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Query: UMLS:C0027066 (
myoclonus
)
4,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Paraneoplastic neurologic syndromes (PNS) are rare disorders of the nervous system that cannot be ascribed to metastases or to destruction of vital systemic organs by the tumor or its treatment. Most frequently, PNS occur in association with small-cell lung, breast or ovarian carcinomas. The most frequent PNS is Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome, which at the same time has the highest predictive value concerning an underlying carcinoma. PNS have been classified mostly under anatomical aspects but now are increasingly categorized according to specific antibodies. In certain neurologic syndromes (sensible and autonomic neuropathy, cerebellitis, limbic encephalitis,
Opsoclonus
-
Myoclonus
syndrome, Stiff-man syndrome, neuromyotonia, subacute amaurosis) specific autoantibodies are highly predictive for a neoplasm. Pathogenic relevance of these autoantibodies has been demonstrated only for antibodies against (1) voltage gated calcium channels (VGCC) in Lambert-Eaton myasthenic syndrome, (2) voltage gated potassium channels (VGKC) in neuromyotonia, and (3) recoverin in cancer associated retinopathy. The present article deals with the neurological symptoms of PNS, associated tumors, and the relevance of specific antibodies for the diagnosis and pathogenesis of PNS.
...
PMID:[Paraneoplastic neurologic syndromes. Diagnostic and pathogenetic significance of autoantibodies]. 1070 18
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
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.
...
PMID:Opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome in a child with neuroborreliosis. 1084 Oct 99
Eye movements are necessary for clear and stable vision, for which images of the world should be brought to the fovea and be held steady on the retina. The main types of eye movements consist of saccadic eye movements, vergence, vestibular eye movements, smooth pursuit eye movements and eye movements for visual stabilization. Saccades are fast eye movements and have consistent relationship between their peak velocity and the size of the movements. The burst neurons in the brainstem are the generator of saccades and receive projections from the frontal eye field, supplementary eye field, parietal eye field, basal ganglia, superior colliculus and cerebellum. Saccades are evaluated by a speed and accuracy of the size. There are different types of saccade, such as visually triggered saccades, antisaccades, memory-guided saccade and predictive saccades. The specific test paradigms of saccades may show the localization and the type of diseases.
Opsoclonus
, flatter-like oscillation, ocular
myoclonus
, square-wave jerks are characteristic involuntary eye movements. Syndromes of the paramedic pontine reticular formation, medial longitudinal fascicules and one-and-a-half syndrome are caused by disease of the pons.
...
PMID:[Neurology of eye movements]. 1146 61
Opsoclonus
is a rare but distinctive disorder of ocular motility, characterized by irregular, continual and conjugated chaotic saccades of the eyes. It is increased with eye closure and fixation, and it persists during sleep.
Opsoclonus
appears more commonly in children and in half of such cases in association with neuroblastoma. In adults the most frequent causes are idiopathic (50%) and paraneoplastic (20%). Among the second group, different types of tumors involving a wide variety of organs have been reported.
Opsoclonus
when accompanied by other symptoms of central nervous system involvement (head, appendicular
myoclonus
and truncal ataxia) constitutes a clinical picture, known as opsoclonus-
myoclonus
syndrome. We report the case of a young patient affected by renal cell carcinoma associated with opsoclonus-
myoclonus
syndrome which did not respond to medical therapy but dramatically improved after cancer ablation.
...
PMID:Opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome as a paraneoplastic manifestation of renal cell carcinoma. a case report and review of the literature. 1191 72
Opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome was observed in a patient treated for small-cell lung cancer.
Opsoclonus
presented as anarchic involuntary eye movements associated with myoclonies of the limbs and trunk.
Opsoclonus
-
myoclonus
is exceptional and a specific expression among several paraneoplastic manifestations described in small-cell lung cancer. These manifestations develop late after diagnosis of cancer. Presence of anti-neuronal antibodies in the serum (inconstant) is a factor of very poor prognosis.
...
PMID:[Paraneoplastic opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome associated with small-cell lung cancer]. 1470 30
Paraneoplastic syndromes related to soft tissue tumors are very uncommon and an association of paraneoplastic diseases with a malignant fibrous histiocytoma (MFH) has not been reported so far.
Opsoclonus
-
myoclonus
is a rare paraneoplastic nervous system syndrome, that was well documented in adult patients with neoplasms particularly of the lung and breast. A 77-year-old woman developed typical opsoclonus-
myoclonus
syndrome and rapidly progressed to coma. The opsoclonus and generalized
myoclonus
continued until the patient's death seven months later. An autopsy examination identified a pleomorphic MFH in the retroperitoneum without a metastatic spread. Microscopic examination of the cerebellum revealed an atrophy of the granular layer along with a marked patchy loss of Purkinje cells, and a loss of neurons in the cerebellar nuclei accompanied by distinct peridental demyelination and astrogliosis. A moderate loss of neurons and neuronal chromatolysis were observed also in the inferior olivary nuclei. However, the omnipause neurons of the nucleus raphe interpositus, that are supposed to be responsible for opsoclonus generation under pathological conditions, as well as ocular brain stem nuclei were all intact. We failed to prove the presence of known antineuronal anti-Yo, anti-Hu or anti-Ri autoantibodies in both serum and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) of the patient. However, the confirmation of the intrathecal IgG synthesis by oligoclonal bands in CSF and the immunohistochemical detection of IgG deposits on membranes of Purkinje cells, neurons of cerebellar granular layer and in cerebellar nuclei in our case support the presumed autoimmune nature of the disease.
...
PMID:Paraneoplastic opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome associated with malignant fibrous histiocytoma: neuropathological findings. 1523 19
Opsoclonus
-
myoclonus
is a rare neurological paraneoplastic syndrome associated with breast cancer and the presence of anti-Ri antibody. We presented a case of a 79-year-old woman with this syndrome and a small invasive ductal carcinoma [pT1aN0(sn)M0], whose symptoms improved 3 months following her simple mastectomy without any adjuvant therapy. Based on the 15 previously reported cases in the literature, there is no uniform treatment option available, and the response to such treatments is mixed.
...
PMID:Anti-Ri antibody opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome and breast cancer: a case report and a review of the literature. 1533 43
Opsoclonus
-
myoclonus
-ataxia syndrome (OMA) in children is most commonly associated with occult neuroblastoma (NB). Although children with OMA and NB have decreased mortality, they suffer from increased neurologic morbidity. The pathogenesis of OMA in NB is not well understood, but current research and treatments support an immune-mediated process. The authors describe an unusual presentation of OMA occurring following 6 months of chemotherapy in a child with stage 4S NB who presented with partial Horner syndrome. Histopathologic examination of his primary cervical tumor showed NB maturation, which may have played a role in precipitating OMA syndrome. Further study of unusual cases of OMA in NB may provide better understanding of the syndrome and additional treatment options for these children.
...
PMID:Late presentation of opsoclonus-myoclonus-ataxia syndrome in a child with stage 4S neuroblastoma. 1595 91
Opsoclonus
-
myoclonus
-ataxia (OMA) secondary to Epstein-Barr virus (EBV) infection has only been described in three pediatric patients. Previous reports suggested that evidence for a recent EBV infection in the absence of an occult neoplasm would predict a favorable prognosis for OMA as well as no tumor development. We present the case of a 20-month-old child with OMA associated with a microbiologically documented acute EBV infection and an occult thoracic ganglioneuroblastoma diagnosed 5 months later.
...
PMID:Epstein-Barr virus related opsoclonus-myoclonus-ataxia does not rule out the presence of occult neuroblastic tumors. 1620 May 67
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