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Query: UMLS:C0027066 (myoclonus)
4,275 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

This is a case of Ramsay Hunt syndrome with mental disorder. The patient had action myoclonus, grand mal seizure and severe cerebellar ataxia. Schizophrenia-like symptoms including delusion of persecution and self-reference, auditory hallucination and incoherence were characteristically observed before the neurological disturbance became manifest. Subsequently, euphoria, disinhibition, moria and mild dementia appeared with neurological symptoms. The possibility of Ramsay Hunt syndrome to accompany organic mental syndromes and the relationship between cerebellar dysfunction and psychiatric symptoms are discussed.
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PMID:Ramsay Hunt syndrome with mental disorder. 181 81

A case of autoptically verified progressive subcortical gliosis (PSG) is reported. The 79 year old woman developed subacutely a right sided hemisyndrome and a cerebellar syndrome. Generalized action myoclonus of the left leg evolved into left sided Epilepsia partialis continua and dementia appeared. After a 6 month course the patient died of aspiration pneumonia. There was no indication of alcoholism or HIV-dementia neither clinically nor at autopsy. Morphologically the brain showed a diffuse proliferation of astrocytes in the subcortical white matter, thalamus, basal ganglia, brain stem and cerebellum. A severe neuronal dropout was found in medial thalamic neurons but Wernickes encephalopathy was ruled out. 21 cases of PSG confirmed by autopsy were found in the literature. Clinics, neuropathology and classification of PSG is discussed.
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PMID:[Progressive subcortical gliosis]. 193 41

The clinical features and course of 14 patients with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) were analysed. PSP formed 2.3 percent of the parkinsonian population. Blepharospasm, hypersomnia, athetosis, action dystonia, action myoclonus and family history of dementia were the unusual features. Half of the patients had dementia at presentation. Drug therapy was uniformly disappointing. The mean duration from onset to death in 4 patients who died was 4.5 years. The histopathological features in a patient with the disease for one year and who died of acute myocardial infarction showed moderately severe changes characteristic of the disease.
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PMID:Progressive supranuclear palsy. Report of 14 cases with special reference to unusual features. 193 53

A 22-year-old female with progressive myoclonus epilepsy (PME) considered to be due to hereditary dentato-rubro-pallido-luysian atrophy (DRPLA) was reported. Some of her family members showed progressive myoclonus, seizures, dementia, ataxia and choreoathetosis, with variation of onset from childhood to adult life, which suggested that they had been suffering from DRPLA. CT scan and MRI studies, including some on family members, revealed cerebral and cerebellar atrophy accompanied by dilatation of the fourth ventricle, compatible with the findings in DRPLA reported previously. We emphasize that a detailed family history may be essential in dealing with a PME patient and that DRPLA should be considered in the differential diagnosis of the PME syndrome with onset in childhood, in Japan.
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PMID:Progressive myoclonus epilepsy: dentato-rubro-pallido-luysian atrophy (DRPLA) in childhood. 195 76

A German family with 21 members affected by Alzheimer disease (AD) was studied clinically and genetically. The diagnosis was histologically verified in three affected family members. Ancestors were traced through seven generations to a couple residing in East-Westfalia during the middle of the 19th century. Dementia was often accompanied by extrapyramidal features and myoclonus. No cases of Down syndrome or hematologic malignancy occurred in this family. Clinical manifestations, temporal progression, neurological testing, and neuropathological features do not differ from the more common sporadic form of AD. The inheritance pattern is most consistent with autosomal-dominant transmission.
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PMID:Familial Alzheimer disease: a large, multigeneration German kindred. 202 23

A case of Pisa syndrome in a 60-year-old man with dementia, probably of the Alzheimer type, who had never been exposed to any psychotropic medication is described. He also had some extrapyramidal features and myoclonus. Treatment with amantadine was slightly beneficial. We believe that this report is the first of its kind.
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PMID:Pisa syndrome without neuroleptic exposure in a patient with dementia of the Alzheimer type. 205 53

We have encountered a case of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease associated with myocarditis. A 77 year-old woman was admitted to a hospital with complaints of rapidly progressive visual disturbance, myoclonus and dementia. Electroencephalogram revealed a periodic synchronous discharge and Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease was suspected. Then she moved to our hospital, because acute myocarditis was combined with ST-T changes on electrocardiogram, and generalized hypokinetic motion of the left ventricle on echocardiogram. The abnormal findings in electrocardiography and echocardiography were transient. Blood levels of enzymes derived from the myocardium were slightly elevated. We could not find a distinct increase in the titer of neutralizing antibody to various viruses. In this case, the cause of myocarditis may have been associated with the infectious agent of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease. This report might be the first one with a case of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease complicated with myocarditis.
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PMID:[A case report of Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease associated with myocarditis]. 206 95

Clinical records and EEGs of 114 consecutive patients with clinical diagnosis of Alzheimer's disease have been reviewed. The EEGs of 15 patients (13%) contained triphasic waves. Triphasic waves were always atypical as they occurred singularly or in short bursts, and/or they had occipital predominance, and/or they were bilateral but asymmetrical. Triphasic waves, in all but one patient were recorded in a state of complete alertness. No statistically significant differences were found between the triphasic waves group and the other one, with respect to age, age at onset, illness duration, presence of seizures. Myoclonus was more frequent in patients with triphasic waves (p less than 0.01). Triphasic waves patients had a higher degree of dementia (p less than 0.01), both in cases with rapidly evolving disease and in subjects with relatively slow clinical course.
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PMID:Triphasic waves in Alzheimer's disease. 208 90

Among progressive myoclonus epilepsies (PME), the nosography of the Ramsay Hunt syndrome (RHS) has been much debated. The authors report on a homogeneous group of 43 patients originating from around the western Mediterranean, with a large number of northern African subjects, who were followed up for a mean period of 11.6 years. Onset is between 6 and 17 years (mean: 11.2) and the transmission appears to be recessive. The clinical features include: action myoclonus, generalized epileptic seizures, mild cerebellar signs and lack of dementia. EEG features include normal background activity, spontaneous fast generalized spike-wave discharges, photosensitivity, lack of activation during nREM sleep and vertex/rolandic spikes during REM sleep. The prognosis is variable, even within families, but the progression seems to be slow in a majority of patients. This condition can be distinguished from mitochondrial encephalomyopathy and is less severe than Baltic myoclonus. The authors propose that this form of PME, formerly reported as RHS, be more properly described as Mediterranean myoclonus.
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PMID:The Ramsay Hunt syndrome revisited: Mediterranean myoclonus versus mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with ragged-red fibers and Baltic myoclonus. 210 22

It has been suggested from studies of patients with progressive myoclonus epilepsy that the term Ramsay Hunt syndrome should be abandoned, as its use has led to nosologic confusion, and because, in the light of modern diagnostic techniques, the majority of cases can be allocated to specific disease categories, chiefly, Unverricht-Lundborg disease (Baltic myoclonus) and mitochondrial encephalomyopathy. Review of 30 cases of this syndrome, defined as progressive ataxia and myoclonus and infrequent seizures in the absence of dementia, showed that a clinical or biochemically supported diagnosis could not be made in 43%. This low diagnostic yield probably reflects differences in ascertainment of patients; those described here were referred with a syndrome of progressive myoclonic ataxia (the Ramsay Hunt syndrome) rather than progressive myoclonus epilepsy. These two syndromes share common causes, but a smaller proportion of patients with progressive myoclonic ataxia can currently be diagnosed precisely during life.
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PMID:Progressive myoclonic ataxia (the Ramsay Hunt syndrome). 212 Nov 21


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