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Query: UMLS:C0027066 (
myoclonus
)
4,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 21-year-old woman had typical clinical and biochemical findings of the cherry-red spot-
myoclonus
syndrome. She had 20/50 acuity in each eye,
flutter
-like ocular oscillations, rebound nystagmus, and transient vertical dissociation. Cherry-red maculas and optic atrophy were present. Although electroretinographic signals were normal, visual evoked potentials were almost absent. Levels of neuraminidase were significantly reduced in cultured ebroblasts from the patient and her parents, while lysosomal inclusions probably containing oligosaccharides were found in her conjunctival fibroblasts.
...
PMID:Cherry-red spot-myoclonus syndrome. 55 58
A variety of abnormal ocular oscillations consequent to brain stem and cerebellar dysfunction are described. The brain stem eye signs include: see-saw nystagmus, convergence-retraction nystagmus, down-beat nystagmus, ocular
myoclonus
, ocular bobbing, and superior oblique myokymia. The "cerebellar system" eye signs discussed are five varieties of nystagmus, square wave and macro square wave jerks, macro saccadic oscillations, ocular dysmetria and
flutter
, and opsoclonus.
...
PMID:Ocular oscillations. 83 66
Five patients presenting with focal abnormal involuntary movements of the abdominal wall are described. One was shown to have diaphragmatic
flutter
, which may represent a variant of the palatal
myoclonus
syndrome. The other four had writhing movements and contractions of the abdominal wall at frequencies of approximately 30 per minute. In two of the latter cases, these abdominal movements were profoundly influenced by respiratory manoeuvres. They were quite unlike the movements of spinal
myoclonus
or axial torsion dystonia. None of the patients were taking drugs that might have provoked their abnormal movements, or had any other evidence of neurological deficit. No cause was established in any of the cases.
...
PMID:Diaphragmatic flutter, the moving umbilicus syndrome, and "belly dancer's" dyskinesia. 213 30
An increased compendium of drugs useful in ocular motor system dysfunction has expanded our capacity to treat selected ocular motility disorders. Adjunctive therapeutic modes (e.g., Fresnel prisms and orthoptic exercises) can also be beneficial. PAN and see-saw nystagmus can be treated with baclofen. Downbeat nystagmus may respond to clonazepam therapy, and prisms may help if the nystagmus can be modified with convergence. Congenital nystagmus may respond minimally to drugs (e.g., baclofen), but prisms or surgical procedures, or both, are still the primary treatment modalities. Innovar may be helpful in patients with severe, incapacitating vestibular disorders, and scopolamine alone or in combination with promethazine may be beneficial in patients with milder ambulatory acute peripheral vestibular disorders. Benign positional vertigo is best treated initially with positional exercises before drug therapy is instituted. Opsoclonus and ocular
flutter
have been treated successfully with corticosteroids, propranolol, and clonazepam, while microflutter, an extremely rare disorder, can resolve with baclofen. Although therapy with carbamazepine, 5-hydroxtryptophan, and scopolamine has been useful in selected patients with ocular palatal
myoclonus
, most do not respond to drug treatment. It is not usually necessary to treat voluntary nystagmus, but Fresnel prism lenses should be remembered in refractory patients. Potentially reversible and pseudointernuclear ophthalmoplegias also were discussed. Orthoptic exercises can be beneficial in posttraumatic internuclear ophthalmoplegia. Selected supranuclear palsies can be improved completely with the proper drug regimen. Lastly, superior oblique myokymia can be treated successfully with carbamazepine, with tight surveillance for possible adverse side effects. Descriptive phenomenology and pathophysiological localization must be correlated with brain stem neurochemistry and neuropharmacology to medically treat additional ocular motor system disorders.
...
PMID:Medical treatment of nystagmus and ocular motor disorders. 349 76
Pathological nystagmus may be spontaneous, positional, or gaze-evoked. Peripheral vestibular nystagmus is usually rotatory, the horizontal component being most prominent. It is - in contrast to a central vestibular nystagmus - strongly inhibited by fixation. Spontaneous congenital nystagmus is also prominent with fixation, but it can usually be distinguished from acquired fixation nystagmus based on its long duration, atypical waveforms and high frequency. Two general types of positional nystagmus can be identified on the basis of nystagmus regularity: static and paroxysmal. The most common variety of positional nystagmus is the so-called benign paroxysmal positional nystagmus, which in the majority of cases occurs as an isolated symptom of unknown cause. Gaze-evoked nystagmus, prominent with fixation, includes dissociated, rebound and gaze-paretic nystagmus forms. Symmetrical gaze-evoked nystagmus is most commonly produced by ingestion of certain drugs. Phenomena related to nystagmus include: amblyopic, voluntary, and convergence-retraction nystagmus, ocular dysmetria, ocular
flutter
, opsoclonus, ocular bobbing, and ocular
myoclonus
.
...
PMID:[Pathologic nystagmus and related phenomena. A review]. 387 44
After two days of malaise, headache, nausea, and vomiting, a 26-year-old man suddenly developed opsoclonus and stance and gait ataxia, without
myoclonus
. Having excluded a paraneoplastic etiology, we assumed that the disorder was probably related to a viral infection. Spontaneous resolution occurred in about two months. Opsoclonus became
flutter
dysmetria and then resolved. Saccadic eye movement recording disclosed the occurrence of hypermetria, increased velocity, and delayed latency, which also resolved. In this patient, the correspondence between clinical and ocular motor abnormality courses suggests a transient cerebellar dysfunction as the possible pathophysiologic mechanism for opsoclonus.
...
PMID:Opsoclonus in a patient with cerebellar dysfunction. 1060 72
A 69-year old man developed subacutely progressive dementia, inactivity, and gait disturbance. On admission, he showed
flutter
-like oscillation of the bilateral eyes and
myoclonus
with upper extremities. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) analysis revealed elevation of protein (73.2mg/dl) and the positive 14-3-3 protein. An electroencephalogram (EEG) revealed diffuse slowing (2-3Hz, 80microV). Brain MRI showed high intensity lesions in the white matter and left thalamus on FLAIR and diffusion imaging. We first suspected Creutzfelt-Jakob disease (CJD), but his symptoms didn't progress and showed no PSD on EEG. Oral corticosteroid therapy (prednisolone 60mg/day) brought him remarkable recovery corresponding with improvement of CSF and EEG findings. Despite of etiology unknown, we made a diagnosis of steroid-responsive encephalopathy.
...
PMID:[A case of steroid-responsive encephalopathy with positive 14-3-3 protein of the cerebrospinal fluid clinically resembling Creutzfelt-Jakob disease]. 1551 6
Celiac disease may be associated with various neurologic manifestations, most commonly cerebellar ataxia. This report describes a 2-year-old male who presented with opsoclonus-
myoclonus
syndrome including action
myoclonus
, palpebral
flutter
, opsoclonus, and ataxia. Given the severity of ataxia, the child was unable to sit or walk independently. Brain magnetic resonance imaging was normal on two occasions (4-week interval). Oligoclonal bands were found in the cerebrospinal fluid. Blood and serum examinations were unremarkable, with no evidence of infectious seroconversion. However autoantibody testing indicated the presence of antigliadin antibodies of immunoglobulin A subtype, anti-endomysial antibodies, and anti-CV2 antibodies that were not, however, detected in the cerebrospinal fluid. Duodenal biopsy documented villous atrophy confirming the diagnosis of celiac disease. This case confirms that initial presentation of celiac disease may be restricted to neurologic features. We suggest that a search for evidence for celiac disease should be included in the evaluation of opsoclonus-
myoclonus
.
...
PMID:Opsoclonus-myoclonus associated with celiac disease. 1663 9
We report an autopsy case of paraneoplastic opsoclonus-
myoclonus
-ataxia syndrome associated with small cell carcinoma of the lung. Chemotherapy and lung lobectomy resulted in complete tumor remission and disappearance of
myoclonus
. However, emotional and behavioral disturbances relapsed and remitted associated with exacerbation of truncal ataxia and ocular
flutter
, which responded favorably to prednisolone. At autopsy, after 2 years and 11 months of illness, there was no recurrence of cancer. Neuropathologically, only the cerebellum was affected, with diffuse loss of Purkinje cells and dentate neurons, suggesting that the paraneoplastic cerebellar involvement may be responsible for the cognitive affective symptoms in our patient.
...
PMID:Autopsy case of opsoclonus-myoclonus-ataxia and cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome associated with small cell carcinoma of the lung. 1753 81
Paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration may occur in association with Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome (LEMS), but to our knowledge, the co-occurrence of paraneoplastic opsoclonus-
myoclonus
syndrome and LEMS has not been previously reported. A 67-year-old woman presented with a complex partial seizure and evolving ocular
flutter
, opsoclonus,
myoclonus
and 'cerebellar' signs, all of which improved spontaneously within 6 weeks. Approximately 8 weeks after symptom onset, the patient became encephalopathic, she had a further complex partial seizure, and she became areflexic with potentiation of deep tendon reflexes. Radiological, bronchoscopic and histological investigations revealed small-cell lung cancer, and neurophysiological investigations confirmed a diagnosis of LEMS. High-titre anti-P/Q-type voltage-gated calcium-channel antibodies were identified in the serum, which increased as the signs of opsoclonus and
myoclonus
resolved. The encephalopathy and clinical features of LEMS responded dramatically to chemotherapy and radiotherapy. Spontaneous improvement of paraneoplastic opsoclonus-
myoclonus
syndrome may occur, and this syndrome may occur in association with LEMS. Antivoltage-gated calcium-channel antibodies are not implicated in the pathogenesis of paraneoplastic opsoclonus-
myoclonus
syndrome.
...
PMID:Sequential fluctuating paraneoplastic ocular flutter-opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome and Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome in small-cell lung cancer. 2039 78
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