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)

Diagnosis of respiratory chain defects in cultured skin fibroblasts is a difficult diagnostic procedure. We investigated the feasibility of using survival of skin fibroblasts in culture medium with galactose as the major carbon source as a method of quickly diagnosing cell lines that were compromised in oxidative metabolism. We found that cells from patients with most forms of cytochrome oxidase deficiency, cells with complex I deficiency, cells with multiple respiratory chain defects and cells with severe pyruvate dehydrogenase (PDH) complex deficiency failed to survive when subcultured into galactose (5 mM) medium. Cells from patients with Lebers hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON), Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS), myoclonus-epilepsy-lactic acidosis-stroke (MELAS), the hepatic form of cytochrome oxidase deficiency, and mild PDH complex deficiency survived well in galactose (5 mM)-containing medium. This could be used as a rapid screening test for skin fibroblasts with major oxidative defects.
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PMID:Nonviability of cells with oxidative defects in galactose medium: a screening test for affected patient fibroblasts. 132 73

Leigh's disease is one of the mitochondrial encephalomyopathies. This article presents a 7-month-old baby boy who had been well-being since birth until 6 months of age when episodic downward gaze of both eyes with limitation of horizontal eye movement were noted. This episode of cranial nerve palsies lasted about 4-5 days and subsided spontaneously. The second attack was noted one month later, to be associated with hypotonia and truncal ataxia. Episodic hyperventilation with resultant gasping and myoclonus was noted at the third attack but spontaneous respiration resumed soon with persistent ophthalmoplegia and truncal ataxia. Lumbar puncture, brain MRI, amino acid assay and cardiac echo all showed negative finding. The oral glucose lactate stimulation test revealed an elevation of lactic acid, brain stem evoked potential indicated bilateral obscure 4th and 5th waves, and muscle biopsy showed ragged red fibres with aggregation of structurally abnormal mitochondria noted under electron microscope. Coenzyme Q, thiamine and carnitine had been given before biochemical study; however, the neurological symptoms did not show any improvement. Biochemical study finally revealed normal respiratory chain enzymes including NADH-coenzyme Q reductase, succinate coenzyme Q reductase and cytochrome c oxidase while other enzymes were technically unavailable for study. Unfortunately the patient died at 18-month-old due to respiratory failure.
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PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy presenting with clinical Leigh's disease: report of a case. 184 64

We reported a case of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with repeated stroke-like episodes. A 33-year-old single male was admitted to our hospital because of stroke-like episodes with visual field defect, hemiplegia and convulsion repeated seven times for the past seven years. There were no abnormalities on the physical examination. He was hallucinative and perseverative and had mental deficiency. Muscle weakness and atrophy were not prominent, and generalized hyporeflexia were present without pathological reflexes. Myoclonus was not observed. Serum CK and blood gas analysis were normal (pH 7.398). Although blood levels of lactate and pyruvate were almost within normal limit, lactate was elevated by 20WATT-15 minutes exercises. On the contrary, the CSF levels of lactate and pyruvate were elevated markedly. CT of the brain revealed the presence of the low density areas in the right occipital and the left frontal lobes. Cranial 4 vessels studies were unremarkable. EEG showed the diffuse slowness with spike and wave complex. CT of the muscles were normal. A specimen obtained from the left biceps brachii muscle showed ragged-red fibers without obvious myogenic or neurogenic changes, and accumulations of abnormal mitochondria with paracrystalline inclusion bodies were observed by electron microscopy. However, mitochondrial abnormalities were not seen in the vessel walls in the biopsied muscle. Activities of complex I + III, II + III, IV in mitochondria were normal. Clinical features of this case were consistent with MELAS. However, this case showed no muscle weakness, short stature and lactic acidosis which characterize MELAS, and the onset of this case was later than those cases that were reported before.
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PMID:[A case of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy characterized by repeated stroke-like episodes]. 250 53

We reported a girl with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, who had various neuromuscular symptoms including dilated cardiomyopathy, generalized convulsions, myoclonus, muscular weakness and growth retardation. Lactate levels in the serum and CSF were elevated. Muscle biopsy showed scattered ragged-red fibers, and complex I (NADH-CoQ reductase) and complex IV (cytochrome c oxidase) were markedly reduced. Although she was treated with coenzyme Q, DL-carnitine and sodium succinate, she died of progressive congestive heart failure at 9 10/12 years of age.
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PMID:[A case of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with cardiomyopathy due to decreased complex I and IV activities]. 255 57

A patient with intention and action myoclonus, epilepsy, ataxia, and mental deterioration in association with ragged-red fibers in striated muscle is described. This patient demonstrated a unique form of erratic myoclonus with continuous EEG spike activity during eye closure. Both the myoclonus and the EEG spiking disappeared on opening the eyes. A defect in the activity of complex I in the respiratory chain was demonstrated.
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PMID:The syndrome of myoclonic epilepsy with ragged-red fibers. Report of a case and review of the literature. 312 68

We describe two patients with mitochondrial myopathies who presented with complex multisystem diseases predominantly affecting the central nervous system. In both cases the disease ran a fluctuating clinical course, eventually leading to profound impairment of intellectual function. In Case 1 dementia was associated with optic atrophy, absent pupillary responses, impaired eye movements and generalized dystonic rigidity without evidence of weakness or loss of muscle bulk. In Case 2 myoclonus preceded the onset of ataxia, generalized weakness and mental confusion by several years. Biochemical studies on isolated muscle mitochondria revealed defects in the mitochondrial respiratory chain which were located at NADH-CoQ reductase in Case 1, and at cytochrome b in Case 2. This study illustrates the potential value of muscle biopsy in the diagnosis of unusual and otherwise unexplained cerebral syndromes in man, even in the absence of muscle weakness.
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PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathies: biochemical studies in two cases revealing defects in the respiratory chain. 710 66

We report on a new maternally-inherited syndrome characterized by a combination of sensorineural hearing loss, ataxia and myoclonus in a large kindred from Sicily. Hearing loss was the most widespread and sometimes the only symptom found in family members. Sequence analysis of the mitochondrial DNA regions encompassing the tRNA genes revealed the presence of a heteroplasmic insertion at nucleotide position 7472. The insertion adds a seventh cytosine to a six-cytosine run that is part of the mitochondrial tRNASer(UCN) gene. Conformational analysis showed that this mutation is likely to alter the structure of the T psi C loop in the tRNASer(UCN) clover leaf secondary structure. Moreover, the degree of heteroplasmy in blood and muscle was correlated with the clinical phenotype, and homoplasmic mutant hybrids showed decreased complex I activity, low oxygen consumption and high lactic acid output, indicating faulty oxidative phosphorylation. Finally, mutation was absent in 381 unrelated maternal lineages, suggesting specific segregation with the disease. We propose that the C7472 insertion-mutation is pathogenic, and etiologically related to hearing loss and other symptoms that define a novel maternally-inherited clinical entity.
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PMID:Maternally inherited hearing loss, ataxia and myoclonus associated with a novel point mutation in mitochondrial tRNASer(UCN) gene. 758 83

On the French West Indian island of Guadeloupe, atypical parkinsonian patients represent two-thirds of all cases of parkinsonism, which is exceptionally frequent compared to epidemiological data from European countries where atypical parkinsonism accounts for only approximately 5% of all cases. The clinical entity was a unique combination of levodopa-resistant parkinsonism, tremor, myoclonus, hallucinations, REM sleep behavior disorder and fronto-subcortical dementia. Based on the presence or the absence of supranuclear gaze palsy, two subgroups of patients were distinguished. In patients with oculomotor signs that came to autopsy, neuronal loss was found to predominate in the substantia nigra and the striatum but other brain areas were also affected, including the frontal cortex. In addition, tau-containing lesions were detected throughout the brain. Epidemiological data suggested a close association of the disease with the regular consumption of soursop, a tropical annonaceous plant. Experimental studies performed in midbrain cell cultures identified annonacin, a selective mitochondrial complex I inhibitor contained in the fruit and leaves of soursop, as a probable etiological factor. Consistent with this view, chronic administration of annonacin to rats through Alzet osmotic minipumps showed that annonacin was able to reproduce the brain lesions characteristic of the human disease.
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PMID:Atypical parkinsonism in the Caribbean island of Guadeloupe: etiological role of the mitochondrial complex I inhibitor annonacin. 1881 93

Here, we present a male infant with clinical signs of typical Leigh syndrome. The first symptom, myoclonus was presented already on the 5th day of life; at 7 months of age limb convulsions and cerebral paresis with hypotonia were developed. At the age of 11 months, MRI verified increased signal intensity in the entire mesencephalon and medulla oblongata; while gray matter proton spectroscopy revealed presence of lactate increase in the brain. At age of 17 months, the child died in cardiorespiratory arrest. After autopsy, the diagnosis of Leigh syndrome was established; using DNA isolated from skeletal muscle and liver, heteroplasmic (>50%) mitochondrial 11777C>A was detected in the fourth subunit of NADH dehydrogenase enzyme (MTND4) encoding gene, which causes Arg --> Ser replacement. The mutation was also detected in low copy number in blood of mother. Albeit this mutation type is well recognized as a typical mtDNA mutation, according the reports available on the PubMed, this mutation was described only in four patients with wide phenotypic variations; here, we reviewed the characteristic clinical features of them. Taken together, the earliest onset of symptoms, the nature of the first presentation signs, the most rapid progression, the character of minor additional symptoms, and the early fatal outcome differentiate the phenotypic variant of the proband presented here from cases reported so far by others.
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PMID:Mitochondrial DNA 11777C>A mutation associated Leigh syndrome: case report with a review of the previously described pedigrees. 2050 85

Mitochondrial respiratory chain disorders are relatively common inborn errors of energy metabolism, with a combined prevalence of one in 5000. These disorders typically affect tissues with high energy requirements, and cerebral involvement occurs frequently in childhood, often manifesting in seizures. Mitochondrial diseases are genetically heterogeneous; to date, mutations have been reported in all 37 mitochondrially encoded genes and more than 80 nuclear genes. The major genetic causes of mitochondrial epilepsy are mitochondrial DNA mutations (including those typically associated with the mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes [MELAS] and myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibres [MERRF] syndromes); mutations in POLG (classically associated with Alpers syndrome but also presenting as the mitochondrial recessive ataxia syndrome [MIRAS], spinocerebellar ataxia with epilepsy [SCAE], and myoclonus, epilepsy, myopathy, sensory ataxia [MEMSA] syndromes in older individuals) and other disorders of mitochondrial DNA maintenance; complex I deficiency; disorders of coenzyme Q(10) biosynthesis; and disorders of mitochondrial translation such as RARS2 mutations. It is not clear why some genetic defects, but not others, are particularly associated with seizures. Epilepsy may be the presenting feature of mitochondrial disease but is often part of a multisystem clinical presentation. Mitochondrial epilepsy may be very difficult to manage, and is often a poor prognostic feature. At present there are no curative treatments for mitochondrial disease. Individuals with mitochondrial epilepsy are frequently prescribed multiple anticonvulsants, and the role of vitamins and other nutritional supplements and the ketogenic diet remain unproven.
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PMID:Mitochondrial disease and epilepsy. 2228 95


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