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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (muscular dystrophy)
5,870 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

It has been well documented that children with severe neuromuscular disorders have tall vertebrae, presumably a consequence of altered mechanical forces. This finding was present in four neonates who were born with severe "floppy" hypotonia due to Werdnig-Hoffmann disease (two cases), nonspecific neonatal myopathy, and congenital muscular dystrophy. Fetal vertebral development is normally modified by intrauterine muscle tension and fetal activity.
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PMID:Tall vertebrae at birth: a radiographic finding in flaccid infants. 387 40

A three-year-ten-month old boy with the Fukuyama type of congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), early onset of muscular hypotonia, severe mental retardation, a slow progressive course and a characteristic fundus appearance similar to that of gyrate atrophy is described. Hyperornithinaemia and iminoglycinuria were not noted. To our knowledge, this is the first reported case of FCMD associated with atypical gyrate atrophy of the choroid and retina.
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PMID:A Fukuyama type of congenital muscular dystrophy associated with atypical gyrate atrophy of the choroid and retina. A case report. 400 43

Eleven patients diagnosed as having muscular dystrophy and who underwent posterior spinal fusion were reviewed: Becker dystrophy in one, limb girdle in two, facioscapulohumeral in one, myopathia unspecified in one, myotonia dystrophica in two, myotonia congenita in one, and hypotonia congenita in three. There were eight females and three males. The curve pattern was thoracic in four, thoracolumbar in three, double thoracic and thoracolumbar in three, and thoracolumbar lordosis in one. Scoliosis was associated with kyphosis in two, with lumbar lordosis in one, and thoracic lordosis in four patients associated with poor vital capacity and shortness of breath. Seven patients had nonoperative treatment, five showing increase of the curve, and two having control of the curve. All patients had posterior spinal fusion with instrumentation with a follow-up of 9-89 months (average, 41 months). Postoperative support was used in all but one. Major complications occurred in four patients: a symptom of vascular obstruction of the duodenum in two, extubation delayed until the 7th day postoperatively in one and pseudarthrosis in one resulting in an increasing curve and refusion. One patient (limb girdle), 6 years after surgery at 21 years died from cardiomyopathy. The second (limb girdle) lost ambulation at age 22 years, 6.6 years after spinal surgery. In conclusion, patients with muscular dystrophies other than Duchenne generally have slowly evolving curves, and the use of an orthosis in the juvenile years controlled the curve until the pubertal growth spurt, when progression occurred. Surgical treatment was successful in stabilizing the deformities.
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PMID:Spinal deformities in patients with muscular dystrophy other than Duchenne. A review of 11 patients having surgical treatment. 407 Dec 69

A girl with congenital muscular dystrophy with severe scoliosis from birth was presented. No positive family history was obtainable. She developed muscle hypotonia and weakness, and feeding difficulty during the neonatal period. Her developmental milestones were delayed; she learned to walk at the age of 2 years when she walked with a "waddling gait" and stood up with Gowers' maneuver. On physical examination at 2 years old, she had mild proximal dominant muscle weakness and atrophy, and severe scoliosis with a Cobb's angle of 74 degrees but no joint contractures in the extremities. Creatine kinase was slightly elevated. Biopsied muscle showed myopathic changes, including variation in fiber size, moderate fibrous tissue proliferation, some necrotic and regenerating fibers and type 1 fiber predominance, consistent with those seen in chronic progressive muscular dystrophy.
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PMID:Congenital muscular dystrophy with severe infantile scoliosis. 408 85

Two Dutch siblings are described suffering from muscular weakness, hypotonia, severe joint contractures, mental retardation and epileptic fits. E.M.G. showed a characteristic myopathic pattern. Muscle biopsy revealed changes consistent with congenital muscular dystrophy. On CT marked hypodensities of the cerebral white matter were noticed. These findings are consistent with congenital muscular dystrophy of the Fukuyama type, a peculiar form of congenital muscular dystrophy, extremely rare outside Japan.
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PMID:Two Dutch siblings with congenital muscular dystrophy (Fukuyama type). 631 92

Clinical and morphological findings in five patients, three girls and two boys, afflicted with congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD) and cerebral lesions are reported. Four of these patients represented two pairs of siblings, and all patients had died in early infancy. Three of the patients had muscle hypotonia in early infancy, two siblings died with a necrotizing myopathy before neuromuscular symptoms became clinically apparent. Two siblings had intractable grand mal seizures, one other boy had polymicrogyria, and a single child had internal hydrocephalus. Muscle morphology in all patients was compatible with CMD, showing a necrotizing component in two male sibs. Electron microscopy of muscle only revealed non-specific ultrapathology. The association of CMD with cerebral lesions renders prognosis unfavourable. The data presented do not permit the delineation of a precise nosological form of cerebro-muscular disease but may comprise several entities. The association of CMD and cerebral lesions may often occur in families, apparently following an autosomal-recessive mode of inheritance. It may not be identical to the Fukuyama type of CMD, and it is definitely different from the "muscle, eye and brain disease" in Finnish children. It seems to be similar to CMD with cerebral lesions observed in non-Japanese siblings, but whether it is actually the same disease remains unclear. At least the association of CMD and cerebral lesions indicate an unfavourable clinical prognosis.
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PMID:A morphological study of non-Japanese congenital muscular dystrophy associated with cerebral lesions. 641 78

The authors state that a marked hypotonia of the lower extremity muscles in children with progressive muscular dystrophy may lead to the development of secondary dislocations and semi-dislocations of the femur, which were detected in 18 of the 32 patients examined. Most of the patients had Werdnig-Hoffmann's spinal amyotrophy which was related to an especially gross muscular hypotonia.
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PMID:[Secondary changes in the hip joints of children with progressive muscular dystrophy]. 652 78

Two autopsy cases of congenital muscular dystrophy of Fukuyama type (F-CMD) were described. The first case was diagnosed clinically and pathologically as its typical case. Neither his family history nor the history of his prenatal period were contributory. He had suffered from muscle weakness and atrophy since his birth. Serum CPK was markedly elevated. EMG and muscle biopsy proved dystrophic changes of the skeletal muscles. In addition, he manifested mental retardation and attacks of convulsion. EEG failed to elicit remarkable changes, but PEG represented ventricular dilatation. He died of respiratory insufficiency at age 12. His postmortem examination showed variegated anomalies in the nervous system. Extensive micropolygyria was present in the cerebrum and cerebellum accompanied by adhesions between the bilateral cerebral hemispheres. Assymmetry of the longitudinal fibers was pointed out in the pontine base. Anterior horn cells were atrophic and moderately depopulated. On the other hand, the second patient was an atypical F-CMD case in symptoms, signs and pathology. His grand-mothers on both father's and mother's sides wee first cousins. His three siblings showed no similar disorders. His mother developed slight gestational toxicosis in the sixth and seventh months of pregnancy. His muscle weakness, contracture of the bilateral hip-joints and clubfoot had been observed since his birth. Physical and neurological examinations at age 6 showed deformity of the skull, myopathic face, macroglossia, high-arched palate, pigeon chest, scoliosis of the thoracic spine. In addition, generalized muscular atrophy, hypotonia and areflexia were recognized. Pseudohypertrophy of the muscles was absent. Sensation was intact to all modalities. Serum CPK and LDH were moderately increased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[2 autopsy cases of congenital muscular dystrophy of Fukuyama type--a typical and an atypical cases]. 652 23

Ocular manifestations in two cases of congenital muscular dystrophy of Fukuyama type were reported. This disease is characterized by early onset of hypotonia, generalized muscle weakness and atrophy, mental retardation, and elevated serum creatine-phosphokinase activity. The symptoms include entropion of lower lids, pathological myopia with astigmatism, optic nerve pallor, and irregular grayish subretinal mottling. Case 1 showed additional features of posterior staphyloma, dragged papillomacular vessels, peripheral grayish-white discoloration of the retina, and rete mirabile as well as abnormal vascular anastomosis.
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PMID:Ocular manifestations of congenital muscular dystrophy (Fukuyama type). 665 Nov 32

Familial occurrence of cerebral malformations with muscular dystrophy was described by Fukuyama as congenital cerebromuscular dystrophy. We have observed a new syndrome belonging to the same group in three siblings. These syndromes differ in the degree of CNS involvement and abnormalities in the eye. The main clinical characteristics of our cohort were dysmorphic face, hypotonia, areflexia, failure to thrive, corneal opacity, cataract, dysgenesis of the anterior chamber of the eye, and death within the 1st year of life. Hydrocephalus and agyria were verified by computed tomography. Neuropathologic examination demonstrated malformations of the CNS. The agyric hemispheres with polymicrogyria in several cortical segments and severe cortical disorganization in other segments represented the principal anomaly. Congenital muscular dystrophy was also found. The CNS anomalies demonstrated a long-lasting pathologic process extending to involve the eye and muscle, which is most likely an inborn error of metabolism with autosomal recessive inheritance.
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PMID:Cerebro-oculo-muscular syndrome: a variant of Fukuyama congenital cerebromuscular dystrophy. 682 Mar 33


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