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Query: UMLS:C0027066 (
myoclonus
)
4,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Diagnosis of respiratory chain defects in cultured skin fibroblasts is a difficult diagnostic procedure. We investigated the feasibility of using survival of skin fibroblasts in culture medium with galactose as the major carbon source as a method of quickly diagnosing cell lines that were compromised in oxidative metabolism. We found that cells from patients with most forms of cytochrome oxidase deficiency, cells with complex I deficiency, cells with multiple respiratory chain defects and cells with severe pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex deficiency failed to survive when subcultured into galactose (5 mM) medium. Cells from patients with Lebers hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON),
Kearns-Sayre syndrome
(
KSS
),
myoclonus
-epilepsy-lactic acidosis-stroke (MELAS), the hepatic form of cytochrome oxidase deficiency, and mild PDH complex deficiency survived well in galactose (5 mM)-containing medium. This could be used as a rapid screening test for skin fibroblasts with major oxidative defects.
...
PMID:Nonviability of cells with oxidative defects in galactose medium: a screening test for affected patient fibroblasts. 132 73
Fourteen patients (10 boys, 4 girls) aged from 4 months to 14 years old were diagnosed with mitochondrial disease based on the clinical manifestations together with abnormal muscle mitochondrial morphologies. Their clinical diagnoses included Leigh syndrome, three; Menkes' syndrome, three;
Kearns-Sayre syndrome
, two; myoclonic epilepsy with ragged fibres, one; and infant-onset progressive myoclonic epilepsy, one; fatal infantile mitochondrial myopathy, one; fatty acid oxidation defect, two; and myopathy with cardiopathy, one. Organs involved other than muscles included central nervous system, ten; heart, six; eye, two; liver, two; and kidney, two. Clinical manifestations varied to include hypotonia, seizures,
myoclonus
, mental retardation, nystagmus, ataxia, ptosis, ophthalmoplegia, retinal degeneration, muscle atrophy, spasticity etc. Nine had an abnormal rise in lactate after glucose loading. Ragged-red fibres were found in four patients. Abnormal mitochondrial morphology included abnormal accumulation, abnormal cristae pattern of tubular, concentric, or parallel form, some contained osmiophilic inclusion bodies. One patient of Leigh syndrome had had brain necropsy which showed intramyelin splitting of myelinated axons.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestation of mitochondrial diseases in children. 821 54
Recent advances in molecular genetics have led to a better understanding of mitochondrially inherited diseases. Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy overlap syndrome is one such group of diseases in which ocular abnormalities are frequently manifest. The authors describe the clinical, molecular genetic, and pathologic findings of two patients with the mitochondrial encephalomyopathy overlap syndrome. The patients shared a similar clinical course with features overlapping the three traditionally distinct clinical phenotypes (the
Kearns-Sayre syndrome
; the syndrome of mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke [MELAS], and the syndrome of
myoclonus
, epilepsy, and ragged red fibers [MERRF]). The patients had identical mitochondrial DNA mutations (at nucleotide position 3243) and had similar ultrastructural abnormalities, including abundant enlarged mitochondria with "whorled" and "tubular" cristae. These abnormal mitochondria appeared to be preferentially distributed in cells with high metabolic activity (retinal pigment epithelium, corneal endothelium, and extraocular muscles).
...
PMID:Ocular clinicopathologic study of the mitochondrial encephalomyopathy overlap syndromes. 836 69
Neuroimage studies of thirty-eight infants and children with mitochondrial disorders were reviewed: 24 ultrasound (US), 21 computed tomography (CT), and 27 magnetic resonance image (MRI) examinations were analyzed. Patients included seventeen with Leigh syndrome, two with
Kearns-Sayre syndrome
(
KSS
), one with
myoclonus
, epilepsy, and ragged red fibers (MERRF), one with Alpers disease, five with Menkes disease, two with fatty acid metabolic defect, two with Rett syndrome, and eight with unspecified mitochondrial disorders.
KSS
and MERRF tended to occur in older children, whereas Leigh syndrome, Menkes disease, and Alpers disease occurred in infants and young children. The deep cerebral nuclei and the cerebral white matter were commonly involved in Leigh syndrome and
KSS
. Subdural hematomas or effusions with profound cerebral atrophy was found in Alpers disease and Menkes disease. Tortuosities of basilar, Willis circle, and cerebral vessels were also noted in Menkes disease. MRI and CT examinations of Rett syndrome, fatty acid metabolic defect, and most of the unspecified mitochondrial disorders were normal. Our results indicate that neuroimage studies have characteristic findings for specific mitochondrial syndromes.
...
PMID:Neuroimage in infants and children with mitochondrial disorders. 893 6
Mitochondrial diseases (MIDs) are a large group of heterogeneous disorders due to mutations in either mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) or nuclear DNA (nDNA) genes, the latter encoding proteins involved in mitochondrial function. A multisystem clinical picture that involves several organs, including both the peripheral and central nervous systems, is a common presentation of MID. Movement disorders, even isolated ones, are not rare. Cerebellar ataxia is common in myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibers (MERFF) due to mutations in the mitochondrial transfer RNA (tRNA) lysine gene, in
Kearns-Sayre syndrome
due to mtDNA deletions, in sensory ataxic neuropathy with dysarthria and ophthalmoplegia (SANDO) due to nuclear POLG1 gene mutations, and also in ARCA2, Friedreich's ataxia, SPG7, SCA28 and autosomal-recessive spastic ataxia of Charlevoix-Saguenay (ARSACS) due to mutations in nuclear genes involved in mitochondrial morphology or function.
Myoclonus
is a key feature of MERFF, but may also be encountered in mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS), ARCA2, POLG1 mutations and Leigh syndrome. Dystonia is common in Leigh syndrome (which may be caused by 75 different genes) and in Leber hereditary ocular neuropathy (LHON) plus disease, due to mutations in mtDNA genes that encode subunits of NADH dehydrogenase, as well as in ARCA2, pantothenate kinase-associated neurodegeneration (PKAN), mitochondrial membrane protein-associated neurodegeneration (MPAN) and POLG1 mutations. Other movement disorders are rarer (such as parkinsonism, tremor, chorea). Although parkinsonism is more frequent in POLG1 mutations, and
myoclonus
in MERFF, most movement disorders are found either isolated or combined in numerous MIDs. The presence of associated neurological signs, whether central or peripheral, or of evocative magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) abnormalities (striatal necrosis) should prompt a search for MID. In cases of a particular clinical spectrum (LHON, MERFF,
Kearns-Sayre
, SANDO, SPG7, ARCA2, ARSACS), a search for the most frequently implicated mutation(s) is recommended. In other cases, muscle biopsies followed by metabolic and genetic studies may be useful for arriving at a diagnosis.
...
PMID:Movement disorders in mitochondrial diseases. 2777 46