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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (
muscular dystrophy
)
5,870
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The Acridine Orange (AO) stain for muscle biopsies is particularly useful to identify regenerating and ongoing hypertrophic muscle fibers under fluorescent microscopy. This method was applied to muscle biopsies from 65 patients who suffered from various childhood neuromuscular disorders. While normal fibers showed dull green cytoplasm with small green-yellow nuclei, striking fluorescent fibers were observed in eight cases of congenital
muscular dystrophy
(CMD) and 12 cases of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD); these fibers were characterized as follows: (1) small fibers with big oval or spherical nuclei which fluoresced strongly with a bright orange color; (2) fibers of various sizes and different degrees of orange fluorescence; and (3) opaque fibers with bright yellow cytoplasm. The small diameter fibers in
Werdnig-Hoffmann
(WH) disease, nemaline myopathy, and congenital fiber type disproportion failed to show apparent AO-RNA fluorescence. Although all the atrophic fibers in Kugelberg-Welander (KW) disease showed a vague orange fluorescent color, this was obviously different from that of regenerating fibers seen in CMD and DMD. In addition to these findings, the hypertrophic fibers in a case of unclassified myopathy also showed moderate orange fluorescence around the entire periphery of the cytoplasm.
...
PMID:A fluorescent microscopy study of biopsied muscles from infantile neuromuscular disorders. 683 68
Vitamin E levels were measured in the plasma of infants and children with various neuromuscular disorders. Seven of 8 infants with
Werdnig-Hoffmann disease
(WHD) had a significantly lower plasma vitamin E level (p less than 0.01) than age-matched normal controls, children with congenital myopathies, or children with
muscular dystrophy
. Vitamin E deficiency in WHD is not caused by malabsorption. A therapeutic trial of vitamin E in 3 patients with WHD did not change the natural course of the disease. Vitamin E deficiency may play a role in the pathogenesis of WHD.
...
PMID:Vitamin E deficiency in Werdnig-Hoffmann disease. 729 34
The number of motor cells was significantly reduced in the C8 segment of the cervical spinal cord in all 12 cases of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), in the C6 and/or C8 segments in 1 case of adult onset spinal muscular atrophy, 2 cases of
Werdnig-Hoffmann
(W-H) disease, 3 of 4 cases of chronic polyneuropathy and in 1 case of poliomyelitis and 1 of ossification of the posterior longitudinal ligament in the cervical spine (OPLL). The numbers of motor cells were normal in the C6 or C8 segment in 6 cases of
muscular dystrophy
, except in one case of congenital
muscular dystrophy
, who showed reduced numbers of the motor cells. Examination of the distribution of motor cells per 500 micrometers thickness in serial sections revealed that reduction in numbers of the motor cells was diffuse and symmetrical in half the cases of ALS and W-H disease and in the cases of chronic polyneuropathy and congenital dystrophy; diffuse but asymmetrical in the other ALS and W-H disease cases and in a case of adult spinal muscular atrophy, and localized and asymmetrical in the cases of poliomyelitis and OPLL. In
muscular dystrophy
the distribution of motor cells showed segmental variations similar to controls.
...
PMID:Morphometric quantification of the cervical limb motor cells in various neuromuscular diseases. 742 Jan 21
The expression of the myogenic determination gene MyoD1 plays a primary role in the commitment of primitive mesenchymal cells to a striated muscle lineage and is down-regulated during later stages of differentiation. To determine the potential role of this gene in myopathic conditions, we examined its expression by means of immunohistochemical analysis, using a series of muscle biopsies from 14 patients with a variety of primary myopathies and neurogenic disorders. Utilizing the avidin-biotin-complex technique, cryostat sections were stained with monoclonal antibody 5.8 A, which we have previously described as having a high level of specificity for tumors with rhabdomyoblastic differentiation. Of special interest was the observation in 4 of 8 cases of neurogenic atrophy of varying levels of cytoplasmic positivity of muscle fibers, appearing to correlate with their degree of atrophy, in addition to weak nuclear staining. Muscle biopsies from 2 patients with Duchenne's
muscular dystrophy
and 2 patients with autoimmune inflammatory myopathies demonstrated various levels of nuclear positivity in scattered foci that appeared to correlate with areas of regeneration. A biopsy from a single case of neurogenic atrophy secondary to infantile spinal muscular atrophy (
Werdnig-Hoffmann
's disease) demonstrated diffuse but relatively weak staining of myofiber nuclei, in contrast to sections of normal striated muscle and muscle biopsies from patients with unexplained myoglobinuria, which exhibited only minimal amounts of staining. These data are compatible with observations that MyoD1 expression is related to electrical activity and muscle regeneration.
...
PMID:Immunohistochemical analysis of the distribution of MyoD1 in muscle biopsies of primary myopathies and neurogenic atrophy. 752 88
Three children with a diagnosis of congenital
muscular dystrophy
are described. Because of the heterogeneity of these disorders the authors stress the necessity of differentiation with other causes of "floppy infant" syndrome, especially with
Werdnig-Hoffmann disease
, structural myopathies, and Duchenne progressive
muscular dystrophy
. An extensive hypodense area on brain CT scan was found in one child.
...
PMID:[Diagnostic problems of congenital muscular dystrophies in children]. 762 73
The term intestinal pseudo-obstruction, is applied to a group of clinical disorders in which there are obstructive symptoms, in the absence of a mechanical agent, secondary to a disorder of intestinal motility. In this report, we show manometric studies done in four patients, with acute intestinal pseudo-obstructions, secondary to von Recklinghausen's neurofibromatosis (VRNF), in two patients, and in one patient with Duchenne's
muscular dystrophy
(DMD) and in another with
Werdnig-Hoffmann
's disease (WHD). We studied 24 hours antroduodenal motility, specially during phase 3 of the migratory motor complex (CMM), which showed a neuropathic disorder in one case of von Recklinghausen's disease and a myopathic disorder in patients with Duchenne's
muscular dystrophy
and
Werdnig-Hoffmann
's disease. We analysed results and conclusions and specially the kinetic action of erythromycin.
...
PMID:[Intestinal pseudo-obstruction secondary to systemic neuropathies and myopathies]. 799 13
The study describes the pattern of childhood neuromuscular disorders seen in a decade (1982-1992) at King Khalid University Hospital, Riyadh, Saudi Arabia. Similar data are scanty outside Europe and North America, and lacking in Saudi Arabia. Eighty-four children (< or = 16 years) were assigned to an entity of neuromuscular disease following review of the clinical, biochemical and neurophysiological data, and after re-examination of the histological and histochemical features of the muscle biopsies. Of the 84 ascertained cases, 40 (48%) had different forms of
muscular dystrophy
(MD), 26 (31%) had one of the various types of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) and two (2.4%) hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type I. The rest were miscellaneous cases including one (1.2%) with dermatomyositis. Of the dystrophies, severe childhood autosomal recessive
muscular dystrophy
(SCARMD) was more prevalent (30%) than Duchenne type (25%), conforming with observations from North African countries known to have a high incidence of consanguineous marriages. Family history of other cases of SCARMD included three males and three females, one of whom died at 15 years, and consanguinity was evident in 63%. Congenital MD, inherited in an autosomal recessive pattern, was also common (30%). A history of consanguinity was present in 55%. Of the 26 cases of SMA, type I (
Werdnig-Hoffman disease
) was the most prevalent (69%). Consanguinity was ascertained in 65% of SMA families and histories revealed another 14 affected siblings. Autosomal recessive forms seem to constitute the bulk of neuromuscular disorders in Saudi Arabia.
...
PMID:Childhood neuromuscular disorders: a decade's experience in Saudi Arabia. 898 23
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