Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (muscular dystrophy)
5,870 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Hemopexin, a serum glycoprotein that binds free heme and transports it to hepatic parenchymal cells, has been measured by radial immunodiffusion. We have confirmed elevation of serum hemopexin concentration in Duchenne's muscular dystrophy patients and carries, and demonstrated elevations in dermatomyositis/polymyositis and myasthenia gravis, but not in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis. In monkeys, elevations of hemopexin levels were specifically induced by hematin injections, muscle-crush, or myoglobin injections. Myoglobin leakage is the likely explanation of hemopexin level elevation in Duchenne's dystrophy patients and carriers and in dermatomyositis/polymyositis. In myasthenia gravis there might be a slight myoglobin leakage not heretofore suspected; or, the elevation of hemopexin levels might be a new reflection of a dysimmune state in myasthenia gravis, and perhaps as such is a further incrementing factor in dermatomyositis/polymyositis. Hemopexin, presumably as a longer-phase reactant, is sometimes an index of neuromuscular disease when other data are negative or equivocal.
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PMID:Elevations of hemopexin levels in neuromuscular disease. 9 25

The dynamics of selenium in the blood serum of 20 lambs of the Merino breed, traditionally reared, was followed from birth to weaning at the age of 110 days. Results of the observations revealed that the highest concentration of serum selenium was determined in lambs just after delivery (0.25 ppm) and the level was maintained throughout the period of colostral nutrition. In the period between the 15th and 60th day low selenium values (0.06-0.13 ppm) were recorded, which implies a critical period in relation to the origin of muscular dystrophy. At the end of the observations there appeared a significant selenium content increase in the blood serum of lambs.
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PMID:[Selenium dynamics in the blood of lambs from birth to weaning using traditional rearing technics]. 10 9

The term 'long term neurological cripple' is an unattractive and yet an all embracing one, covering a wide spectrum of disorders from spina bifida or cerebral palsy with or without associated epilepsy and behavioural and learning problems, through muscular dystrophy, multiple sclerosis, and motor neurone disease, to the effects of head injury, cerebrovascular lesions and the degenerative disorders of later life such as Parkinson's disease and the senile and presenile dementias. Whilst many of the problems are common to several of these entities, each has its own particular aspects.
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PMID:The support of the long term neurological cripple. 10 16

The authors report four cases of metabolic cardiomyopathy with lipid infiltration diagnosed by skeletal muscle and myocardial biopsy in children with no clinical signs of muscular dystrophy. Normal or increased serum and urinary carnitine levels excluded a primary carnitine deficiency. A deficiency in muscular-palmityl-carnitine-transferase was demonstrated. This pathogenic mechanism may be an indication for treatment with carnitine, but the results are less spectacular than in primary carnitine deficiency states.
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PMID:[Primary cardiomyopathy in children with lipid infiltration of the myocardium and skeletal muscles and demonstration of a palmityl-carnitine transferase deficiency. Apropos of 4 cases]. 11 6

The case of a girl who presented with gastrointestinal upsets with nausea, vomiting and occasional hypoglycaemic attacks during childhood is reported. At about 5 years of age generalised muscular weakness with severe amyotrophy, cardiomegaly with a cardiothoracic ratio of 0,63, left ventricular hypertrophy on electrocardiography and left ventricular dilatation with hypokinesis on echocardiography were observed. A few weeks later she developed severe cardiac failure. Muscle biopsy showed muscular dystrophy with lipid infiltration due to carnitine deficiency )serum carnitine 9 nmoles/ml, normal values: 46 +/- 6,9 nmoles/ml; muscle carnitine 0,27 nmoles/mg, normal values: 3,0 +/- 0,79 nmoles/mg fresh frozen weight). She improved rapidly with carnitine chlorhydrate and a diet low in lipids and high in medium chain triglycerides. Regression of muscular symptoms and cardiac failure was observed. After 13 months follow-up with no tonicardiac therapy she is much improved; the signs of heart failure have disappeared, the cardiothoracic ratio is now 0,55 and the electrocardiogramme and echocardiogramme are normal.
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PMID:[Lipidic myopathy with severe cardiomyopathy caused by a generalized carnitine deficiency. Favourable course during carnitine hydrochloride treatment]. 11 7

Fukuyama type Congenital Muscular Dystrophy, inherited autosomal-recessively, is characterized by muscular dystrophy associated with severe mental retardation and epileptic convulsions. By examining 56 cases, followed for more than three years, 75 EEG records from 40 patients and visual evoked potentials from 11 patients with reference to autopsied materials, the authors aimed at clarifying the causative relationship between congenital central nervous system (CNS) lesions and childhood epilepsy. In 36 out of 56 cases diffuse epileptic seizures were observed with onset at 1.64 +/- 1.01 years average. In 32/36 cases seizures developed before 3 years of age. In 51/75 EEGs focal paroxysmal discharges (FPD), fronto-contro-parietal in younger and centro-occipital in older cases, were observed. Abnormal basic activities (ABA), diffuse-alpha-activity and/or abundant or extreme spindles, were observed more often in older than younger cases. The incidence of FPD was similar between convulsive and non-convulsive cases, but ABA predominated in the former, VEP revealed abnormal findings in 64% of 11 cases examined. Of the CNS pathology, consisting of cerebral and cerebellar gyral abnormalities and a hypoplastic corticospinal tract, the gyral lesions (verrucous polymicrogyria with adhesions of adjacent gyri and cellular disarrangement) were thought to be lesions causing epilepsy. Cortical nonprogressive gyral lesions occurring around the second trimester could cause FPD and clinical diffuse epileptic seizures develop with other factors concerned with ABA.
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PMID:Fukuyama type congenital muscular dystrophy as a natural model of childhood epilepsy. 12 66

Endogenous membrane protein kinase activity in fresh erythrocyte ghosts is altered in myotonic muscular dystrophy. Phosphorylation of erythrocyte Component a, which migrates with an apparent molecular weight of 90,000 to 100,000, is significantly reduced compared to age- and sex-matched controls. The difference in endogenous membrane protein kinase activity in fresh RBC membranes lends confirmation to the suggestion that myotonic dystrophy is a disease of widespread membrane alterations.
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PMID:Phosphorylation of component a of the human erythrocyte membrane in myotonic muscular dystrophy. 12 92

The technique of parabiotic reinnervation has been used to test directly the neurogenic theory of the aetiology of muscular dystrophy in mice. Dystrophic muscles contain significantly fewer muscle fibres than their normal controls; they also have a much broader spectrum of fibre size because of a much higher proportion of very small fibres and are poorly differentiated into histochemical fibre types. These criteria were used to assess whether there was any amelioration of the dystrophic process in response to the introduction of a normal nerve supply, or whether dystrophic changes were induced in normal muscle reinnervated with a dystrophic nerve. Self-reinnervated normal and dystrophic TA and EDL muscles contained the same numbers of fibres as unoperated controls. The process of parabiosis alone resulted in no changes in normal or dystrophic muscles. In the process of parabiotic reinnervation, the efficiency of the reinnervation process was not affected by the parabiotic state. The parabiotic reinnervation of dystrophic muscle by normal nerve resulted in no significant increase in fibre numbers and the spectrum of fibre sizes was essentially the same as in unoperated dystrophic muscle. The parabiotic reinnervation of normal muscle by dystrophic nerve resulted in a reduction of fibre numbers in only some of the muscles examined. However, the spectrum of fibre diameters remained essentially normal, and the differentiation of the fibres into histochemical fibre types was characteristic of reinnervated normal muscle. There was a marked absence of necrosis or of other histological signs of dystrophy in these muscles. Since there was no positive evidence to show that conversion of normal to dystrophic, or dystrophic to normal muscle occurred under the influence of parabiotic nerve transposition, two alternative conclusions were admissible. Firstly, the influence of dystrophic nerve upon muscle may be operative in fetal or neonatal life and may be irreversible by means of the subsequent introduction of a normal nerve supply. Secondly, the dystrophic state in muscle may be determined by genetic factors independent of nerve supply.
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PMID:Parabiotic reinnervation in normal and dystrophic mice. Part 2. Morphological studies. 12 20

A comparative study was carried out in the properties of ATPase system of the skeletal muscle nuclei in the rabbits in norm and with experimental muscular dystrophy conditioned by E-avitaminosis. It is shown that in the system, containing 1.5 mM of MgCl2, ATPase system of the nuclei is activated by sodium and potassium ions. In norm maximum activation is observed with their presence in the medium, the concentration being 80 and 70 mM, respectively. With experimental muscular dystrophy maximum activating concentrations decrease and are equal for both cations - 30 mM. Activation of the enzymatic system by these ions is specific because the introduction of equimolar quantities of cholin-chloride or lithium, cesium ions instead of sodium ions into the incubation medium evokes no activation of the ATPase system of the rabbit skeletal muscles both in norm and with experimental muscular dystrophy. A simultaneous presence of sodium and potassium ions in optimum concentrations in the incubation medium makes for an increase of ATPase activity to the same extent as the presence of one of these cations. Oubain, a specific inhibitor of Mg2+, Na+, K+- ATPase, taken in the concentrations of 10(-4) and 10(-3) M did not decrease the intensity of ATP hydrolysis and its activation conditioned by the presence of sodium or potassium. A conclusion is made that Mg2+, Na+, K+-ATPase taking part in the work of "sodium pump" is absent in the nuclei of skeletal muscles.
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PMID:[Availability of Mg2+, Na+, and K+-ATPase in the nuclei of the skeletal muscles of rabbits normally and during experimental muscular dystrophy]. 12 69

The author describes his experiences as the leader of a therapy group for adolescents with muscular dystrophy. The group progressed through discernible stages of dependence-flight, independence, regression, interdependence, disenchantment, and resolution. By the end of the experience, the group had developed more meaningful communication and interrelationships than they had exhibited previously. The author suggests that such groups could be helpful for other chronically disabled adolescents.
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PMID:A group experience with chronically disabled adolescents. 12 99


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