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

We measured the prevalence and incidence of Becker muscular dystrophy in the Northern Health Region of England, UK. Patients were identified from the records of the Regional Neurological Centre and Muscular Dystrophy Group laboratories, Newcastle upon Tyne, and by writing to local doctors. We used cDNA probes and/or dystrophin immunolabelling of muscle-biopsy samples to prove the diagnosis of all cases. Results were compared with the known prevalence and incidence of Duchenne muscular dystrophy. 73 patients alive and resident in the Northern Health Region were identified, giving a prevalence rate of 2.38/100,000. This compares with a prevalence of Duchenne muscular dystrophy of 2.48/100,000. The cumulative birth incidence of Becker muscular dystrophy (at least 1 in 18 450 male live births) was about one third that of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (1 in 5618 male live births), suggesting that the disorder is more common than previously thought.
...
PMID:Prevalence and incidence of Becker muscular dystrophy. 167 77

Immunohistochemical localization of dystrophin was studied in a symptomatic carrier of Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD). Muscle biopsy specimens from a female carrier showed findings compatible with slowly progressive muscular dystrophy by ordinary histochemical examinations. Immunohistochemical study, using an antiserum raised against a synthetic peptide fragment of dystrophin, demonstrated a mixture of staining patterns, including continuous but faint positive fibres, partially disrupted fibres and negative fibres. These findings were identical to those of patients with BMD and appear to differ from previous findings in female carriers of Duchenne muscular dystrophy. This report is the first immunohistochemical study of a symptomatic female proven by molecular genetic analysis to be a carrier of BMD.
...
PMID:Dystrophin immunohistochemistry in a symptomatic carrier of Becker muscular dystrophy. 168 69

We studied 38 unrelated patients from southern France with Duchenne (DMD) or Becker (BMD) muscular dystrophy for intragenic deletions of the DMD/BMD gene. We used both multiplex amplification of selected exons and cDNA probes. Of the 26 (68%) unrelated individuals found to have deletions, 24 (92%) were detected by multiplex polymerase chain reaction. All these deletions have been delineated with regard to the exon-containing HindIII fragments revealed by cDNA probes, and in two cases, junction fragments of altered size were seen. The correlation between phenotype and type of deletion agreed with the reading frame theory, except for two BMD and two DMD cases.
...
PMID:Molecular deletion patterns in families from southern France with Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophies. 168 65

The localization of dystrophin was studied using the immunohistochemical method of diagnostic muscle specimens from 68 patients, aged 9 days to 65 years, with various neuromuscular disorders. Additionally muscle specimens from 2 normal humans and 2 normal mice were used as positive controls, and those from 2 mice with x-linked muscular dystrophy as negative controls. The specimens from all 14 Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) patients, including one with preclinical DMD, showed negative dystrophin staining except for two which had 0.2% to 0.8% positive fibers. The mdx mice also showed negative dystrophin staining. In Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD), muscle fibers stained in a patchy or discontinuous fashion. Two symptomatic DMD carriers exhibited a distinct mosaic pattern of dystrophin positive and negative fibers. In contrast, dystrophin was present in all 7 biopsies from patients with 4 other types of muscular dystrophy (limb-girdle, congenital, myotonic and facioscapulohumeral). Other specimens, those from normal humans and control mice, revealed homogeneous immunostaining along the surface membranes of all muscle fibers. We thus conclude that immunohistochemical dystrophin staining can aid in differentiating DMD from preclinical DMD or BMD, as well as in the detection of DMD carriers.
...
PMID:Dystrophin immunostaining of muscle from Chinese patients with various neuromuscular diseases. 168 82

The localization of the protein dystrophin was studied using the immunofluorescence method, in muscle biopsies from 74 patients affected by different types of muscular dystrophy and 4 normal controls. In 15 patients with limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) the pattern was indistinguishable from normal. Among 42 Duchenne patients (DMD), 3 were totally negative and 39 showed a variable proportion (4-30%) of partially labelled fibers. With one exception 17 Becker dystrophy patients (BMD), showed a positive sarcolemmal reaction. A diffuse reaction inside the fibers, which was not observed in normal controls, was seen in the majority of DMD and also in some of the BMD patients. Based on these observations it is suggested that in DMD, a small quantity of protein is still present or there is a cross-reaction with other proteins which share some homology with dystrophin. The present results suggest that it is possible to make a differential diagnosis between DMD and BMD through dystrophin immunohistochemistry. However, to distinguish between patients with BMD and LGMD phenotypes, or DMD and outliers, complementary immunoblot studies and quantitative determination of dystrophin are necessary.
...
PMID:Dystrophin immunostaining in muscles from patients with different types of muscular dystrophy: a Brazilian study. 170 Aug 8

Both normal and pathological transcripts of tissue-specific genes may be detected by polymerase chain reaction (PCR) amplification in tissues not normally considered to express the gene product. The exploitation of constitutive basal mRNA levels ("ectopic" transcription) would be a major boon to diagnostic medicine since it promises both to simplify the analysis of complex genes and to avoid the requirement for an expressing tissue that is sometimes obtainable only by biopsy. We have demonstrated the feasibility of this novel strategy by characterizing a mutation in the X-chromosomal Duchenne (or Becker) muscular dystrophy (DMD/BMD) gene encoding dystrophin. The massive size of this gene has in the past often hindered carrier detection due to the high frequency of recombination and the high proportion of new mutations. In this study a deletion was identified in both a BMD patient and a heterozygous carrier using only a minimal volume of peripheral blood. Following specifically primed reverse transcription of lymphocyte RNA, the relevant region of the pathological cDNA was PCR-amplified. Sequence analysis indicated an in-frame deletion of exons 45 to 47.
...
PMID:Characterization of pathological dystrophin transcripts from the lymphocytes of a muscular dystrophy carrier. 170 53

We studied the prevalence of various types of progressive muscular dystrophy (PMD) in Okinawa, Japan on December 31, 1989 and the incidence of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD) in 5-year periods from 1957 to 1985. We classified patients with PMD clinically, electrophysiologically, molecular biologically and immunohistochemically with antidystrophin antibody, especially for sporadic cases of DMD, Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) and limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LG). The prevalence for all PMD in Okinawa was 7.13 X 10(-5) for DMD, 1.82 X 10(-5) for BMD in the male population, 1.55 X 10(-5) for LG, 1.14 X 10(-5) for congenital muscular dystrophy, 2.03 X 10(-5) for facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSH), and 9.13 X 10(-5) for myotonic dystrophy (MD) in the total population. The incidence of DMD in the period 1957-1985 was 15.41 X 10(-5) live-born males (LBM) and 3.21 X 10(-5) LBM for BMD. The incidence has apparently declined in Okinawa since 1975. The prevalence of BMD, FSH and MD was rather high in Okinawa compared with previous reports. Molecular biological techniques for classifying patients were indispensable for the epidemiological study of PMD.
...
PMID:Epidemiology of progressive muscular dystrophy in Okinawa, Japan. Classification with molecular biological techniques. 174 28

A thorough histological description of 17 patients with congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD) is presented. The biopsies were performed in the left superficial deltoid muscle and processed with histochemical techniques. All samples showed connective tissue proliferation, changes in the internal architecture, necrosis, increase of adipose tissue, macrophagia, fiber regeneration and segmentation, central nuclei, and type I fiber predominance. The histological hallmarks of this entity are the marked endomysial connective tissue proliferation that frames one fiber from the other, and the important changes in the fiber's internal architecture. Those two abnormalities are extremely helpful to differentiate, on histological grounds, CMD from limb girdle muscular dystrophy and Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophy. CMD presents a particular natural course and should be individualized apart from other muscular dystrophies.
...
PMID:[Congenital muscular dystrophy: histochemical study of the skeletal muscle in 17 patients]. 181 Feb 37

Dystrophin Related Protein is the recently identified protein product of a large autosomal transcript, showing significant similarity to dystrophin at the carboxyl terminus. Dystrophin related protein and dystrophin share a similar abundance and molecular weight, however, they differ both in their tissue distribution and expression in Duchenne/Becker muscular dystrophy. Here we define the immunolocalization of dystrophin related protein to neuromuscular and myotendinous junctions, along with peripheral nerves and vasculature of skeletal muscle. Groups of regenerating muscle fibres as well as embryonic and neonatal muscle express far greater amounts of dystrophin related protein compared with adult mdx mice. These findings may explain the paradoxical labelling seen using dystrophin antibodies in Duchenne patients and dystrophin deficient mdx mice. Finally, no abnormalities of dystrophin related protein expression were detected in three patients with Duchenne-like autosomal recessive muscular dystrophy.
...
PMID:Immunolocalization and developmental expression of dystrophin related protein in skeletal muscle. 182 93

A 6-yr-old boy who presented with brown urine due to myoglobinuria and who was otherwise virtually asymptomatic was diagnosed as having Becker muscular dystrophy on the basis of a greatly elevated creatine kinase, muscle biopsy, dystrophin analysis, and a deletion of exons 3-7 in the dystrophin gene. Fifteen months later, during a general anaesthetic for dental treatment, he had a cardiac arrest associated with acute rhabdomyolysis, hyperkalaemia and hypocalcaemia. He died 4 days later. This case is reported to highlight this rare but potentially fatal complication of anaesthesia in muscular dystrophy, and to discuss possible ways of preventing such a catastrophe.
...
PMID:Fatal rhabdomyolysis complicating general anaesthesia in a child with Becker muscular dystrophy. 182 95


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>