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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (
muscular dystrophy
)
5,870
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A time lag factor of about five days has been identified in an increased incidence of SIDS in relation to a cold day. Sudden exposure to chilling appeared to trigger skeletal muscle weakness and
renal failure
about five days later in a man found to have only 25% of normal carnitine palmitoyl transferase (CPT) activity in biopsied skeletal muscle. White Muscle Disease is a
muscular dystrophy
in young ruminants which appears about five days after turnout to pasture in the weaned ruminant raised on a diet deficient in vitamin E and selenium (VESD). Pasture has high levels of linoleic and linolenic acid (high PUFA diet) which are modified by developing rumen bacteria. Corbucci investigated the effects of circulatory shock (cardiogenic) on skeletal muscle mitochondrial activity in humans. Cytochrome oxidase activity fell markedly and, in particular, the capacity to oxidase palmitoyl carnitine was greatly reduced. He considered a consequence of this disorder was sequestration of carnitine as acyl carnitine which could not be recycled. Unusual acyl carnitines have been identified in six out of 13 SIDS victims in a USA group. In Finland, researchers identified a rise in SIDS incidence (mostly found in the prone position) after great and rapid temperature changes. Foster found a relationship between 1984 SIDS incidence and the incidence of goitre in World War I troops.
...
PMID:Sudden infant death syndrome (SIDS): a time lag factor. 204 96
The first generation of troponin T ELISA (TnT 1) can yield false-positive results in patients with severe skeletal muscle injury. Therefore, a cardiac-specific second-generation troponin T ELISA (TnT 2) was developed, in which the cross-reactive antibody 1B10 has been replaced by a high-affinity cardiac-specific antibody M11.7. No cross-reactivity of TnT 2 was observed with purified skeletal muscle troponin T (1000 micrograms/L) or in test samples from 43 marathon runners and 24 patients with rhabdomyolysis and highly increased creatine kinase. TnT 2 was increased > 0.2 microgram/L in 5 of 40 patients with
renal failure
and in 4 of 20
muscular dystrophy
patients. The detection limit is 0.012 microgram/L. Day-to-day imprecision (CV) within the range 0.19-14.89 micrograms/L was < 5.8%. In 4955 patients without myocardial damage, 99.6% had TnT < 0.10 microgram/L. Assay comparison (TnT 1 vs TnT 2) over the whole concentration range (i.e., in 323 samples from AMI-suspected patients) showed a slope, intercept, and standard error of estimate (Sey) of 1.18, 0.01 micrograms/L, and 0.81 microgram/L, respectively.
...
PMID:Improved troponin T ELISA specific for cardiac troponin T isoform: assay development and analytical and clinical validation. 906 83
Cardiac troponin T (cTnT) in serum is a highly sensitive and specific marker for myocardial damage. Quantitative immunoassays take 9 min. A rapid test (TropT, CardiacT) using plasma detects cTnT concentrations above 0.10 microg/l within 15 min. Both assays are specific for the cardiac isoform. In a study using the maximal values from serial sampling in 502 infarction-suspected patients, we found a diagnostic sensitivity for non-Q- and Q-wave infarctions of 100%, with a specificity of 99%. cTnT has been shown to be a powerful prognostic marker for risk stratification in acute coronary syndromes. In 30-40% of patients with unstable angina, cTnT > or = 0.10 microg/l detects minor myocardial damage (MMD) with poor prognosis. False positives may be found in certain skeletal muscle diseases, such as polymyositis and Duchenne's
muscular dystrophy
. Constantly increased values in
renal failure
may be due to uremic cardiomyositis. Even in uremia, a rapid increase of cTnT will indicate acute myocardial damage. We propose a diagnostic strategy based on timed, parallel determinations of myoglobin + cTnT.
...
PMID:Troponin T: a sensitive and specific diagnostic and prognostic marker of myocardial damage. 958 56
The reduced growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor-I concentrations in growth hormone deficiency and normal ageing are associated with reduced muscle mass and strength, and slower muscle protein synthesis. Recent research has addressed the hypothesis that growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor-I have an anabolic effect in adults, including the elderly. These hormones stimulate whole-body and muscle protein synthesis, at least under some conditions. There is increasing evidence to justify long-term administration of growth hormone to promote muscle growth in growth hormone deficient adults. However, the long-term effects on muscle mass and function in the elderly do not seem beneficial enough to justify widespread hormone replacement therapy. These hormones may be useful anabolic agents to counteract muscle wasting under other conditions, including surgical stress,
renal failure
,
muscular dystrophy
, glucocorticoid administration and HIV infection, but more clinical trials are needed to determine the functional significance of the protein anabolic effects under these conditions.
...
PMID:Growth hormone and insulin-like growth factor-I as anabolic agents. 1056 58
Rhabdomyolysis is a relatively common condition that may occur intermittently in chronic and inflammatory myopathy,
muscular dystrophy
, and metabolic myopathy. Rhabdomyolysis can also present acutely in otherwise healthy individuals. The list of etiologies for acute muscle cell lysis is enormous, with new causes described yearly. Series on acute pediatric rhabdomyolysis have not yet been published. This article describes a retrospective review of children admitted to the authors' institution during an 8-year period in whom rhabdomyolysis was recognized as a complication during their hospital stay. Patients with intermittent or relapsing rhabdomyolysis were excluded. Nineteen children were identified. Trauma (five cases), nonketotic hyperosmolar coma (two cases), viral myositis (two cases), dystonia (two cases), and malignant hyperthermia-related conditions (two cases) were the most common causes of rhabdomyolysis. Acute renal failure was the most frequent complication, occurring in 42% of cases. The mean age of
renal failure
patients was 13.9 years, compared to 8 years for non-
renal failure
children. Careful assessment of the initial urinalysis would have suggested a diagnosis of rhabdomyolysis in 9 of 16 patients tested.
...
PMID:Acute pediatric rhabdomyolysis. 1080 87
Yanase Pharmacy Co., Ltd. actively provides home health care intervention. The present study examined the effects of drug management guidance provided as home-visit-based health care support for elderly patients living in rented housing. The subjects were 117 patients who moved into rented accommodation for the elderly between June 2009 and February 2012, and who received drug administration guidance. The majority of the subjects had intractable diseases: 74(63%)were terminally ill with cancer, 7(6%)had amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, and 2(2%)had
muscular dystrophy
. Home-visit-based support included accompanying physicians' visits, formulation support, participation in the conference, and the provision of drug information for home-visiting nurses. The following formulation support measures were used: reducing intravenous infusion was proposed to address terminally ill cancer patients with a large amount of sputum; advice was provided on the selection of opioids for patients with
renal failure
; and drug options were discussed to alleviate the symptoms of gastrointestinal obstruction. All of these measures effectively alleviated symptoms.
...
PMID:[Palliative care for elderly patients living in rented housing by pharmacists]. 2326 7
We are now well entering the exciting era of stem cells. Potential stem cell therapy holds great promise for the treatment of many diseases such as stroke, traumatic brain injury, Alzheimer's disease, Parkinson's disease, amyotrophic lateral-sclerosis, myocardial infarction,
muscular dystrophy
, diabetes, and etc. It is generally believed that transplantation of specific stem cells into the injured tissue to replace the lost cells is an effective way to repair the tissue. In fact, organ transplantation has been successfully practiced in clinics for liver or
kidney failure
. However, the severe shortage of donor organs has been a major obstacle for the expansion of organ transplantation programs. Toward that direction, generation of transplantable organs using stem cells is a desirable approach for organ replacement and would be of great interest for both basic and clinical scientists. Here we review recent progress in the field of organ generation using various methods including single adult tissue stem cells, a blastocyst complementation system, tissue decellularization/recellularization and a combination of stem cells and tissue engineering.
...
PMID:Generation of functional organs from stem cells. 2540 73
The LMNA gene contains 12 exons and encodes lamins A and C by alternative splicing within exon 10. While mutations in lamin A specific residues cause several diseases including lipodystrophy, progeria,
muscular dystrophy
, neuropathy, and cardiomyopathy, only three families with mutations in lamin C-specific residues are reported with cardiomyopathy, neuropathy, and
muscular dystrophy
so far. We now report two brothers with juvenile-onset generalized lipodystrophy due to a lamin C-specific mutation. The proband, a 23-year-old Caucasian male was reported to have generalized lipodystrophy at 3 weeks of age, developed diabetes, hypertriglyceridemia, hypertension and liver problems and died with complications of cirrhosis, and
kidney failure
. His younger brother, a 37-year-old Caucasian male developed generalized lipodystrophy around 2 years of age and was diagnosed with diabetes, hypertriglyceridemia, fatty liver, and hypertension at 36 years of age. Their father also died of end stage renal disease at age 52 years. Exome sequencing of the proband revealed an extremely rare missense heterozygous variant c.1711_1712CG>TC; p.(Arg571Ser) in LMNA which was confirmed by Sanger sequencing in both the patients. Interestingly, the mutation had no effect on mRNA splicing or relative expression of lamin A or C mRNA and protein in the lymphoblasts. Our observations suggest that mutant lamin C disrupts its interaction with other cellular proteins resulting in generalized lipodystrophy due to defective development and maintenance of adipose tissue.
...
PMID:Juvenile-onset generalized lipodystrophy due to a novel heterozygous missense LMNA mutation affecting lamin C. 2868 29
Induced pluripotent stem cells (iPSCs) avoid many of the restrictions that hamper the application of human embryonic stem cells: limited availability of source material due to legal restrictions in some countries, immunogenic rejection and ethical concerns. Also, the donor's clinical phenotype is often known when working with iPSCs. Therefore, iPSCs seem ideal to tackle the two biggest tasks of regenerative medicine: degenerative diseases with genetic cause (e.g., Duchenne's
muscular dystrophy
) and organ replacement in age-related diseases (e.g., end-stage heart or
renal failure
), especially in combination with recently developed gene-editing tools. In the setting of autologous transplantation in elderly patients, donor age becomes a potentially relevant factor that needs to be assessed. Here, we review and critically discuss available data pertinent to the questions: How does donor age influence the reprogramming process and iPSC functionality? Would it even be possible to reprogram senescent somatic cells? How does donor age affect iPSC differentiation into specialised cells and their functionality? We also identify research needs, which might help resolve current unknowns. Until recently, most hallmarks of ageing were attributed to an accumulation of DNA damage over time, and it was thus expected that DNA damage from a somatic cell would accumulate in iPSCs and the cells derived from them. In line with this, a decreased lifespan of cloned organisms compared with the donor was also observed in early cloning experiments. Therefore, it was questioned for a time whether iPSC derived from an old individual's somatic cells would suffer from early senescence and, thus, may not be a viable option either for disease modelling nor future clinical applications. Instead, typical signs of cellular ageing are reverted in the process of iPSC reprogramming, and iPSCs from older donors do not show diminished differentiation potential nor do iPSC-derived cells from older donors suffer early senescence or show functional impairments when compared with those from younger donors. Thus, the data would suggest that donor age does not limit iPSC application for modelling genetic diseases nor regenerative therapies. However, open questions remain, e.g., regarding the potential tumourigenicity of iPSC-derived cells and the impact of epigenetic pattern retention.
...
PMID:Age Is Relative-Impact of Donor Age on Induced Pluripotent Stem Cell-Derived Cell Functionality. 2942 97
Repeated presentations of a rare symptom in a patient should make a physician stop and evaluate for rare conditions. This is a report of a teenager with multiple episodes of rhabdomyolysis and weakness. He was eventually diagnosed as having McArdle
muscular dystrophy
, or glycogen storage disease type V. His rhabdomyolysis has been severe, with a creatinine kinase level of >320,000 U/L, myoglobinuria, transaminitis, and elevated bilirubin. He has a low threshold for triggering rhabdomyolysis, such as doing an hour of aerobic exercise 2 days in a row. McArdle disease is a glycogen storage disorder in which the skeletal muscle cannot convert glycogen to glucose. Unlike other glycogen storage disorders, McArdle
muscular dystrophy
only affects the skeletal muscle, sparing the brain and visceral organs, leading to a vague phenotype. These patients have exercise intolerance, muscle cramps, and rhabdomyolysis. Many patients report loading with simple carbohydrates before exercise, as they have learned that this can increase their stamina. The vague symptoms can lead to decades of delay in diagnosis and significant mismanagement. Rhabdomyolysis is the most dangerous sign of McArdle disease, and it can lead to acute kidney injury, resulting in
renal failure
requiring dialysis in the severest cases.Rhabdomyolysis has numerous causes, but when it is recurrent, especially with seemingly insignificant triggers, one needs to develop a broader differential and pursue advanced testing. This testing can include specific exercise tests, genetic sequencing, and muscle biopsy. This case report will guide the clinician through the process of evaluating recurrent rhabdomyolysis, working through the differential diagnosis and testing options.1.
...
PMID:Repeatedly in Rhabdomyolysis. 3220 5
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