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)

Clonazepam, a new benzodiazepine derivative, was used in the treatment of intention myoclonus with excellent results. Five patients, three with postanoxic encephalopathy and two with degenerative central nervous system disorders, all refractory to other therapy, responded with marked decrease in myoclonus. The effective dosage was 7 to 12 mg a day in divided doses. One patient has been treated for over 4 years with no toxicity or breakthrough of symptoms. Except for transient sedation, there have been no untoward side effects. Clonazepam is an important addition to the therapy of intention myoclonus.
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PMID:Intention myoclonus: successful treatment with clonazepam. 94 66

The CNS diseases that are associated with mitochondrial myopathy have been reviewed in this chapter. The disorders causing myoclonus have been compared to those in which myoclonus has been reported. Both groups have been associated with lactate and pyruvate accumulation, and both have a wide spectrum of clinical and pathologic findings. Deficiency of components of the respiratory chain has been offered as an explanation for the mitochondrial accumulation in the muscles of these patients. Skeletal muscle respiratory-chain components may be deficient, and there is experimental evidence that indicates that mitochondria will proliferate in muscle and other tissues when vital nutrients are withheld. There are two features of these patients that separate them from other patients with myoclonus. The first is the elevation of serum lactate and pyruvate due to deficient oxidative phosphorylation. The second is a pedigree that indicates maternal inheritance.
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PMID:Myoclonus and mitochondrial myopathy. 308 Aug 47

Among patients with renal failure, there have been impressive modifications of both the duration and quality of life as a result of dialysis, renal transplantation, and improved medical management. However, patients who have renal failure continue to manifest a variety of neurologic disorders. Patients with chronic renal failure who have not yet received dialytic therapy may develop a symptom complex progressing from mild sensorial clouding to delirium and coma, with tremor, asterixis, multifocal myoclonus, and seizures. Even after the institution of otherwise adequate maintenance dialysis therapy, patients may continue to be afflicted with more subtle nervous system dysfunction, including impaired mentation, generalized weakness, and peripheral neuropathy. The central nervous system disorders of both untreated renal failure and that persisting despite dialysis are referred to as uremic encephalopathy. The dialytic treatment of end stage renal disease has itself been associated with the emergence of two distinct, new disorders of the central nervous system: Dialysis dysequilibrium and dialysis dementia. The dialysis disequilibrium syndrome consists of headache, nausea, muscle cramps, obtundation and seizures, and is a consequence of the initiation of dialysis therapy in some patients. Dialysis dementia is a progressive, generally fatal encephalopathy which affects patients on chronic hemodialysis. This disease also appears to be a complication of the therapy for renal failure.
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PMID:Pathogenesis of dialysis encephalopathy. 636 3

Patients with renal failure may manifest a variety of neurologic disorders. Patients with chronic renal failure who have not yet received dialytic therapy may develop a symptom complex progressing from mild sensorial clouding to delirium and coma, with tremor, asterixis, multifocal myoclonus, and seizures. After the institution of adequate maintenance dialysis therapy, patients may continue to be afflicted with more subtle nervous dysfunction, including impaired mentation, generalized weakness, and peripheral neuropathy. These central nervous system disorders are referred to as uremic encephalopathy. The dialytic treatment of end-stage renal disease has itself been associated with the emergence of two distinct, new disorders of the central nervous system; dialysis dysequilibrium and dialysis dementia. The dialysis disequilibrium syndrome consists of headache, nausea, muscle cramps, obtundation, and seizures, and is a consequence of the initiation of dialysis therapy in some patients. Dialysis dementia is a progressive, generally fatal encephalopathy which affects patients on chronic hemodialysis. There are at least three different forms of dialysis encephalopathy: sporadic, epidemic; and that associated with renal disease in children. In addition to the foregoing neurologic diseases which are specifically related to uremia and/or dialysis, a number of other neurologic disorders occur with increased frequency in patients with end-stage renal disease on chronic hemodialysis. These include subdural hematoma, electrolyte disorders, vitamin deficiencies, drug intoxication, hypertensive encephalopathy, and acute trace element intoxication. Renal transplantation is associated with a variety of central nervous system infections, reticulum cell sarcoma, and central pontine myelinosis. The present manuscript will review the clinical, structural, and biochemical components of those neurologic disorders which are peculiar to the uremic state and its treatment with dialysis.
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PMID:Uremic encephalopathies: clinical, biochemical, and experimental features. 675 30

Local injections of botulinum toxin is a well-accepted treatment for focal dystonias, hemifacial spasms and strabismus. Its use by skilled neurologists has been reported to be safe and effective. We report our experience with botulinum toxin injections in 108 patients with various central nervous system disorders. Botox was effective in upper face dystonia (86% improvement), spastic dysphonia (92% improvement), platysma muscle spasms and spasmodic torticollis (range of movement 61%, pain and tension 90%). It was also very effective in a few patients with apraxia of eyelid opening, parkinsonian jaw tremor, teeth clenching, palatal myoclonus and adductor leg spasticity. No serious side effects were recorded. Botulinum toxin is a useful symptomatic treatment for many neurological disorders, and one of the leading mode of treatments in the new subspecialty in neurology called "Interventional neurology."
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PMID:Interventional neurology: botulinum toxin as a potent symptomatic treatment in neurology. 798 70

The medical records of 220 dogs with inflammatory/infectious diseases of the central nervous system (CNS) were retrospectively examined. The aims of the study were to determine if clinical and clinicopathologic data (not including biopsy or necropsy examination) could distinguish inflammatory CNS diseases from diseases of other types, and to search for criteria allowing differentiation of specific inflammatory diseases. The signalment, historical findings, extraneural and neurological signs, and the lesion site contributed marginally to a specific diagnosis. Multifocal signs were only noticed in one third of the dogs with inflammatory/infectious diseases. Particular neurological abnormalities were more frequent in certain diseases than in others (eg, myoclonus was frequent in dogs with distemper, but it was also found in those with other meningoencephalomyelitides). Hematologic findings contributed to the diagnosis in certain conditions (eg, canine distemper encephalitis, protozoal encephalomyelitis, steroid-responsive meningitis-arteritis). Cerebrospinal fluid examinations, including immunoglobulin G index and cytology were useful to separate meningoencephalomyelitides from the other CNS diseases and to distinguish certain conditions from others. In most cases a specific diagnosis depended on a combination of clinical signs and ancillary diagnostic aids. Still, a specific diagnosis remained very difficult, if not impossible, in at least one third of the dogs.
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PMID:Diagnosis of inflammatory and infectious diseases of the central nervous system in dogs: a retrospective study. 853 Nov 75

Paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis developed as the presenting feature of small-cell lung carcinoma in 3 patients. Two patients with paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis manifested predominantly as subacute sensory neuronopathy did not improve after prednisone treatment and chemotherapy. The third patient had severe axial and limb rigidity and myoclonus, which partially improved after chemotherapy and treatment with intravenous immunoglobulin and prednisone. Serum from each patient immunocytochemically stained the neuropil and to a lesser degree the neuronal cytoplasm in human cerebral and cerebellar cortex. On immunoblots of human neuronal extracts, each patient's serum contained high-titer IgG antibodies reacting with a protein band of apparent molecular mass 125 kd. This autoantibody pattern is indistinguishable from antibodies recently identified in several women with breast carcinoma and stiff-man syndrome. Screening of a human brain complementary DNA expression library with patient serum yielded clones whose sequence is identical to that of the synaptic vesicle-related protein amphiphysin. Reverse transcriptase-polymerase chain reaction demonstrated expression of amphiphysin in 8 of 10 small-cell lung carcinomas and in 5 of 14 breast carcinomas. These observations highlight the clinical and serological heterogeneity of paraneoplastic central nervous system disorders: Patients with a given clinical syndrome may have different antineuronal antibodies, and patients with a given autoantibody specificity have differing clinical presentations.
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PMID:Antiamphiphysin antibodies with small-cell lung carcinoma and paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis. 861 52

Myoclonus can be caused from a variety of central nervous system disorders. With regard to its pathophysiology, much work has been done in adult patients, but reports from pediatric clinics are scarce. We describe the clinical and electrophysiological features of four different types of myoclonus in children using back averaging technique. In a patient with cortical reflex myoclonus, myoclonic jerks were induced in the distal right arm by taps on the ipsilateral fingers. Myoclonus was preceded by the cortical spike which was localized posterior to the central sulcus contralateral to the myoclonus, and the cortical spike was time-locked to the myoclonus. In a patient with subcortico-cortical myoclonus, myoclonus occurred as a focal motor seizure. Myoclonic jerks were preceded by generalized cortical waves which were of maximal amplitude over the cortex contralateral to the myoclonus, and cortical waves time-locked to the myoclonus. A patient with spinal myoclonus had rhythmical and segmental myoclonus. Myoclonus was induced in both arms after electrical stimulation at the wrist with a latency which was slightly longer than that of the F wave. In a patient with brainstem myoclonus, muscle activity was bilaterally synchronous and was predominant in the proximal flexors. The pattern of muscle recruitment suggested that the myoclonus signal travelled downward along the spinal cord and upward through the brainstem. The back averaging technique is essential in the differential diagnosis of myoclonus.
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PMID:Electrophysiological study of myoclonus in pediatric practice. 965 93

Opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome is one of a few corticotropin (ACTH)-responsive central nervous system disorders of childhood. We measured cerebrospinal fluid ACTH and cortisol in 69 children with opsoclonus-myoclonus and 25 age- and sex-matched control subjects to determine endogenous levels and look for hypothesized differential hormonal effects of ACTH and corticosteroid treatment. Cerebrospinal fluid cortisol was 10-fold higher with ACTH treatment (n = 26), but was unchanged with oral steroid treatment (n = 18) or no treatment (n = 25). It was significantly higher in children receiving daily high-dose ACTH than alternate day ACTH. In ACTH-treated children, cerebrospinal fluid and serum cortisol were highly correlated (r = 0.96, P = 0.0001), with a mean ratio of cerebrospinal fluid to serum cortisol of approximately 1:10. Cerebrospinal fluid ACTH concentration did not differ significantly between untreated opsoclonus-myoclonus and control subjects but was lower with ACTH (-29%) or steroid treatment (-36%), suggesting feedback inhibition of ACTH release. These data delineate differences in the central effects of ACTH and corticosteroid therapy, as well as between high and low ACTH doses, and support the integrity of the brain-adrenal axis in pediatric opsoclonus-myoclonus.
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PMID:Cerebrospinal fluid ACTH and cortisol in opsoclonus-myoclonus: effect of therapy. 1608 57

Systemic lupus erythematosus (SLE) may involve the nervous system but there are no specific biomarkers of neuroSLE. Limbic encephalitis has been rarely associated with SLE. We present a case of a 22-year-old black woman where typical SLE psychosis evolved to an encephalopathy with atypical features, normal MRI, electroencephalogram slowing and frontal and occipito-temporal hypometabolism on fluorodeoxyglucose positron emission tomography (FDG PET).Memory deficits, bizarre behaviour, psychosis, neuromyotonia and movement disorders have been described in autoimmune central nervous system disorders and associated with specific antibodies. Brain MRI may be normal and cortical brain hypometabolism on FDG PET scans has been reported. We have not found any report of limbic encephalitis or other SLE neurological manifestation associated to positive titres of anti-CASPR2 antibodies and this may warrant systematic investigation. In the rare cases of limbic encephalitis associated with SLE no specific antibodies were documented. Anti-CASPR2 antibodies have been associated not only with limbic encephalitis but also with neuromyotonia and Morvan syndrome. Although our patient had a specific pattern of tone abnormalities with an impressive cervical and upper limb hypertonicity and flaccid lower limbs, no myotonic discharges were found. We did not find any association between myoclonus and anti-CASPR2 antibodies. We cannot exclude that a non determined autoantibody could have played a role; however, clinical and FDG PET improvement supports an antibody-mediated injury, in this case of neuroSLE.
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PMID:Encephalopathy with upper body hypertonia and myoclonus in patient with systemic lupus erythematosus and anti-CASPR2. 2743 9


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