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)

Paraneoplastic syndromes are complexes of symptoms and signs that occur in association with cancer and that are unexplained by the known anatomic and physiologic characteristics of the tumor. Many of these syndromes are neurologic in nature or have consequences for the central or peripheral nervous system. These syndromes have been well characterized in adults. With the exception of opsoclonus-myoclonus, little has been written about the occurrence of such syndromes in children. This review looks at published reports of paraneoplastic syndromes in children and concludes that paraneoplastic syndromes in childhood differ from those seen in adulthood because of differences in both the host and the kinds of neoplasms most prevalent in each age group. Paraneoplastic syndromes may be underreported in childhood because of the difficulty in eliciting specific neurologic complaints from children and because a thorough neurologic examination is often not undertaken as a matter of routine.
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PMID:Nervous system dysfunction in children with paraneoplastic syndromes. 163 46

Paraneoplastic syndromes are heterogeneous in their clinical presentations and their associations with particular tumor types and are an important part of the differential diagnosis of neurologic dysfunction in patients with or without a known neoplasm. Patients presenting with one of the more distinctive syndromes, such as subacute cerebellar degeneration, opsoclonus-myoclonus, and the Lambert-Eaton syndrome, should undergo a careful evaluation for the presence of an occult malignancy. The importance of looking for a monoclonal gammopathy in patients with certain polyneuropathies and motor neuron syndromes is also becoming clear. At this time, an autoimmune pathogenesis has been clearly demonstrated only for the Lambert-Eaton syndrome. Specific autoantibodies in other syndromes appear to be valuable diagnostic markers for the presence of an underlying malignancy, but the actual role of these antibodies in producing tissue damage and clinical disease is still unknown.
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PMID:The remote effects of cancer on the nervous system. 254 61

In the last decade, anti-neurons autoantibodies have been found in serum and cerebro spinal fluid of patients suffering from neurological paraneoplastic syndrome. This discovery has made possible to improve the knowledge of these syndromes as well as to characterize some proteins specific to the nervous system, unknown until now. Paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis can manifest together with an ataxic sensitive neuropathy, a limbic encephalitis, a brainstem or cerebellum syndrome. This encephalomyelitis is almost always associated with a small cells lung cancer and auto-antibodies, called anti-Hu, which recognize all the neurons of the nervous system. Patients with paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration present an antibody, called anti-Yo, directed against Purkinje cells. In this case, the tumor is a gynecologic cancer. Patients presenting with an opso-myoclonus and a breast cancer have an antineurons anti-body, called anti-Ri, which is absent when the opso-myoclonus is associated with a lung cancer or a neuroblastoma. These three antibodies are the most frequently found and the best studied, but others, rarer, have been described. The genes coding for the proteins recognized by these three antibodies have been cloned. These proteins seem to play a major role in the neuronal maturation and homeostasis. These antibodies prove to be irreplaceable tools to study the phenomenons subtending the neuronal degeneration and the cellular proliferation.
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PMID:[Value of the detection of anti-nervous system autoantibodies in neurologic paraneoplastic syndromes]. 805 19

A neurologic paraneoplastic syndrome may be the first sign of an occult and treatable cancer. Some syndromes are associated with autoantibodies against neuronal antigens. Patients with cerebellar degeneration and ovarian or breast cancer have antibodies against 34 and 62 kilodalton (kDa) proteins in Purkinje cell cytoplasm: anti-Yo antibodies. Patients with encephalomyelitis or sensory neuronopathy and small cell lung cancer have antibodies against 35-40 kDa neuronal nuclear proteins: anti-Hu antibodies. Patients with opsoclonus-myoclonus and breast cancer have antibodies against 55 and 80 kDa neuronal nuclear proteins: anti-Ri antibodies. Patients with Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome and small cell lung cancer have antibodies against voltage-gated calcium channels (anti-VGCC) in motor nerve terminals. The presence of anti-neuronal antibodies strongly indicates that a neurological syndrome is paraneoplastic, and often identify the site of an occult neoplasm. However, the absence of detectable antibodies does not rule out the presence of an underlying tumour.
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PMID:[Neurologic paraneoplastic syndromes and anti-neuronal antibodies]. 863 63

A 27-month-old girl presented with chest pain. Further evaluation confirmed posterior mediastinal neuroblastoma with bone marrow infiltration, which was treated with a combination of chemotherapy and surgery. Four months after completing treatment, she presented with myoclonus and weakness of her right arm. The myoclonus eventually subsided but her right arm weakness progressed to a right hemiplegia. High titers of antineuronal nuclear antibodies identified as anti-Hu were found in both serum and cerebrospinal fluid. One month later she presented with a relapse of her original tumor, from which she died. Identification of anti-Hu antineuronal nuclear antibodies in this neuroblastoma-associated paraneoplastic syndrome supports the hypothesis that the syndrome is due to autoimmune disease.
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PMID:Neuroblastoma-associated paraneoplastic syndrome with anti-Hu antineuronal antibodies presenting at the time of recurrence. 883 43

The different pathogenic and clinical aspects of the paraneoplastic ophthalmological syndromes are discussed by the author. Opsoclonus-myoclonus, retinal degeneration are largely reviewed. It is possible that new modern immunological methods to elucidate the role of antibodies in the genesis of paraneoplastic syndrome and the role of these antigens in the functioning of nervous system. Recognising a ophthalmological syndrome as paraneoplastic will prompt a search for an early detection of a cancer and a more prompt treatment.
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PMID:Paraneoplastic ophthalmological syndromes. 891 42

Opsoclonus-myoclonus is a well-described paraneoplastic syndrome that most often occurs in association with small cell carcinoma of the lung and breast carcinoma. To the best of our knowledge, we describe the first reported case of paraneoplastic opsoclonus-myoclonus occurring is association with malignant melanoma. Antineuronal antibodies were not identified despite repeated testing. No therapeutic benefit was observed following corticosteroid administration.
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PMID:Paraneoplastic opsoclonus-myoclonus secondary to malignant melanoma. 1022 21

Anti-Ri antibodies most often occur in patients with breast cancer and typically are associated with the paraneoplastic syndrome of opsoclonus-myoclonus-ataxia. This study reports a patient with diplopia and ophthalmoplegia. She had anti-Ri antibodies, and despite an exhaustive search for malignancy at presentation, breast cancer was not detected for six months.
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PMID:Ophthalmoplegia associated with the anti-Ri antibody. 1060 78

A 58-year-old male presented with reflex myoclonus and stiffness of the left facial, tongue, shoulder, and lower limbs muscles. Muscle stiffness and gait progressively worsened, leading to frequent falls. Acoustic and cutaneous stimuli of head precipitated reflex myoclonus like head retraction. Cutaneous of lower extremities precipitated jerky myoclonus of bilateral lower extremities. CSF analysis were unremarkable. No anti GAD antibody or anti amphiphysin antibody was detected in the serum and CSF. On surface EMG the spasms initiated with 4-5 short burst discharges at intervals between 59 and 84 ms, followed by a tonic decrescendo activity up to 3 s. After diazepam treatment, stiffness and reflex myoclonus of lower extremities were disappeared and head retraction like reflex myoclonus was improved but remained. CT of the chest revealed a mediastinal tumor. Biopsy of the tumor revealed undifferential carcinoma. The patient further improved after the resection of the tumor. These findings suggest that this stiff-man syndrome may occur as an autoimmune paraneoplastic syndrome of CNS.
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PMID:[A case of stiff-man syndrome with head retraction like reflex myoclonus and jerky myoclonus of bilateral lower extremities which responded well to removal of mediastinal carcinoma]. 1065 63

Opsoclonus-myoclonus is a rare neurological syndrome affecting children and adults. In children it occurs as a parainfectious process or a paraneoplastic syndrome in association with neuroblastoma. Here we report it presenting as an unusual neurological manifestation of Lyme borreliosis. To our knowledge, this is the first report which describes recovery from this syndrome in a child.
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PMID:Opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome in a child with neuroborreliosis. 1084 Oct 99


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