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Query: UMLS:C0026850 (
muscular dystrophy
)
5,870
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS) is an autosomal recessive disorder characterized by type II lissencephaly, cerebellar and retinal anomalies, and congenital
muscular dystrophy
. We report a female diagnosed with WWS based on clinical criteria. This patient was found to have fetal hydrocephalus on ultrasonography at 29 weeks of gestation, and exhibited severe
hypotonia
, ocular malformations, and hydrocephalus at birth. MRI revealed type II lissencephaly, hydrocephalus, and other severe brain malformations. Genetic analysis was performed to distinguish WWS from severe Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), which has numerous findings in common. This revealed no expression of the founder haplotype or single-stranded conformation polymorphism (SSCP) abnormalities. Since the life expectancy of patients with FCMD is longer, differential diagnosis should be performed precisely.
...
PMID:A case of Walker-Warburg syndrome. 1110 33
Myotonic
muscular dystrophy
is the most frequent autosomal
muscular dystrophy
affecting adults and children. It affects multiple organ systems and is probably the best example of variable expressivity in a human disease. This article presents a patient with congenital myotonic dystrophy who had facial dysmorphism,
hypotonia
, talipes, feeding and respiratory difficulties in the neonatal period and later presented to us with developmental delay and had percussion myotonia. His mother had clinical and electrophysiological features of myotonia. Expansion of unstable CTG trinucleotide repeat in the myotonic protein kinase gene was demonstrated in both. The identification of this molecular defect allows its specific diagnosis in relation to other neuromuscular disorders as well as accurate prenatal diagnosis.
...
PMID:Congenital myotonic dystrophy. 1140 62
The cardiac features of a novel form of congenital
muscular dystrophy
(Salih CMD) are described in two adolescent siblings. The patients presented with severe
hypotonia
at birth, associated with delayed development. They could walk independently and managed to maintain walking after 13 years of age. Their muscle immunohistochemistry differed from that seen in Duchenne and Becher
muscular dystrophy
(DMD and BMD), severe childhood autosomal recessive
muscular dystrophy
(SCARMD) due to sarcoglycan deficiency (sarcoglycanopathies), and lamininalpha2 (merosin)-deficient CMD. However, both patients had associated cardiomyopathy. Electrocardiography (ECG) in Salih CMD was characterized by delayed atrioventricular (AV) conduction, left anterior fascicular block (left axis deviation), and left atrial enlargement without evidence of atrial dysarrhythmia. Echocardiography showed features of severe left ventricular dysfunction with estimated left ventricle ejection fraction (LVEF) of 25% at 16 years-of-age in the older patient. A year later, multigated aquisition MUGA scan showed LVEF of 21% and dilatation of the right ventricle. Echocardiography and MUGA scan were normal in the younger patient at 15 years-of-age. ECG, echocardiography, and MUGA scan are effective techniques for diagnosing and monitoring the cardiomyopathy in Salih CMD. They can also distinguish it from features seen in the other common forms of MD, including DMD, BMD, and sarcoglycanopathies.
...
PMID:Distinguishing cardiac features of a novel form of congenital muscular dystrophy (Salih cmd). 1145 96
Classical merosin (2 laminin)-positive congenital
muscular dystrophy
is a heterogeneous subgroup of disorders; a few cases characterized by severe mental retardation, brain involvement and no ocular abnormalities were called Fukuyama-like congenital
muscular dystrophy
. We report a family of healthy non-consanguineous parents, with four affected siblings, of which one died at the age of 7 months due to an intercurrent illness, who presented congenital
hypotonia
, severe mental retardation, microcephaly, delayed psychomotor development, generalized muscular wasting and weakness with mild facial involvement, calf pseudohypertrophy, joint contractures and areflexia. Muscle biopsy disclosed severe
muscular dystrophy
. Immunostaining for laminin 2 80 kDa and clone Mer3/22B2 monoclonal antibodies, 1 and 1 chain was preserved. Magnetic resonance imaging findings were consistent with pontocerebellar hypoplasia, bilateral opercular abnormalities and focal cortical dysplasia as well as minute periventricular white matter changes. Clusters of small T2-weighted focal hyperintensities in both cerebellar hemispheres consistent with cysts were observed in two of the three siblings studied with magnetic resonance imaging. Ophthalmologic and cardiologic examination was normal. Haplotype analysis using microsatellite markers excluded the Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy, LAMA2 and muscle-eye-brain disease loci. Thus, a wider spectrum of phenotypes, gene defects and protein deficiencies might be involved in congenital
muscular dystrophy
with brain abnormalities.
...
PMID:Merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy with mental retardation, microcephaly and central nervous system abnormalities unlinked to the Fukuyama muscular dystrophy and muscular-eye-brain loci: report of three siblings. 1152 87
We report laminin alpha 2 (merosin) deficiency associated with
muscular dystrophy
and demyelinating neuropathy in two cats. The cats developed progressive muscle weakness, and atrophy. Either
hypotonia
or contractures resulted in recumbency, necessitating euthanasia. Muscle biopsies showed dystrophic changes including marked endomysial fibrosis, myofiber necrosis, variability of fiber size, and perimysial lipid accumulation. Immunohistochemistry showed that laminin alpha 2 chain was absent or reduced, while dystrophin and all the components of the dystrophin-associated glycoprotein complex were present and normal. One cat was examined in detail. Motor nerve conduction velocity (MNCV) was decreased, and ultrastructurally the peripheral nerves showed Schwann cell degeneration and demyelination. Brain imaging was not performed, but white matter changes were not apparent in the brain at necropsy. The disease in these cats is similar to primary or secondary merosin (laminin alpha 2)-deficient congenital
muscular dystrophy
(CMD) in humans and to dystrophia muscularis in mice.
...
PMID:Laminin alpha 2 (merosin)-deficient muscular dystrophy and demyelinating neuropathy in two cats. 1153 31
We analyzed three Japanese patients (two boys and a girl) from two families with congenital
muscular dystrophy
(CMD) and brain involvement. One of the two families had two affected siblings of different sexes. Parental consanguinity was not documented in either family. All patients showed generalized
hypotonia
and weakness from infancy, delayed psychomotor development, facial muscle involvement, and joint contractures. Serum creatine kinase levels were markedly elevated. The histological change seen on muscle biopsy was characteristic of a dystrophic process, although dystrophin and merosin staining were normal. On MR imaging, cortical dysplasia and cerebral white matter abnormalities were observed. Although these clinical, myopathological and neuroradiological findings were typical of Fukuyama-type CMD (FCMD), full mutational analysis of the fukutin gene revealed neither a 3 kb insertion (Japanese founder mutation) nor point mutations. RT-PCR analysis of RNA isolated from lymphoblasts of a patient revealed normal expression of the FCMD transcript. As classification of CMD should be based on genetic background, our present cases with typical clinical, myopathological and neuroradiological findings of FCMD without mutation of the fukutin gene may represent a new variant (or variants) of CMD that is different from FCMD.
...
PMID:A variant of congenital muscular dystrophy. 1175 Oct 21
Congenital adrenal hypoplasia (CAH) normally occurs in the neonatal period, with patients presenting with more or less severe salt-wasting syndrome. X-linked CAH has been associated with mutations in the DAX-1 gene, and boys have also been shown to have hypogonadotrophic hypogonadism. Recently, in three unrelated boys, CAH was associated with intrauterine growth retardation (IUGR), metaphyseal dysplasia and genital abnormalities, defining a new association called IMAGe. We now report four additional patients with this association, including the first living female. The four patients belong to two unrelated families (one brother and one sister from each family). These patients have the main clinical characteristics of IMAGe association: IUGR, facial dysmorphy (frontal bossing, broad nasal bridge, low-set ears), short limbs due to metaphyseal dysplasia, and adrenal insufficiency. As these patients are older than the initial three patients, we can also describe additional features: short adult height, normal puberty in boys as well as in the living girl. The boys have hypospadias associated with micropenis. The living girl came to clinical attention at the age of 5 years as a result of a familial survey, and careful questioning revealed that she had been suffering from mild adrenal insufficiency since early childhood. At least one boy has congenital
hypotonia
due to
muscular dystrophy
. In conclusion, these four new cases display familial transmission, strongly suggesting Mendelian autosomal recessive inheritance. Adrenal insufficiency may be mild.
Hypotonia
, described in all the patients, might be related to paucisymptomatic
muscular dystrophy
, as this condition is clearly heterogeneous varying with regard to severity, associated manifestations and outcome. If this symptom is part of the syndrome, which we cannot assume, it could help to localize the candidate gene.
...
PMID:IMAGe association: additional clinical features and evidence for recessive autosomal inheritance. 1206 32
We report three Tunisian patients affected by congenital
muscular dystrophy
with mental retardation and cerebellar cysts on cranial magnetic resonance imaging. The clinical features were characterized by
hypotonia
at birth, joint contractures associated with severe psychomotor retardation, absence of speech, inability to walk in three patients, but calf hypertrophy was noted only in two patients. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed several cerebellar cysts and vermis hypoplasia in all of the patients. Abnormality of the white matter was present in two patients. The pattern of gyration was normal in all cases. Serum creatine kinase was elevated in all three cases and their muscle biopsy showed dystrophic changes compatible with congenital
muscular dystrophy
. The immunohistochemical analysis of the skeletal muscle revealed partial merosin deficiency, more pronounced for the N-terminal antibody. Linkage analysis excluded congenital
muscular dystrophy
loci on chromosomes 6q22, 9q31, 1p32 and 1q42. These patients constituted a particular form of congenital
muscular dystrophy
with a combination of severe motor delay, mental retardation, partial merosin deficiency and cerebellar cysts. Two patients showed white matter abnormalities on magnetic resonance imaging and hypertrophy of the calves. These cases, in addition to those reported previously, confirmed the large phenotypic variability in the group of secondary merosin deficiency congenital
muscular dystrophy
.
...
PMID:Merosin-deficient congenital muscular dystrophy with mental retardation and cerebellar cysts, unlinked to the LAMA2, FCMD, MEB and CMD1B loci, in three Tunisian patients. 1246 26
Floppiness in an infant may have a number of different etiologies from disorders of the brain to spinal cord lesions, neuropathies, neuromuscular junction disorders and myopathies. In this study we aimed to investigate the correlation of muscle ultrasonography (US) and electromyography (EMG) in the diagnosis of floppy infants. The study encompassed 41 floppy infants aged 2-24 months. The muscle US and EMG examinations were performed without awareness of the clinical diagnosis. The final diagnosis was established by molecular genetic tests or muscle/nerve biopsy. The neurogenic group consisted of 16 infants according to their US and EMG findings. Fifteen of them had spinal muscular atrophy proven by genetic analysis and one had polyneuropathy diagnosed by nerve biopsy. Six infants were in the myopathic group according to their muscle US and EMG results. All of them underwent muscle biopsy and microscopic examination revealed five congenital
muscular dystrophy
and one glycogen storage disease. In two infants the US and EMG data conflicted. Their biopsies were also insufficient for the diagnosis. Seventeen infants had normal US and EMG findings but pathologic cranial magnetic resonance imaging or metabolic/genetic tests. They were considered in the group of central
hypotonia
. Our results suggest a high concordance of US and EMG findings in the diagnostic work-up of neurogenic and myopathic disorders.
...
PMID:Muscle ultrasonography and electromyography correlation for evaluation of floppy infants. 1253 29
We report three patients with sporadic merosin-positive congenital
muscular dystrophy
(CMD) with torticollis and/or developmental dislocation of the hip in early childhood. Diagnosis of merosin-positive CMD was based on their clinical and dystrophic muscle biopsy findings. At the age 13 months, patient 1 was found to have developmental dislocation of both hips, which was surgically treated at 5 years. Patient 2 had severe torticollis and contracture of both hip joints which had been present since the neonatal period, and underwent repair of the torticollis at 2 years. Patient 3 was found to have developmental dislocation of the left hip at one month of age. Although she had generalized muscle
hypotonia
she learned to walk at 23 months. She had no facial muscle involvement nor contracture of joints, but had hyperlaxity of distal joints. Her muscle biopsy showed complete collagen VI deficiency immunohistochemically. In contrast to merosin-deficient CMD, merosin-positive CMD appears to be a group of heterogeneous diseases. Since collagen VI was reported to be defective in Ullrich's disease, patient 3 may be diagnosed as having Ullrich's disease but had no typical clinical characteristics of the disease. Further study is needed to identify the pathogenetic mechanism of congenital
muscular dystrophy
with early joint abnormalities to determine whether there is a primary abnormality of the connective tissue including collagen VI.
...
PMID:[Merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy with early orthopaedic problems in relation to Ullrich's disease]. 1266 Nov 1
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