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)

The article describes pregnancies and labors of five women with myotonic muscular dystrophy and their four severely involved infants, and reviews the pertinent literature. Three of the four neonatal cases died by 3 weeks of age of respiratory failure or aspiration; the fourth infant is now 4 months old and has respiratory and swallowing difficulties. The symptoms of myotonic dystrophy worsen during pregnancy. A high rate of fetal loss occurs due to spontaneous abortion, prematurity, and neonatal involvement with the disease. Prolonged labor has been described as a consistent complication, but the evidence does not justify this conclusion. Although many neonates with myotonic dystrophy are asymptomatic, severely affected newborns have a recognizable disorder unrelated to the severity of the maternal disease. The most common clinical manifestations in the neonate are arthrogryposis involving predominantly the lower extremilies, generalized hypotonia and weakness, and pharyngeal weakness. Less constant features include polyhydramnios, facial diplegia, diaphragmatic paralysis, respiratory failure, decreased motility of the gastrointestinal tract, congenital cataracts, and electrocardiographic abnormalities.
...
PMID:Clinical effects of myotonic dystrophy on pregnancy and the neonate. 77 28

Respiratory failure is an unusual initial manifestation of congenital muscular dystrophy. The authors describe a case of congenital muscular dystrophy in a patient presenting with rhabdomyolysis at birth. Despite an initially poor prognosis, aggressive respiratory therapy during the neonatal period permitted normal subsequent development. The muscular dystrophy predominantly involved the respiratory muscles.
...
PMID:Congenital muscular dystrophy presenting with respiratory failure. 155 7

The clinical effect of mechanical ventilatory assistance with tracheotomy in respiratory failure of terminal phase muscular dystrophy was studied. The subjects were 6 Duchenne muscular dystrophy cases and 1 Ullrich type congenital muscular dystrophy case. Duration of the longest survival case was 4 years and 5 months. General physical conditions, complications, ADL and muscular atrophy were examined. By ventilatory assistance respiratory failure improved, and the physical condition stabilized and took good progress. Arterial hemorrhage which is lethal complication was observed in 2 cases. Mechanical ventilatory assistance with tracheotomy is an effective symptomatic therapy for the improvement of respiratory failure that can be applied when life prolongation is wished for by the patients or their families.
...
PMID:[The clinical effect of mechanical ventilatory assistance with tracheotomy in terminal phase muscular dystrophy]. 176 Feb 6

Rigid spine syndrome (RSS) is clinically characterized by progressive limitation of flexion of the spine and contractures of other joints. We herein report a 27-year-old man with RSS, who underwent tracheotomy because of severe restrictive respiratory failure. He had limitation of neck flexion and proximal muscle weakness from early childhood and was diagnosed as having muscular dystrophy at 16 years old. He was suffered from dyspnea and his first tracheotomy was performed at 24 years old. Two years later, the second tracheotomy was done because his respiratory failure was aggravated. He had limitation of spine flexion, scoliosis, but no limited range of elbow and wrist joints movement except mild contracture of ankle joints. Serum CK level was elevated to 590 IU/L. Repeated ECG examinations showed negative T wave but no conduction block. In his family, his parents and brother had neither similar clinical symptoms nor heart block. Chest X-ray study showed elevated diaphragm and enlarged heart shadow (CTR = 65%). Percent VC and FEV1 in sitting position were 14.6% and 100%, respectively. Arterial blood gas analysis showed PaO2 of 34.2 mmHg and PaCO2 of 77.2 mmHg. The density of paraspinal muscle in CT scan was severely decreased. Needle EMG showed myogenic change. Muscle biopsy from left biceps brachii showed myopathic change with mild type 2 fiber grouping. After the second tracheotomy, he was on a respiratory during sleep but mostly off in the daytime. His clinical features are different from Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy because he had no heart conduction block and no family history, but progressive respiratory failure.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[A case of rigid spine syndrome associated with severe respiratory failure]. 176 65

A term newborn male with severe hypotonia and contractures was found to have dense bilateral cataracts. He died at age 3 days of respiratory failure. Amino acidopathies and disorders of peroxisome function were excluded, and results of serologic studies and placental histopathology, specifically seeking evidence of intrauterine infection, were normal. Autopsy showed changes in the skeletal muscles consistent with congenital muscular dystrophy and a small focal anomaly of the cerebral cortex. These findings either represent a new syndrome or raise further questions about broadening the spectrum of known congenital muscular dystrophy syndromes with associated eye and brain anomalies.
...
PMID:Lethal congenital muscular dystrophy with cataracts and a minor brain anomaly: new entity or variant of Walker-Warburg syndrome? 186 58

We studied a family with Leber's congenital amaurosis and Duchenne's muscular dystrophy. One son, the proband, was noted to be blind from shortly after birth and had absent pupillary reflexes, attenuation of retinal blood vessels and pigmentary changes of the retina. He manifested Duchenne's muscular dystrophy at 6 years of age and died of its complication--severe respiratory failure--at 21 years of age. His older brother also was blind since birth, with absent pupillary light reflexes and an extinguished electroretinogram in both eyes. The proband's younger brother with Duchenne's muscular dystrophy died following respiratory failure. Their oldest brother was apparently unaffected. Their mother and sister were proven carriers of Duchenne's muscular dystrophy and a maternal uncle and great-uncle also died from this condition. The parents were consanguineous, third generation cousins.
...
PMID:Leber's congenital amaurosis with Duchenne's muscular dystrophy. 197 44

The diaphragm muscle pathology in four patients with Fukuyama type congenital progressive muscular dystrophy (FCMD) was reported. In the diaphragm muscle fibers of three patients aged more than 14 years exhibiting chronic respiratory failure, a lot of electron dense lesions, which varied in size but did not extend over the whole length of the muscle fibers, and a marked increase in mitochondria were observed as well as the dystrophic changes. The dense lesions, consisting of electron dense fibrillary material comparable to Z-band materials in electron density, seemed to be due to Z-band disruption leading to streaming and/or large aggregations of Z-band materials. No mitochondria or other microorganelles were found in these dense lesions. These findings are thought not to be specific to FCMD, but seem to reflect diaphragm muscle fatigue, because, there were no such lesions in the diaphragm muscle of a 2-year-old infant not exhibiting chronic respiratory failure or in muscle at other sites in all patients.
...
PMID:Diaphragm muscle pathology in Fukuyama type congenital muscular dystrophy. 209 88

To study the relationship between plasma alpha-atrial natriuretic peptide (alpha-ANP) and cardiac function in patients with Duchenne's progressive muscular dystrophy (DMD), we measured plasma alpha-ANP levels in 51 patients with DMD and evaluated them according to the clinical severity of the disease and the echocardiographic left ventricular function. In many of the patients with DMD, plasma alpha-ANP levels were mildly elevated, but no clear correlation was observed between alpha-ANP levels and wall motion abnormalities of the left ventricle. The alpha-ANP level was moderately or markedly elevated (81 to 120 pg/ml) in 3 of the 16 patients with respiratory failure and extremely high (1208 pg/ml) in the one patient with congestive heart failure. Two patients with respiratory failure and one with congestive heart failure, in whom alpha-ANP levels were elevated, died within 2 months. Elevation of left atrial pressure as a result of left ventricular dysfunction caused by impairment of the myocardium and elevation of right atrial pressure as a result of pulmonary hypertension caused by impairment of the respiratory muscles are considered to be involved in the mechanism of increased plasma alpha-ANP levels in patients with DMD. It can be concluded that a moderate or marked elevation in plasma alpha-ANP levels in patients with terminal DMD is a sign of a poor prognosis and may be a useful index for the management of the disease.
...
PMID:Plasma levels of atrial natriuretic peptide in patients with Duchenne's progressive muscular dystrophy. 214 65

Some of the neuromuscular diseases may lead to respiratory failure. This is the case in some lesions of the anterior horn cells (poliomyelitis and spinal muscular atrophy), in diseases affecting the nerve roots (acute polyradiculitis and lesions of the C4-roots) or affecting the phrenic nerve. Respiratory failure is frequent in myasthenia and may accompany Duchenne's muscular dystrophy. In each case one has to evaluate the opportunity of respiratory treatment considering all the elements of the disease and of the individual patient.
...
PMID:[Neuromuscular diseases which lead to respiratory insufficiency]. 227 7

In patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), heart failure appears in later stage of the disease due to myocardial degeneration and respiratory insufficiency, and sometimes causes death. However, there have been no adequate parameters which can be used easily to evaluate the grade of heart failure in DMD, except cardiac enlargement and pulmonary congestion observed by chest X-ray picture. Thus, we measured the plasma concentrations of atrial natriuretic peptide (ANP) in the patients with muscular dystrophy of various types, and studied a relationship between plasma ANP concentration and heart failure, expecting that it could be an index of heart failure in DMD patients. The plasma ANP concentrations in patients with DMD were 35.5 +/- 3.3pg/ml (mean +/- SE) and higher than in normal subjects (19.3 +/- 1.0pg/ml). In the patients with limb-girdle muscular dystrophy, facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy and neurogenic muscular atrophy, the plasma ANP concentration showed a tendency to elevate. However, no elevation of plasma ANP levels was observed in the patients with other types of muscular dystrophy. In DMD, number of the patients having a high plasma ANP concentration was increased with progress of disability grade, and decrease in serum creatine kinase activity and serum myoglobin concentration. There was a significant correlation (p less than 0.01) between plasma ANP concentration and cardiothoracic ratio or PEP/LVET, but no correlation between the concentration and respiratory failure. Immunohistochemistry of the atrial cardiac muscle of an autopsied DMD case revealed many ANP-positive atrial muscle cells, indicating the preservation of ANP-secreting function.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Secretion and clinical significance of atrial natriuretic peptide in patients with muscular dystrophy]. 252 1


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