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)

A case of inadvertent intrathecal injection of diatrizoate meglumine is presented. After myelography with 10 ml i.e. 6.5 g Angiografin, a 76-year-old man rapidly developed myoclonus, drowsiness and excessive metabolic acidosis. He died only a few hours later. Postmortem showed non-specific brain edema. RP-HPL-Chromatography confirmed high concentration of the contrast medium in CSF (6 mg/ml) which must have induced refractory central nervous dysregulation. The lethal effects of the misapplication of this agent on the nervous system are discussed.
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PMID:Fatal complications after myelography with meglumine diatrizoate. 233 38

A 56-year-old, hypertensive man was admitted to our hospital because of confusion. He had been well unit half an hour before admission, when he had suddenly developed left hemiplegia. Although he became deep coma soon after admission, his vital signs were preserved. CT scan revealed a large right putaminal hemorrhage and a ventricular perforation. The condition was too severe for surgical approaches and conservative therapy for brain edema was performed. On the 2nd hospital day, corneal and light reflexes were disappeared and an anisocolia appeared. On the 3rd hospital day, right papilledema appeared. Doll's head-eye movements and ciliospinal reflexes were absent. CT scan demonstrated marked brain edema and collapsed ambient cisterns. Tentorial herniation were suspected. On the 4th hospital day, respiratory arrest occurred and ventilatory assistance began. On the 11th hospital day, electroencephalograms (EEG's) showed electrocerebral silence. EEG's performed next day showed still electrocerebral silence. On the 13th hospital day, brainstem auditory evoked potentials were recorded without any responses. He was thought to be in condition of brain death. On the 17th hospital day, multifocal myoclonus involving lower limbs and abdominal muscles appeared. The myoclonus lasted for about 15 hours occurred on both sides, but was asymmetrical. The myoclonus consisted of intermittent, brief, arrhythmic, stereotype, jerking contractions of the muscles. Sometimes, the contractions were sufficient enough to jump his body over the bed. These symptoms provided the characteristics of spinal myoclonus. Etiologies of spinal myoclonus are varied, but the primary abnormality exists within the spinal cord.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Spinal myoclonus in association with brain death]. 262 31

A 44-year-old man suffered from repeated impairment of consciousness associated with flapping tremor, myoclonus and generalized convulsions, and died in coma 6 months after admission. He had had a psychosomatically underdeveloped childhood, with a propensity for legumes without a family history of the same or a record of consanguinity. On admission, he had disturbed consciousness and emaciation without other physical abnormalities. The EEG revealed diffuse slow waves with occasional appearance of triphasic waves. A high level of serum citrulline (534.7 nmol/ml) was recognized and the assay of urea cycle enzymes in the liver demonstrated decreased argininosuccinate synthetase (ASS) activity (0.062 U/g liver, 7.4% of that in normal liver), although no kinetic abnormality was found. Accordingly he was diagnosed as having type II citrullinemia. In addition, this case could be classified as cluster type of localization of the ASS in the liver by immunohistochemical study. There were characteristic findings concerning his clinical picture and laboratory data, such as a significant correlation between the grade of disturbed consciousness and arterial blood gas pH (r = 0.61, p less than 0.01). However, the blood ammonia level did not always correlate with the severity of disturbed consciousness. Oral treatment with sodium citrate and sodium benzoate was very effective, though transiently, for disturbed consciousness in this case. Pathological findings of the autopsied liver were fatty change and fibrosis. Neuropathologically, characteristic findings were brain edema with cerebellar tonsilar herniation, laminar necrosis with spongy formation in cerebral cortex, and Alzheimer type II glia. The relationship between citrullinemia and other hepatic encephalopathy was also discussed.
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PMID:[An autopsied case of type II citrullinemia--transient effectiveness with either citrate or benzoate to the consciousness disturbance]. 269 30

A 71-year-old woman with Hashimoto's disease was admitted to our hospital because of involuntary movement, gait disturbance, and mental decline. Her consciousness was alert but her orientation about time and place was disturbed. She was mentally ill (HDS-R; 12/30, MMSE; 14/30), and could not walk because of truncal ataxia. Myoclonus was present in the upper extremities. Laboratory examinations showed hypothyroidism and very high titers of antithyroid antibodies (ATA) in serum. Head MRI showed no abnormal lesions. On electroencephalogram (EEG), the basic rhythm was slow and bursts of irregular slow waves (4-6 Hz) were present. Her conditions gradually ameliorated so that she was discharged. However, she was hospitalized again because of sudden worsening of the illness: her consciousness got disturbed and the myoclonus became marked. As the result, she got bed-ridden. At the time, thyroid function was almost normal, suggesting that the deterioration could not be attributed to hypothyroidism. The EEG findings were quite different from the former: complex of multiple spikes and slow waves was continuously present. Examination of the cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) revealed an elevated level of protein and IgG (cell 1/m3, protein 101 mg/dl, sugar 60 mg/dl ,Cl 124 mEq/l, IgG 20.4 mg/dl). IgG index was 0.57 and Q albumin (CSF-albumin/serum-albumin ratio) was 15.2 (9.0>) . After the second admission, she recovered from the bed-ridden state but was still unable to walk or communicate. She continued to need complete support for all daily lives. The diagnosis was made as Hashimoto's encephalopathy (HE), from the following points: 1) encephalopathy not due to hypothyroidism, 2) very high titers of ATA, 3) elevated CSF protein. The effectiveness of steroid therapy was so amazing that the neurological problems faded away very soon. Finally she completely recovered. As well as the clinical manifestations, the EEG findings were improved. At the stage in which excellent clinical improvement had achieved, head MRI revealed that T2/FLAIR high lesions without Gd-enhancement temporarily appeared diffusely and extensively in the cerebral white matter. They thereafter almost disappeared on follow-up MRI. Judging from the lesions being non-enhanced and reversible, they supposedly reflected brain edema. It is important to keep it in mind that MRI findings may change abruptly and drastically in HE. ATA was detected not only in serum but also in CSF. Either titer thereafter decreased along with the healing of the illness. Concerning the reason why ATA is present in CSF, we supposed leakage from blood through the disrupted blood-brain barrier, for the following reasons: 1) IgG index was normal, 2) Q albumin was elevated, 3) the change of CSF-ATA titer was almost parallel to that of serum-ATA titer, and 4) the white matter lesions, which presumably reflected brain edema, were observed.
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PMID:[Reversible white matter lesions and antithyroid antibodies in the cerebrospinal fluid in Hashimoto's encephalopathy: a case report]. 1538 4

We report a 2-year-old girl who had repeated febrile or afebrile seizures since infancy. Prolonged left/right hemiconvulsions and myoclonus of the eyelids/extremities with generalization to tonic-clonic seizures, were refractory to antiepileptic agents. At age 1 year and 4 months, she contracted rotavirus infection, and developed status epilepticus with persistent right hemiclonic seizures. Left unilateral brain edema with subsequent emergence of cortical laminar necrosis and white matter lesions, and progressive atrophy of the left cerebral hemisphere were noted during this period. She showed residual right hemiparesis and mild intellectual disability, and had generalized/eyelid myoclonia and hot water epilepsy after a 5-month seizure-free period. Analysis for SCN1A, the gene encoding the neuronal voltage-gated Na+ channel alpha1 subunit revealed a nonsense mutation, R1892X. These indicate the potential risk in patients with severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy (SMEI) to develop hemiconvulsion-hemiplegia (HH) syndrome. SCN1A mutations may need to be further explored in patients with HH syndrome without features of SMEI.
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PMID:Hemiconvulsion-hemiplegia syndrome in a patient with severe myoclonic epilepsy in infancy. 1956 49

Asymmetric brain edema is a rare neurologic complication after cardiovascular surgery. We describe the clinical and imaging features of an asymmetric brain edema syndrome in a 52-year-old man following cardiac transplantation who presented with facial myoclonus and left hemiparesis in the postoperative period. To our knowledge, this is the first case report of asymmetric brain edema syndrome after cardiac transplant and the second following cardiac surgery. Arterial bypass cannula malposition in the ascending aorta or brachiocephalic artery with subsequent cerebral hypoperfusion and subsequent hyperperfusion appears to be the most likely physiologic cause.
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PMID:Asymmetric brain edema after cardiac transplantation: cerebroautoregulatory failure and relative hyperperfusion. 2564 2

Perhaps no other organ in the body is affected as often and in as many ways as the brain is in patients with chronic kidney disease (CKD). Several factors contribute to the neurological disorders in CKD including accumulation of uremic toxins, metabolic and hemodynamic disorders, oxidative stress, inflammation, and impaired blood brain barrier among others. The neurological disorders in CKD involve both peripheral and central nervous system. The peripheral neurological symptoms of CKD are due to somatic and cranial peripheral neuropathies as well as a myopathy. The central neurological symptoms of CKD are due to the cortical predominantly cortical, or subcortical lesions. Cognitive decline, encephalopathy, cortical myoclonus, asterixis and epileptic seizures are distinct features of the cortical disorders of CKD. Diffuse white matter disease due to ischemia and hypoxia may be an important cause of subcortical encephalopathy. A special and more benign form of subcortical disorder caused by brain edema in CKD is termed posterior reversible encephalopathy. Subcortical pathology especially when it affects the basal ganglia causes a number of movement disorders including Parkinsonism, chorea and dystonia. A stimulus-sensitive reflex myoclonus is believed to originate from the medullary structures. Sleep disorder and restless leg syndrome are common in CKD and have both central and peripheral origin. This article provides an overview of the available data on the nature, prevalence, pathophysiology, consequences and treatment of neurological complications of CKD.
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PMID:The nature, consequences, and management of neurological disorders in chronic kidney disease. 2879 4