Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0027066 (myoclonus)
4,275 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Seventy five patients affected by senile dementia of the Alzheimer type (mean age 82) have been submitted to a standardized neurological examination of 88 items. Gait abnormalities were present in 57% of the cases. Extrapyramidal symptoms (akinesia or rigidity or tremor) were noticed in 64% of the cases but they were rarely associated with a typical parkinsonian syndrome. Myoclonus was observed in only 4 patients. The gait abnormalities were significantly associated with the presence of rigidity and grasp reflex but not with other primitive reflexes. The only symptoms to be correlated with dementia severity as assessed by the Mini Mental State were rigidity and optokinetic nystagmus abolition. Tremor and amyotrophy of the hands appeared to be negatively correlated to dementia severity.
...
PMID:[Standardized neurologic study in senile dementia of Alzheimer's type]. 268 Apr 61

A case of familial juvenile Alzheimer's disease with apallic state at the relatively early stage and various neurological features was reported. A 33-year-old woman showed a progressive dementia followed by apallic state at the relatively early stage, and died of cardiac failure at the age of 45. Neurological examination disclosed chorea, myoclonus, rigidity, pyramidal sign, and generalized convulsion. Neuropathologically, extensive senile changes such as senile plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, and granurovascular degenerations were observed in the brain, chiefly in the cerebral cortex and limbic system. The present case was characterized by a severe neuronal loss in the subcortical gray matter such as the caudate nucleus, dentate nucleus, substantia nigra, and thalamus as well as a marked myelin loss and axonal damages in the cerebral white matter. This case suggested a combination of multisystemic degeneration and a primary degeneration of the cerebral white matter. The additional peculiar aspects in this case were the senile plaques and amyloid angiopathy in the cerebellar cortex, and the senile plaques and grumose degeneration in the cerebellar dentate nucleus. In the clinicopathological standpoint, the apallic state in this case could be attributed to a severe degeneration of the cerebral white matter in addition to the cerebral cortical deterioration. Furthermore, the occurrence of chorea and myclonus might be contributed to the severe degeneration of the caudate nucleus and to the degeneration of the dentate nucleus, particularly to the grumose degeneration, respectively.
...
PMID:[A case of familial juvenile Alzheimer's disease with apallic state at the relatively early stage and various neurological features--a clinicopathological study]. 279 15

Thirty cases of diffuse Lewy body disease (DLBD) have been reported, primarily by neuropathologists, but an associated clinical syndrome has not been clearly defined. Four recent cases have led us to examine the clinicopathologic correlations. Patients are usually elderly, with symptoms lasting from 1 to 20 years. Progressive dementia or psychosis is typically the first and most prominent feature. Parkinsonian signs, initially mild or absent, become common eventually, and rigidity is usually severe. Involuntary movements, myoclonus, quadriparesis in flexion, orthostatic hypotension, and dysphagia have also been noted. Classic, concentric Lewy bodies are found profusely in the brainstem, basal forebrain, and hypothalamic nuclei, while less well defined "Lewy-like" bodies occur in limbic structures and in deep neocortical layers. In addition, focal spongiform changes in the mesial temporal lobe were found in two of our cases. We suggest that DLBD may be another specific cause of progressive dementia.
...
PMID:Diffuse Lewy body disease and progressive dementia. 284 93

A case of an unknown type of familial presenile dementia is reported. The patient was a 56-year-old female, whose main clinical symptom was a gradually progressive dementia over 16 years. She had no myoclonus or periodic synchronous discharge in the EEG. The CT scans revealed marked cerebral atrophy with prominent atrophy of the cerebral white matter. One of her sisters is thought to suffer from the same disease, and is now in an apallic state. The patient was clinically diagnosed as having familial Alzheimer's disease. The neuropathological features consisted of severe cerebral cortical degeneration with conspicuous proliferation of gemistocytic astrocytes as well as severe cerebral white matter degeneration. These cerebral lesions are most similar to those of the panencephalopathic type of Creutzfeldt-Jakob's disease (CJD). However, our case differs from it in that the cerebellar degeneration was very mild. Transmission experiments of frozen tissue from the patient into animals are being tried. The neurochemical data suggested cholinergic deficits. As far as we know, such a case has never been reported in the literature.
...
PMID:Familial presenile dementia with CJD-like lesions: preliminary results. 286 22

An autopsy case of familial juvenile Alzheimer's disease with extensive involvement of the subcortical gray and white matters is reported. A 33-year-old woman showed a progressive dementia and died of cardiac failure at the age of 45. Neurological examination disclosed choreatic movements, myoclonus, rigidity, and generalized convulsion. Gross inspection of the brain showed a diffuse cerebral atrophy and marked degenerations of both the subcortical gray and white matters. Microscopically, numerous and extensive argyrophilic changes such as senile plaques, neurofibrillary tangles, and granulovacuolar degenerations were observed in the brain. The present case was characterized by a severe neuronal loss in the basal ganglia, substantia nigra, dentate nucleus, and thalamus as well as a marked myelin loss and axonal damage in the cerebral white matter. This case suggested a combination of multisystemic degeneration and primary degeneration of the cerebral white matter. The pathological similarity of this case to Creutzfeldt-Jakob disease and Pick's disease is discussed.
...
PMID:An autopsy case of familial juvenile Alzheimer's disease with extensive involvement of the subcortical gray and white matters. 292 95

An autopsy case of a 66 year-old woman is reported. She developed personality change and psychotic symptoms at the age of 58. She began to show gait disturbance and forgetfullness at the age of 60. She was admitted to Okayama University Hospital at the age of 61, when she showed personality change, dementia, cerebellar sings and chorea like involuntary movement. The illness progressed slowly and she died of septicemia at the age of 66. At autopsy brain weighed 990 g. Macroscopically, the atrophy of the brain stem was severe, and the cerebellum was slightly atrophic. Microscopically, the globus pallidus was almost intact, but the degeneration involved dentate nuclei, their projections, red nucleus and the subthalamic nuclei, so this case was considered to be a case of pseudo-Huntington form of dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy, proposed by Hirayama. The most striking feature of this case was marked atrophy of the brain stem and her intense familial history. Investigation of her familial history revealed that there were 18 affected cases in 5 successive generations. Their onset of the disease varied from the age of 10 to 60 years old. Cases of juvenile onset showed myoclonus and convulsion as the initial symptoms, and convulsion as the initial symptoms, and those of presenile onset showed dementia, cerebellar ataxia and chorea like involuntary movement. And in some of these cases it was proved by NMR-CT that their brain stem were small. We discussed the meaning of the atrophy of the brain stem in these cases and the difference of the symptoms between the cases of juvenile onset and the cases of presenile onset.
...
PMID:[An autopsy case of dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy showing marked atrophy of the brain stem]. 296 93

A 30-year-old woman had a syndrome of dementia, dystonia, myoclonus, and intention tremor. Brain biopsy showed PAS-positive inclusions of Lafora's disease, but electronmicroscopy demonstrated that the inclusions differed from previously reported Lafora bodies. This may represent a previously undescribed disorder.
...
PMID:Progressive dementia and epilepsy in a young adult: unusual intraneuronal inclusions. 300 85

Action myoclonus, reviewed in this chapter, is the term applied to arrhythmic muscular jerking induced by voluntary movement. It is made worse by attempts at precise or coordinated movement (intention myoclonus) and may also be provoked by certain sensory stimuli. The effective stimuli for action myoclonus is probably feedback from muscle afferents, although it may be initiated by corollary discharge from motor cortex to reticular formation before or at the onset of voluntary movement. The condition is usually associated with diffuse neuronal disease such as post-hypoxic encephalopathy, uremia, and the various forms of PME, although action myoclonus may be limited to one limb in some cases of focal cerebral damage. It is caused by hyperexcitability of the sensorimotor cortex (cortical reflex myoclonus) or reticular formation (reticular reflex myoclonus), or both. No consistent pathological change has been reported in autopsied cases of action myoclonus. The underlying disorder appears to be a loss of inhibitory mechanisms involving serotonin and possibly GABA as transmitter agents. The term PME is used for the association of myoclonus with degenerative changes in the nervous system which are commonly diffuse but may predominate in certain systems. There may or may not be associated tonic-clonic seizures, other manifestations of epilepsy, or dementia. Those cases of PME associated with Lafora inclusion bodies and cerebral storage diseases can be distinguished from the system degenerations. Systems which may be involved in the latter group include cerebellodentatorubral, pyramidal, extrapyramidal, optic, auditory, posterior columns and gracile and cuneate nuclei, spinocerebellar pathways, motor neurons of cranial nerves and anterior horns, and muscle fibers. Confronted with this diversity of pathological change, it seems unnecessary to make any clinical distinction between Ramsay Hunt syndrome and Unverricht-Lundborg syndrome (Baltic myoclonus) because cerebellar signs are found in patients described under both headings. Additional systems may be involved in individuals or families who are otherwise typical. All three names could well be joined in an eponymous title (Unverricht-Lundborg-Hunt disease) or the condition simply known as the systems degeneration type of PME, as Halliday (43) suggested. The cause of the condition (or spectrum of conditions) is at present unknown. Action myoclonus usually responds to sodium valproate or clonazepam, and some individuals, particularly those with posthypoxic myoclonus, improve with the administration of serotonin precursors.
...
PMID:Action myoclonus, Ramsay Hunt syndrome, and other cerebellar myoclonic syndromes. 308 Aug 51

We reviewed 81 patients with dementia and autopsy findings of Alzheimer's disease (AD) to identify patients with seizures or myoclonus after onset of dementia. Eight (10%) had seizures, and eight others (10%) had myoclonus. The incidence of seizures was 10 times more than expected in a reference population. Seizures occurred in any stage of AD, but myoclonus was often a late manifestation. Both seizures and myoclonus, individually or together, are manifestations of AD and may be seen at any time in the course of the illness.
...
PMID:Seizures and myoclonus in patients with Alzheimer's disease. 309 31

Aluminum has been proposed as the causative agent in dialysis encephalopathy syndrome. We prospectively assessed whether other, less severe, neuropsychologic abnormalities were also associated with aluminum. A total of 16 patients receiving chronic dialytic therapy were studied. The deferoxamine infusion test (DIT) was used to assess total body aluminum burden. Neurologic function was evaluated by quantitative measures of asterixis, myoclonus, motor strength, and sensation. Cognitive function was assessed by measures of dementia, memory, language, and depression. There were four patients with a positive DIT (greater than 125 micrograms/L increment in serum aluminum) that was associated with an increase in the number of neurologic abnormalities observed, as well as an increase in severity of myoclonus, asterixis, and lower extremity weakness. Patients with a positive DIT also showed significant impairment in memory; however, no differences were noted on tests of dementia, depression, or language. There was no significant correlation between sex, age, presence of diabetes, mode of dialysis, years of chronic renal failure, years of dialysis or years of aluminum ingestion and any neurologic or neurobehavioral measurement, serum aluminum level, or DIT. These changes may represent early aluminum-associated neurologic dysfunction.
...
PMID:Relationship of aluminum to neurocognitive dysfunction in chronic dialysis patients. 317 74


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>