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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (
muscular dystrophy
)
5,870
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Congenital malformations and inherited disorders constitute a substantial proportion of the afflictions seen in sheep and goats. Of these, malformations tend to be similar in both species, whereas the genetic diseases encountered to date, with the exception of a few, are different. Of the 28 genetic diseases of sheep and goats described in this review, 60% and 62.5%, respectively, are monogenic disorders. For a majority of the monogenic recessive disorders encountered in these species, the carrier state is not detectable at present, whereas in others, in which a biochemical lesion is known (dermatosparaxis, erythrocyte glutathione deficiency, globoid cell leukodystrophy and glycogen storage disease), the carrier state is detectable with the aid of enzyme and surface protein markers. The latter group and the dominant disorders (anury, cataract, glomerulonephritis, and lethal grey in sheep;
gynecomastia
and anotia-microtia complex in goats) are easy to eliminate through selective breeding. The polygenic disorders (entropion, epidermolysis bullosa, hereditary chondrodysplasia, and
muscular dystrophy
of sheep, and udder problems in goats) are more difficult to eradicate, because the mutant genes responsible for these traits generally do not declare themselves until inbreeding brings together a critical concentration to create a health crisis in some, whereas others, which are only short of a few of these mutant genes, might go totally unaffected and therefore undetected. Chromosome defects of the structural nature (translocations) seen in sheep and goats generally create meiotic disturbances, which in a majority of cases lead to subfertility, whereas sex chromosome aneuploids are generally sterile.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:Genetic diseases of sheep and goats. 224 74
We report a 54-year-old man with progressive proximal muscle atrophy and
gynecomastia
. The patient had an insidious onset of weakness in his lower extremities at age 14, in that he noted a difficulty in standing up from a chair. Soon after he noted some difficulty in climbing up stairs. At age 35, he noted weakness in his arms; his weakness slowly progressed in that he became unable to walk or stand alone before 40 years of age. He also noted
gynecomastia
at that age. He was admitted to our hospital for the work up on September 16, 1993, when he was 54-year-old. On admission, he was alert and oriented; his BP was 150/70 mmHg; he had bilateral
gynecomastia
, however, no other skeletal deformities were found. On neurologic examination, he was mentally sound without dementia, and his higher cerebral functions were normal. Cranial nerves also appeared intact without facial atrophy, dysarthria, or dysphagia; no atrophy was noted in the tongue. He had marked muscle atrophy in both upper and lower extremities more marked in the proximal portions; muscle strength was approximately in the range of 2/5 to 3/5 in the proximal parts, and 4/5 in the distal parts in both upper and lower extremities. No fasciculation was noted; muscle tone was flaccid; no ataxia was present. Deep reflexes were either lost or markedly diminished. No Babinski sign was noted. Sensation was intact. Laboratory examination revealed normal blood counts; serum CK was slightly increased to 131 IU/l; ECG showed complete right bundle branch block; EMG revealed no active units in the right biceps brachii, deltoid, quadriceps femoris, and triceps surae muscles; in other muscles tested, motor unit potentials of low amplitude and short duration were seen; in the right tibialis anterior muscle, however, motor unit potentials with an amplitude up to 6 m V were also seen. Nerve conduction velocities were normal. A diagnostic procedure was performed. He was discussed in the neurological CPC, and the chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that this patient had Becker type of progressive
muscular dystrophy
. In her differential diagnosis, the possibility of Kennedy-Alter-Sung syndrome was discussed because this patient had
gynecomastia
. However, the discussant excluded that possibility because of absence of both bulbar symptoms and typical neurogenic changes in his EMG. The diagnostic procedure was a muscle biopsy on the left tibialis anterior muscle. Histologic observation on HE stained specimens revealed marked inequality in the muscle fiber diameters, increase in endomysial nuclei, proliferation of connective tissue, and fiber splitting.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A 54-year-old man with progressive proximal muscle atrophy and gynecomastia]. 766 8
Recessive X-linked amyotrophic spinobulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA) or Kennedy disease is a neuroendocrine disorder with a slowly progressive phenotype, caused by an expansion of a polymorphic tandem CAG repeat of the androgen receptor gene. Classical clinical hallmarks include onset in the third decade of life, weakness and wasting predominantly in proximal extremity muscles, variable weakness of bulbar muscles, abundant muscle fasciculations, sensory nerve action potential abnormalities and signs of androgen insensitivity such as
gynecomastia
and testicular atrophy. The diagnosis has been recently made easier by the availability of genetic testing but Kennedy disease is probably still underdiagnosed because of phenotypic variability. We report 11 new cases, of which seven had atypical initial manifestations presenting respectively with myasthenia, cramps and fasciculation syndrome, polyneuropathy, post-trauma monomelic neuronopathy, effort-dependent muscle intolerance and/or
muscular dystrophy
, with the aim to enlarge the phenotypic spectrum of the published series.
...
PMID:[Multiple phenotypic manifestations of X-linked spinobulbar muscular atrophy]. 1866 19