac dysrhythmias, although rare in pediatrics, may be often the first manifestation of the main disease or may determine the vital prognosis in some of these diseases (e. g. Friedreich's ataxia and Duchenne's progressive muscular dystrophy). This is more so, as at present, technical possibilities of implanting pacemakers, at ever smaller ages, are ever so great. The first part of the paper deals with these aspects, reviews, and analyses a large variety of genotypic diseases (metabolism genetic diseases, cardio-skeletal syndromes, neuromuscular diseases, cardio-auditory syndromes, etc.) and also a series of tachydysrhythmias or isolated familial conduction disturbances (blocks). Within each entity, the authors describe the main elements allowing the diagnosis, with special references on the rhythm and cardiac conduction disturbances that may appear, and with the necessary therapeutical considerations. The second part of the material presented is devoted to the cardiac dysrhythmias following the surgical intervention on heart, frequently used at present in the congenital heart diseases, at ever smaller ages due to the special progress in anesthesia and intensive care techniques. Correlation of various types of surgeries with the anatomical lesions of the excitation-conduction system they can involve, makes easier the understanding of the nature and appearance risks of some postsurgical rhythm and cardiac conduction disturbances. The distinction is made between early postsurgical dysrhythmias--that are often episodic--and tardy dysrhythmias that may relapse or become chronic, thus raising difficult treatment problems and sometimes require a secondary pacemaker implantation, given the major handicap they represent for the child.
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PMID:[Genetic cardiac dysrhythmias and the sequelae of heart surgery in children]. 251 77

We evaluated the frequency of cerebral infarction in 131 patients with Duchenne's muscular dystrophy, myotonic dystrophy, Becker's muscular dystrophy, or Friedreich's ataxia. Electrocardiographic abnormalities were found in 83% of patients with Duchenne's muscular dystrophy, 56% with myotonic dystrophy, 50% with Becker's muscular dystrophy, and 25% with Friedreich's ataxia. Atrial flutter occurred in 2.3% of the patients, and atrial fibrillation in only 0.9%. Evidence of cerebral infarction was found in only 2 patients (1.5%). Both patients had cardiomyopathy and either atrial fibrillation or flutter. Despite frequent cardiac involvement, cerebral infarction is an uncommon occurrence in patients with inherited neuromuscular diseases.
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PMID:Frequency of cerebral infarction in patients with inherited neuromuscular diseases. 360 8

Zinc and taurine were measured in urine in the fasting state and following a 4mg/kg load of taurine in subjects with Friedreich's Ataxia (FA), and healthy controls (C), and subjects with Duchenne type muscular dystrophy (MD). Of the FA, 25% had increased fasting excretion of zinc, and 50% had increased excretion of zinc following the taurine load. The MD subjects all had increased zinc excretion at all times. The increased zinc excretion did not correlate with increased excretion of taurine. As an index of zinc deficiency, uptake of zinc by erythrocytes was measured in all subjects and in heterozygotes for FA. The pattern of uptake was abnormal for FA and heterozygotes. Hair analysis for zinc showed that 10 of the 12 FA subjects had low values. We conclude that significant abnormalities in zinc metabolism exist in some, but not all cases of FA. The evidence available does not permit definition of the cause of these abnormalities, whether zinc deficiency or abnormal zinc transport is the primary factor.
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PMID:Zinc and taurine in Friedreich's ataxia. 650 14

The molecular genetic basis of a large group of monogenic hereditary neurological diseases is analyzed. Emphasis is laid on different types of mutations causing Huntington's chorea, autosomal dominant ataxias, Friedreich's disease, dopa-responsive and nondopa-responsive forms of torsion dystonia: the frequencies of these mutations and their molecular characteristics have been first investigated in the Russian population. Relationships between particular genotypes and various clinical variants of these disorders are analyzed. Genetic loci for two novel hereditary diseases of the nervous system, such as X-linked congenital cerebellar hypoplasia and an atypical form of autosomal recessive muscular dystrophy are characterized. Nosological entities of these clinical forms are substantiated in accordance with molecular genetic findings. DNA diagnostic techniques have been developed, which allows medical genetic counselling and prevention of relapses to be made in genetically burden families.
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PMID:[Molecular analysis of hereditary nervous system diseases]. 1057 63

There are many neuromuscular diseases associated with cardiomyopathy. Cardiac involvement with progressive muscular dystrophy (Duchenne and Becker type) and some type of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy were characterized by impaired left ventricular systolic function, such as dilated cardiomyopathy like status. In Friedreich ataxia various types of left ventricular hypertrophy were reported. While in myotonic dystrophy and Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy, conduction disturbance and tachyarrhythmia are common types of cardiac manifestation. The severity of cardiac involvement in these diseases is not necessarily concordant with that of skeletal muscle. Recently the genes of these diseases were identified by linkage analysis. We review cardiac abnormalities of these diseases, especially relationship between severity of cardiac disorder and gene abnormalities.
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PMID:[Secondary cardiomyopathy accompanied by neuromuscular disorders]. 1088 12

Few population studies are available on epidemiological indexes of hereditary ataxias. An investigation on the prevalence rate of these movement disorders is in progress for the Veneto region, the main area of northeast Italy with a population of 4,490,586 inhabitants. The first results of this epidemiological survey concern the province of Padua, which numbers 845,203 residents (January 1, 2002). The prevalence rate of inherited ataxias has been estimated at 93.3 cases per million inhabitants. The most common types appeared to be the autosomal dominant forms, namely spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 and 2, with a prevalence of 24 per 1,000,000. In the same population, with a prevalence rate of 6 per 1,000,000, Friedreich's ataxia was defined as the prominent recessive autosomal form. There were very rare cases of ataxia telangiectasia, ataxia with vitamin E deficiency and cerebellar ataxia with congenital muscular dystrophy, a recently identified autosomal recessive disease.
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PMID:Prevalence of inherited ataxias in the province of Padua, Italy. 1529 93


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