Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027066 (myoclonus)
4,275 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 64-year-old man presented with a three day history of progressive Broca's aphasia, followed within 3 weeks by exclusively right-sided myoclonus, rigidity, and dystonia. Within 4 weeks he was globally aphasic. He died within 7 weeks of onset. In the final week, rigidity and myoclonus became bilateral. CT and MRI were normal. SPECT showed diminished perfusion of the left hemisphere. EEG showed periodic discharges on the left. At autopsy, there were marked cortical spongiform change, neuronal loss, and gliosis throughout the left hemisphere and in the right occipital cortex. Elsewhere in the right hemisphere, spongiform change was non-existent to minimal. There was moderate spongiform change in the molecular layer of the cerebellar cortex, much more marked on the left. Clinical and pathological unilateral cerebral predominance extended to the ipsilateral cerebellum. Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease is an important consideration in patients with rapidly progressive unilateral cerebral signs associated with a movement disorder.
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PMID:Unilateral Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease presenting as rapidly progressive aphasia. 787 20

A 66-year-old man with clinically diagnosed corticobasal degeneration was studied electrophysiologically. The patient had bilateral forced grasping, rigidity, bradykinesia and hyperreflexia which were predominant on the right side, motor aphasia, constructional apraxia, forced laughing, dysequilibrium and myoclonus of the right upper extremity. Several anti-parkinsonism drugs were ineffective. Brain MRI revealed cortical atrophy of the fronto-temporo-parietal lobes with left predominance. On single photon emission computed tomography, cerebral blood perfusion was decreased, especially on the left side in the fronto-temporal lobes, basal ganglia and thalamus. Myoclonus was distal dominant, worse on action or posture, and was rhythmic, mimicking a tremor. On surface EMG recording of the myoclonus, agonist and antagonist muscle pairs were activated simultaneously and rhythmic activities with frequencies ranging from 7 to 8 Hz were seen. The patient had an enhanced C reflex with a relatively short latency (41.0 ms) after median nerve stimulation only at the right wrist. Additionally, during voluntary contraction, the time-constant EMG silence lasting for about 80-90 ms followed the C reflexes. On somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) to the median nerve stimulation, N20 latencies were normal and P25 and N33 amplitudes were not giant. There was no premovement corticat spike when a jerk-locked averaging method was used. Regarding motor evoked potentials (MEPs) elicited by magnetic brain stimulation, central motor conduction times were normal. The estimated cortical delay between the arrival of a somatosensory volley and the motor cortical discharge responsible for C reflex was 1.0 ms, which was shorter than those (3.1 +/- 0.9 ms) estimated in five patients with typical cortical reflex myoclonus. A conditioning stimulation (C) of the right median nerve produced marked facilitation of MEPs following magnetic stimulation of the left motor cortex, at conditioning-test intervals (C-T intervals) of 20-22 ms, whereas a conditioning stimulation of the left median nerve did not produce the same effect. These C-T intervals were thought to be very short, considering that N20 latency was 19.6 ms in this patient. The duration of the EMG silence following the C reflex corresponded to that of the EMG silence between muscle activities during his rhythmic myoclonus, and also the myoclonus was reset by occurrence of the C reflex. These electrophysiological findings indicate that his myoclonus was based upon the enhancement of direct sensory input from the thalamus to the motor cortex. Moreover, it is suggested that the existence of the time-constant EMG silence following the C reflex was related to the myoclonal rhythm.
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PMID:[Electrophysiological study of a case of clinically diagnosed corticobasal degeneration with rhythmic myoclonus]. 950 71

We report an 80-year-old Japanese man with histologically-diagnosed Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD). The patient was admitted to our neurological unit because of sudden onset motor aphasia-like symptoms and right hemiparesis. His medical and family histories were unremarkable, and he had taken no medications. Urine, blood counts and blood chemistry were all within normal limits. Cerebrospinal fluid was normal except for elevation of neuron specific enolase (29.9 ng/ml). High-signal intensity was demonstrated in the cortex of the left temporal lobe on T2-weighted MRI images, and the lesion swelled during the initial stage of the disease. There was no enhancement with Gd-DTPA. Serial MRI showed that the high-signal lesion had spread into the bilateral cerebral cortex. The patient developed myoclonus followed by akinetic mutism within 6 months of onset. Consecutive EEGs revealed no periodic synchronous discharge (PSD). He died of pneumonia 21 months after of admission. Autopsy revealed spongiform changes in the cerebral cortex with Kuru plaques, confirming the diagnosis of CJD. The Cerebellar cortex was well preserved. The high-signal lesions corresponded to the spongiform changes in the cerebral cortex. Immunohistochemical analysis showed weak synaptic prion staining. Prion protein (PrP) gene analysis of genomic DNA isolated from the autopsied brain by polymerase chain reaction, the restriction fragment length polymorphisms, and direct sequencing revealed a point mutation (Val-->Ile) at codon 180 and a polymorphism (Met/Val) at codon 129 on different alleles. A few CJD patients with point mutations in codon 180 of the PrP gene have been reported. Combination of the codon 180 point mutation and codon 129 polymorphism may yield an atypical clinicopathological form of CJD that includes late onset, negative PSD, and atypical MRI findings, with preservation of the cerebellar cortex.
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PMID:[Clinicopathological characteristics of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease with a PrP V180I mutation and M129V polymorphism on different alleles]. 1058 22

Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease (CJD) is an untreatable rare human prion disease characterized by rapidly progressive dementia along with various neurological features, including myoclonus and sometimes other movement disorders. The clinical course is typically insidious and rapid, leading to an early death. In general, the most common form is sporadic CJD; however, Slovakia is typical for a high percentage of genetic cases. We present an unusual case report of a 65-year-old man with a sudden, stroke-like onset of motor aphasia with right-sided levodopa unresponsive parkinsonism, alien hand, and other characteristic features of corticobasal syndrome (CBS), with rapid deterioration and death on the 32nd day of the disease. Various neurodegenerative disorders are manifested with CBS as a clinical phenotype, including corticobasal degeneration (CBD), progressive supranuclear palsy, Alzheimer's disease, and CJD. In our patient, mutation E200K and M129M polymorphism of the PRNP gene and typical immunohistochemical findings pointed to a diagnosis of CJD. The patient's mother died of CJD many years ago. Several CBS-CJD cases were described, but the atypical stroke-like onset of CBS-CJD, an extremely rare presentation of CJD, makes our case unique worldwide.
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PMID:A Corticobasal Syndrome Variant of Familial Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease with Stroke-Like Onset. 2780 26