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)

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

Opsoclonus is a rare disorder of the saccadic system, in which fixation is continuously interrupted by multivectorial, back-to-back saccades that at times can be seen only with an ophthalmoscope. To diagnose it reliably, eye movement recording is required. Opsoclonus may be a harbinger of an occult malignancy, though many cases are postinfectious, toxic-metabolic or idiopathic. The underlying malignancy is usually neural crest tumors in children and lung, breast, or gynecologic cancer in adults. Opsoclonus can be accompanied by myoclonus and ataxia. Concurrent appearance of oscillations affecting eyes and limbs suggests a common brainstem generator. Dysfunction of the glycinergic omnipause neurons in the nucleus raphe interpositus has been proposed. Autoantibodies against neural epitopes shared with a tumor are implicated in the pathogenesis of opsoclonus in paraneoplastic cases. Because of the association with malignancies, full oncological work-up is indicated in every case. Coexisting opsoclonus carries a relatively good prognosis for the cancer; however, the neurologic disability may remain even if the tumor has been arrested. New, potentially effective immunoadsorption therapy for opsoclonus is currently under investigation.
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PMID:Opsoclonus. 887 53

We conducted the current review of the paraneoplastic neurologic syndromes (PNSs) associated with gynecologic and breast carcinomas to describe their clinical and immunologic characteristics and their relative frequency. We retrospectively reviewed 92 patients whose serum was sent to our laboratories to detect onconeural antibodies and who were diagnosed as having PNSs associated with breast or gynecologic tumors. PNSs were defined as "definitive" and "possible" (atypical PNS, no onconeural antibodies, and no improvement after tumor treatment). Forty-nine patients had breast and 43 had gynecologic cancer. Sixty-three patients had onconeural antibodies (50 Yo-ab, 5 Hu-ab, 5 Ri-ab, and 3 amphiphysin-ab). Cerebellar ataxia represented 57 (62%) of all PNSs and was associated with anti-Yo in 88%. All Yo-abnegative patients had breast cancer; 4 of them had a mild cerebellar syndrome that improved after tumor treatment. Sensorypredominant neuropathies were present in 17 (18%) patients. Seven of them had Hu-ab (5) or amphiphysin-ab (2). Other PNSs were opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome (4 cases, Ri-ab in 2), sensorimotor neuropathy (4 cases), paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis (4 cases, Ri-ab in 3), paraneoplastic retinopathy (2 cases), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (2 cases), stiff-person syndrome (1 with amphiphysin-ab), and limbic encephalitis (1 case). All patients with gynecologic cancer presented definitive PNS, and onconeural antibodies were diagnosed in 93% of them. In contrast, 20% of PNSs associated with breast cancer were defined as possible and the incidence of onconeural antibodies was 51%, excluding the 2 patients with paraneoplastic retinopathy in whom antiretinal antibodies were not analyzed. In patients with possible PNS, a coincidental association between the tumor and the neurologic disorder cannot be excluded.
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PMID:Spectrum of paraneoplastic neurologic disorders in women with breast and gynecologic cancer. 1279 7