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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (
muscular dystrophy
)
5,870
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Myocardial function was evaluated prospectively by noninvasive methods in 20 boys with clinical, biochemical, muscle biopsy, and electromyographic evidence of Duchenne's progressive
muscular dystrophy
. Auscultatory evidence of a nonejection systolic click suggested mitral valve prolapse (MVP) syndrome in seven patients. Phonocardiography disclosed that the click was mid-systolic in four patients and early in three. Echocardiographic features consistent with this diagnosis were identified in all seven patients and in an additional four. One of these had an apical pansystolic murmur, suggestive of mitral regurgitation, whereas in the other three,
prolapse
of the mitral valve was "silent". Echocardiographic findings included an abrupt midsystolic, posterior motion (greater than 3 mm beyond the CD line) in five patients, multiple sequence echoes in six, and posterior coaptation of the mitral valve near the left atrial wall in six. The features most characteristic of MVP syndrome was a smooth, pansystolic, anteriorly concave (hammock-like) posterior motion deviating more than 3 mm beyond the CD line. Among the remaining nine patients who did not have echocardiographic evidence of prolapsing mitral valve, none had an early, middle or late nonejection systolic click or a heart murmur, although four patients in this group had moderate to severe scoliosis. These observations document of occurrence of MVP syndrome in children with Duchenne's
muscular dystrophy
and indicate that its prevalence is high. We speculate that
prolapse
of the mitral valve in these patients is an expression of the underlying cardiomyopathy characteristic of Duchenne's
muscular dystrophy
rather than an isolated, dystrophic involvement of the mitral valve leaflets.
...
PMID:Mitral valve prolapse syndrome in children with Duchenne's progressive muscular dystrophy. 44 Jul 88
A four-year-old female child with Kugelberg-Welander syndrome has been presented. She demonstrated
ptosis
, exotropia, and decreased vision with unilateral high myopia. Unlike the Werdnig-Hoffman type of spinal
muscular dystrophy
Kugelberg-Welander disease has a protracted, somewhat benign course, necessitating proper evaluation and care of the ocular problems of these patients. The most common among these problems are the presence of severe to moderate
ptosis
and strabismus which appears usually to be an exotropia.
...
PMID:Ocular findings in a patient with Kugelberg-Welander syndrome: a case report. 73 21
Progressive external ophthalmoplegia is a myopathic alteration of slow progression which affects the extrinsic ocular muscles;
ptosis
of the eyelid being the most characteristic sign. Nowadays, it is included as type of
muscular dystrophy
. Even though mitochondrial changes have been described, they are not specific to this disease. 2 cases are described in this paper, commenting on clinical, electromyographic and pathological aspects.
...
PMID:[Progressive external ophthalmoplegia]. 210 14
A case of bilateral eyelid
ptosis
was observed in a woman aged 35. She had also some weakness of the muscles of the upper extremities and periodic dysphagia. These symptoms progressed gradually during 20 years. The clinical manifestations and the results of other investigations (EMG, muscle biopsy) made possible the diagnosis of sporadic ophthalmic form of progressive
muscular dystrophy
.
...
PMID:[A case of ophthalmic manifestations in progressive muscular dystrophy]. 236 7
A rare case of progressive bilateral
ptosis
with dysphagia in a 70-year-old man is presented. There were similar symptoms in other members of the family. The patient was diagnosed as having oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy, a rare autosomal dominant disorder involving progressive
muscular dystrophy
, one of the chronic external ophthalmoplegic syndromes. There had been slowly progressive bilateral
ptosis
and there was almost no levator palpebra muscular activity left, resulting in extreme head tilt. A sling suspension operation for the ptotic lids, using autogenous fascia lata, was successful. Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy is essentially a myogenic disorder. Affected muscles are usually those of the pharynx, causing dysphagia, and the levator palpebra muscles. Rarely are other skeletal muscles involved. The sling operation gives direct support to the dystrophic malfunctioning levator muscles by using the frontalis muscles to raise the ptotic lids, thus improving visual ability.
...
PMID:[Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy]. 238 59
Histological specimens of eyelids from patients with congenital genuine
ptosis
and acquired involutional
ptosis
are compared. In congenital
ptosis
there is evidence of true
muscular dystrophy
of the levator muscle as demonstrated by: loss of cross striations, random decrease in muscle fibre diameter, sarcolemmal retraction, nuclei alignment, and fibrous and fatty tissue displacement of the striated fibres. In involutional
ptosis
disinsertion of the levator aponeurosis from its normal insertion on the inferior-anterior surface of the tarsus is demonstrated. Correlation between clinical presentation and surgical correction is explained in light of these findings.
...
PMID:Histological changes in congenital and acquired blepharoptosis. 319 71
Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy is a localized or restricted variety of
muscular dystrophy
, characterized by bilateral
ptosis
, myopathic facies, external ophthalmoplegia and dysphagia. A patient with this unusual myopathy is described and detailed esophageal motility studies are presented that provide conclusive evidence of both striated and smooth muscle involvement.Because these unusual localized forms of
muscular dystrophy
exist and may be of late onset, previous rigid concepts concerning the dystrophies should be discarded.
...
PMID:Late-onset muscle dystrophy: oculopharyngoesophageal variety. 594 Mar 25
A family is presented in which 12 members over 3 generations have been affected by oculopharyngeal dystrophy. The clinical features of 7 affected members are described. All developed
ptosis
in middle age and dysphagia later in the clinical course. Four had mild bilateral facial weakness and mild proximal weakness. Extra-ocular movements were normal in all. A deltoid muscle biopsy from a 71-year-old affected male showed nonspecific myopathic features (random variation in muscle fibre size and atrophy of type 2A and 2B fibres). The skeletal muscles and striated musculature of the pharynx and upper oesophagus of a 75-year-old affected female examined at postmortem showed histological myopathic changes (loss of muscle fibres, variation in size of fibres with scattered small angular and rounded 'giant' muscle fibres, proliferation and central migration of sarcolemmal nuclei, increase in fat and fibrous tissue and occasional fibres undergoing segmental degeneration). This appearance was consistent with a
muscular dystrophy
of chronic type. Detailed neuropathological examination of the brain stem nuclei was normal. The spinal cord showed an unusual hydromyelia affecting C7 to T4 segments.
...
PMID:Oculopharyngeal dystrophy: clinicopathological study of an Australian family. 656 18
The author reports on four patients (one male, three females) from the same kindred with a newly recognized autosomal recessive condition involving striated and smooth muscle that has been designated oculogastrointestinal
muscular dystrophy
. It is characterized by
ptosis
, ophthalmoplegia, and progressive intestinal pseudo-obstruction leading to malnutrition and death before 30 y. Autopsy studies in two cases showed a severe primary myopathy of smooth muscles of the stomach and intestine with intact myenteric plexus and vagus nerves. The proposita notably had myopathic changes of striated muscles but also involvement of the peripheral nerves and central nervous system characterized by demyelinating and axonal neuropathy and focal spongiform degeneration of the posterior columns.
...
PMID:Oculogastrointestinal muscular dystrophy. 685 10
The oculopharyngeal syndrome (OPS) is a rare variant of
muscular dystrophy
characterized by progressive
ptosis
and dysphagia. Previous esophageal motility studies in OPS have yielded conflicting results because of low-fidelity esophageal recording systems. Although cricopharyngeal myotomy improves symptoms, accurate postoperative manometric findings have not been reported. Using a low-compliance, high-fidelity system and a radially oriented esophageal motility catheter in an OPS patient we found a hypertonic upper esophageal sphincter (UES), a hypotonic proximal esophagus, and elevated pressures in the distal two-thirds with prolonged duration of contraction. Clinical improvement followed myotomy. We also found a similar manometric pattern but a normotensive UES in an asymptomatic sibling.
...
PMID:Hypertonic upper esophageal sphincter in the oculopharyngeal syndrome. 734 59
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