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 35-year-old female was reported who presented early onset and slowly progressive ataxia and retrocollis which appeared at the age of nine. On admission, neurological examination revealed cerebellar ataxia, dystonia of the neck and the right arm, myoclonus of the neck and the shoulder, slight mental retardation, supranuclear upper gaze palsy, and sensorineural hearing loss. Laboratory examination showed high serum CK activity. Electromyography and muscle biopsy findings suggested slight muscular involvement. CSF level of HVA and 5-HIAA were reduced. MRI demonstrated marked cerebellar atrophy and slight atrophy of the brain stem. To our knowledge, the characteristic combination of the neurological sign in this case has not been reported. This case was compared with EOCA (early onset cerebellar ataxia with retained tendon reflexes) and other juvenile onset cerebellar ataxia and dystonia.
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PMID:[A case of juvenile onset ataxia with dystonia, myoclonus, sensorineural hearing loss and mental retardation]. 826 7

Twenty patients with movement disorders associated with astrocytomas (grade I-IV according to the WHO tumour classification) of the basal ganglia and the thalamus were evaluated for the effects of treatment. Five patients had more than one movement disorder when the histological diagnosis was verified by stereotactic biopsy. Twelve had tremors, eight hemidystonia, three hemichorea, and one hemichorea/ballismus, and myoclonus respectively. Ten patients died during the follow up period, and for the surviving patients follow up periods ranged from 6-21 years. The movement disorders changed over long periods of time related to therapeutic interventions. CSF shunt operations and percutaneous radiotherapy had no definite effect on the movement disorders. There was a moderate response to medical treatment in a few patients. Stereotactic aspiration of tumour cysts had a marked influence on the movement disorder in two patients, and functional stereotactic surgery abolished tumour induced tremor in one. Interstitial radiotherapy was performed in fifteen patients for treatment of the underlying neoplasm and resulted in different and variable alterations of the movement disorders. These differences may be explained by complex interactions involving structures affected primarily by the tumour, as well as by secondary functional lesions of adjacent structures.
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PMID:Evaluation of the effect of treatment on movement disorders in astrocytomas of the basal ganglia and the thalamus. 841 11

A 45-year-old woman developed opsoclonus, myoclonus, and severe truncal and gait ataxia. Serum and CSF contained IgG antibodies that appear to be identical to "anti-Ri" antibodies associated with paraneoplastic opsoclonus and ataxia. The patient had a fluctuating course with exacerbations that responded well to corticosteroids and later to cyclophosphamide. Her anti-Ri antibody titer has declined significantly but still remains high. After more than 3 years of follow-up, no neoplasm has been detected.
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PMID:Antineuronal (anti-Ri) antibodies in a patient with steroid-responsive opsoclonus-myoclonus. 842 87

The clinical and electrophysiological features of stimulus-sensitive truncal myoclonus are described in a 49-year-old woman. Touching the skin of the back and abdomen would evoke jerks in both ipsilateral and contralateral axial muscles; there was no spontaneous jerking. Multichannel EMG recordings showed bilateral short-latency muscle bursts at truncal recording sites both rostral and caudal to stimulus sites. The short latencies of muscle bursts in adjacent segments give evidence of a spinal origin of myoclonus; the pattern of recruitment and the velocity of spread suggest the involvement of propriospinal pathways. The presence of intrathecal IgG synthesis and of oligoclonal bands in the CSF point towards an inflammatory process which may underly the unusual type of myoclonus in this patient.
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PMID:Pure stimulus-sensitive truncal myoclonus of propriospinal origin. 877 Oct 73

We studied the value of long video-split electroencephalographic monitoring (VSEEG) in detecting myoclonus in nearly SSPE and evaluated the natural history and outcome-affecting factors. The 32 newly diagnosed patients had VSEEG to detect myoclonus and its correlations with EEG periodic complexes. Disease progression was monitored by a special "outcome score'; the chi-square test and multi-variable statistics analysed the outcome score in relation to different variables, such as age at onset, sex, duration of symptoms at presentation, CSF measles antibody titre, type and interval between periodic complexes (EEG discharges). Myoclonus or atonia occurred in all patients and was time-related to the EEG periodic complexes; in 32% of patients, myoclonus or atonia were not clinically evident. The EEG periodic complexes were of 3 types: Type I (16 patients) periodic giant delta waves; Type II (10 patients) periodic giant delta waves intermixed with rapid spikes or fast activity; and Type III (6 patients), long spike-wave discharges interrupted by giant delta waves. Outcome score was associated with symptoms duration (P < 0.01) and EEG periodic complexes (P < 0.05). Symptom duration was inversely related to final outcome (multi-variable analysis). Long VSEEG monitoring greatly improves early diagnosis and detection of subtle atonia or segmental myoclonus. Prognostic factors were the type of EEG periodic complexes and duration of symptoms at presentation.
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PMID:Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE): early diagnosis, prognostic factors and natural history. 885 57

Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis is characterized by the insidious onset of diffuse cerebral dysfunction associated later with myoclonus and typical electroencephalographic changes. The disease progresses relentlessly to coma and death within 2 years. We report a case of acute onset and rapid course associated with atypical CSF, EEG and MRI features simulating acute disseminated encephalomyelitis. Brief review of relevant literature is presented.
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PMID:Subacute sclerosing panencephalitis presenting as acute disseminated encephalomyelitis: a case report. 907 90

Some patients with familial Alzheimer's disease (FAD) have mutations in the presenilin-1 (PS-1) gene on chromosome 14. We report a Japanese family with AD and an Ala285Val substitution in exon 8 of the PS-1 gene. FAD in this family was characterized by relatively late onset (mean age, 50 years) and absence of myoclonus, seizures, or paratonia. Levels of tau were markedly elevated in CSF whereas CSF levels of amyloid beta protein were normal. MRI of the cranium showed marked linear signal abnormalities within white matter in the parieto-occipital lobes, consistent with cortical amyloid angiopathy of the type encountered in patients with the PS-1 gene mutation.
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PMID:A presenilin-1 mutation in a Japanese family with Alzheimer's disease and distinctive abnormalities on cranial MRI. 910 15

A 27 year-old patient developed a progressive neurological multisystem disorder. Initial signs were cerebellar ataxia and dementia, followed by rigidity and oculomotor dysfunction. Myoclonus was not present. MRI showed a marked atrophy of the spinal cord, the cerebellum, and mild (sub)cortical atrophy. CSF contained oligoclonal bands, but no anti-glutamic acid dehydrogenase antibodies. He died 33 months after onset of symptoms. Autopsy revealed widespread neuropathological alterations including perivascular lymphocytic cutting, neuronal cell loss, and micro/astrogliosis the distribution of which corresponded to the changes seen in MRI. The diagnosis of progressive encephalomyelitis with rigidity was pathohistologically confirmed. Brain samples were negative for neurotrophic viruses tested by polymerase chain reaction. A new variant of this rare disorder is described initially presenting with ataxia and dementia, but without myoclonus.
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PMID:A new variant of progressive encephalomyelitis with rigidity associated with cerebellar ataxia and dementia: correlation of MRI and histopathological changes. A case report. 917 49

A 66-year-old woman presented with a rapidly progressive dementia initially characterized by an auditory agnosia. She experienced a rapid progression of her aphasia and developed ataxia and myoclonus. An initial neurological evaluation suggested a left parieto-temporal lesion, however, neuroimaging did not reveal any. An MRI of her brain demonstrated highly focal T2 hyperintensities in her basal ganglia. The patient was diagnosed with Creutzfeldt-Jacob Disease (CJD) on the basis of the presence of two proteins in the CSF that are highly sensitive and specific for CJD. Pathological examination confirmed the diagnosis. The differential diagnosis and utility of MRI in patients with CJD is discussed.
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PMID:A 66-year-old woman with a rapidly progressing dementia and basal ganglia involvement. 923 37

We describe a case of a patient with neuroblastoma and opsoclonus- myoclonus ataxia displaying serum and CSF anti-Hu antibodies that were able to recognize antigens of the patient's own tumor.
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PMID:Antineuronal antibody in a patient with neuroblastoma and opsoclonus-myoclonus-ataxia: a case report. 926 93


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