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Disease
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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)
Ultrastructural and biochemical studies were performed on postmortem material of a 67-year-old woman presenting with proximal muscle weakness in the legs, slurred speech, and mental subnormality. The symptoms began at age 19 and showed extremely slow progression, mimicking progressive
muscular dystrophy
. A brother suffered from a similar chronic neuromuscular disease, and two sisters died at an early age from unknown "nervous" diseases. Autopsy disclosed abundant lipid accumulation in CNS neurons and severe cerebellar cortical atrophy of the granule cell type. Skeletal muscle showed a terminal stage of denervation atrophy with severe lipomatosis; intrafusal fibers of muscle spindles contained lipid deposits. Complex lamellar cytoplasmic inclusions often resembling membranous cytoplasmic bodies or stacked membranes were seen in cells of the brain. In addition, there were various lipopigment bodies, fingerprint profiles, rare polyglucosan bodies, rodlike structures, and filamentous sheaves, particularly in substantia nigra. Accumulation of gangliosides GM2 and GA2 in the cerebral cortex was demonstrated by thin-layer chromatography. Determination of hexosaminidase activity was not possible (formalin-fixed material). This observation, in addition to the cases reported by Navon et al. [1981] and Johnson [1982], is suggested to represent a new phenotype of adult-onset GM2 gangliosidosis referred to as motor neuron disease phenotype, which can be differentiated from other adult-onset lipidoses and motor neuron disorders. Our paper emphasizes the importance of ultrastructural demonstration of lamellar inclusions for the differential diagnosis of
ceroid lipofuscinosis
, and the value of biochemical studies in the diagnostic clarification of atypical neuromuscular disorders.
...
PMID:Adult GM2 gangliosidosis masquerading as slowly progressive muscular atrophy: motor neuron disease phenotype. 716 18
The objective of this study was to screen a dog population from Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany for the presence of mutant alleles associated with hip dysplasia (HD), degenerative myelopathy (DM), exercise-induced collapse (EIC),
neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis
4A (NCL), centronuclear myopathy (HMLR), mucopolysaccharidosis VII (MPS VII), myotonia congenita (MG), gangliosidosis (GM1) and
muscular dystrophy
(Duchenne type) (GRMD). Blood samples (K3EDTA) were collected for genotyping with Kompetitive Allele Specific PCR (n = 476). Allele and genotype frequencies were calculated in those breeds with at least 12 samples (n = 8). Hardy-Weinberg equilibrium was tested. Genetic variation was identified for 4 out of 9 disorders: mutant alleles were found in 49, 15, 3 and 2 breeds for HD, DM, EIC and NCL respectively. Additionally, mutant alleles were identified in crossbreeds for both HD and EIC. For HD, DM, EIC and NCL mutant alleles were newly discovered in 43, 13, 2 and 1 breed(s), respectively. In 9, 2 and 1 breed(s) for DM, EIC and NCL respectively, the mutant allele was detected, but the respective disorder has not been reported in those breeds. For 5 disorders (HMLR, MPS VII, MG, GM1, GRMD), the mutant allele could not be identified in our population. For the other 4 disorders (HD, DM, EIC, NCL), prevalence of associated mutant alleles seems strongly breed dependent. Surprisingly, mutant alleles were found in many breeds where the disorder has not been reported to date.
...
PMID:The prevalence of nine genetic disorders in a dog population from Belgium, the Netherlands and Germany. 2406 50