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Query: UMLS:C0027066 (
myoclonus
)
4,275
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors report the clinical criteria for the diagnosis of progressive
myoclonus
epilepsies on the basis of their experience following 34 cases (2 with sialidosis, 2 with
MERRF
, 4 with Lafora disease, 24 with Unverricht-Lundborg type, 4 with ataxic
myoclonus
). 3 rare forms of PME are also reported: a case of lipoma and PME, a family with dentato-rubro-pallido-luysian atrophy and a family of myoclonus epilepsy, Hartung type. The autonomy of Ramsay Hunt syndrome is discussed on the light of recent molecular genetic data.
...
PMID:Progressive myoclonus epilepsies. Criteria for diagnosis on the basis of the follow-up of 37 cases. 129 89
A 21-year-old woman, who had no particular familial history, was admitted to our hospital because of hand tremor and gait disturbance. On neurological examination, she showed muscle weakness in the proximal extremities. There was an ataxia on heel-to-shin testing. Action and postural
myoclonus
involving the extremities were also noted. In addition, with dorsiflexion of the hands, asterixis-like movement was manifested. Pyruvate was 1.0 mg/dl and lactate was 24.1 mg/dl in cerebrospinal fluid. Brain CT scan revealed mild cerebellar atrophy. EEG showed synchronous diffuse slow wave. Median nerve SEPs showed a large N20-P25 component (20 microV). Median nerve C-reflex was not evoked. With dorsiflexion of the hands, the asterixis-like movement was induced with brief cessation of surface EMG activity in the forearm muscles, as shown by the accelerometer trace. Biopsy specimens of the biceps brachii muscle revealed numerous ragged-red fibers. By PCR-RFLP method with use of a mismatched primer, we analyzed mitochondrial DNA extracted from peripheral leukocytes. The A to G mutation at nucleotide position 8,344 in a tRNA(Lys) gene of a mitochondrial genome was detected. In this patient, clonazepam was effective on the asterixis-like movements. From existence of positive
myoclonus
, giant SEPs and efficacy of clonazepam, we considered this movement to be negative
myoclonus
. Our study indicated the possibility that such an involuntary movement could be induced by certain posture in patients with
MERRF
.
...
PMID:[Myoclonus epilepsy associated with ragged-red fibers--report of a patient with negative myoclonus]. 149 Mar 14
We describe a young man with a progressive neurological disorder including
myoclonus
, mental retardation, muscle weakness and a mitochondrial myopathy (myoclonus epilepsy and ragged red fibres--
MERRF
). Multiple abnormalities of the mitochondrial respiratory chain in skeletal muscle are shown by direct measurement of the flux through the individual complexes, low-temperature redox spectroscopy and decreased immunodetectable subunits of complexes I and IV by immunoblotting. No abnormality of mitochondrial DNA was found. This is the first report of combined defects of complexes I, III and IV as a cause of this clinical syndrome. However, we propose that the occurrence of multiple respiratory chain defects may be more common than previously recognised and that this particular combination of defects, involving complexes I, III and IV, may be the predominant biochemical abnormality in
MERRF
.
...
PMID:Multiple defects of the mitochondrial respiratory chain in a mitochondrial encephalopathy (MERRF): a clinical, biochemical and molecular study. 164 12
We report the cases of 2 siblings with progressive encephalopathy. The first symptoms were noted when they were 6 years old. The full clinical picture included
myoclonus
, seizures, cerebellar ataxia, blindness due to optic atrophy and retinal degeneration, deafness, swallowing difficulties with relatively spared intellectual functions. The course was progressive and led to death within 8 years. The pathological findings included bilateral and almost symmetrical lesions involving the thalami, the colliculi, and the pontine and medullar tegmentum, similar to the changes described in Leigh disease. Neuronal loss and gliosis were noted in the dentate nucleus and in the inferior olive, as in
MERRF
syndrome. Laminar necrosis of the cerebral cortex could have been due to episodes of severe hypotension before death. Cytochrome c oxidase deficiency was found in case 2. The enzyme deficiency was present in muscle and in fibroblasts in culture.
...
PMID:[Familial mitochondrial encephalopathy. A clinicopathologic study]. 166 Jan 81
Diagnosis and management of the progressive
myoclonus
epilepsies (PMEs) provides a challenge to the clinician and neurophysiologist. Over 15 specific disorders can cause the PME syndrome; all are rare, and individual physicians are unlikely to have experience in all of them. Accurate diagnosis is essential to provide a prognosis, optimal therapy, and genetic counseling. The major causes are PME of the Unverricht-Lundborg type, Lafora disease, neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses (three forms),
MERRF
(myoclonus epilepsy and ragged red fibers), and sialidoses (two forms), in addition to a number of even rarer disorders. Here we review the clinical aspects and neurophysiology of these disorders, which can now be diagnosed in life by relatively simple methods in the vast majority of cases.
...
PMID:Progressive myoclonus epilepsies: clinical and neurophysiological diagnosis. 191 32
In the last 4 years much progress has been made in the understanding of mitochondrial disorders. Point-mutations, deletions and depletion of the mitochondrial genome are associated with disorders like Leber's disease,
MERRF
(
Myoclonus
Epilepsia with Ragged Red Fibers), MELAS (mitochondrial Myopathy, Encephalopathy, Lactic acidosis and Stroke-like episodes) and several others. Recently, mitochondrial dysfunctions have been also related to neurodegenerative disorders like Parkinson's disease and to aging. Since the brain depends mostly on mitochondrial energy supply, mitochondrial dysfunctions may affect the nervous system more severely than other tissues causing or worsening diseases and playing a role in the biological deterioration of aging. Furthermore, the mitochondrial energy supply is associated with the production of highly reactive oxygen species. Ninety-five percent of the molecular oxygen is metabolized within the mitochondria by the electron-transport chain so that mitochondria are highly exposed to oxidative stress which may damage selected neuronal populations. Oxygen radicals created during respiration induce mitochondrial dysfunction which accelerates the production of more deleterious species of oxygen. The latter step further increases mitochondrial malfunction, thus intensifying and perpetuating the cycle. These two mechanisms combined may lead to cell death in brain and other tissues with high metabolic rate. Therefore, in neurodegenerative disorders such as Parkinson's disease mitochondrial dysfunction and oxidative stress may cause or worsen the clinical features.
...
PMID:Oxidative stress and mitochondrial dysfunction in neurodegeneration. 784 18
A 73-year-old woman (patient 1) developed progressive mental deterioration at age 63, and seizures at age 70. On examination, she showed severe dementia, tonic clonic convulsion, hypotonia and muscular wasting. There was neither
myoclonus
nor cerebellar ataxia. Brain CT revealed a low density area in the right occipital lobe. A 44-year-old man (son of the patient 1) developed unsteady gait at age 15, muscle twitching at age 18 and then noticed speech disturbance at age 35. He had no history of convulsive seizure. Neurological examination showed cerebellar ataxia,
myoclonus
in the extremities and mild muscular weakness. His intelligence was normal. Brain CT showed moderate atrophy of the pons and the cerebellum. Both cases showed the same mitochondrial DNA mutation as reported previously in patients with
MERRF
. However, the clinical features, the age of onset and the brain CT findings were totally different between these 2 cases. In the progress of mitochondrial genetic analysis, atypical forms in
MERRF
like the patient 1 would increase in number, and the wide variation of clinical symptoms should be considered.
...
PMID:[Two cases of MERRF (myoclonus epilepsy associated with ragged red fibers) showing different clinical features in the same family]. 812 82
We looked for the A-->G transition at position 8344 of mtDNA in 150 patients, most of them with diagnosed or suspected mitochondrial disease, to assess the specificity of this mutation for the
MERRF
phenotype, to define the clinical spectrum associated with the mutation, and to study the relationship between percentage of mutation in muscle and clinical severity. Our results confirm the high correlation between the A-->G transition at position 8344 and the
MERRF
syndrome, but they also show that this mutation can be associated with other phenotypes, including Leigh's syndrome,
myoclonus
or myopathy with truncal lipomas, and proximal myopathy. The absence of the mutation in four typical
MERRF
patients suggests that other mutations in the tRNA(Lys) gene, or elsewhere in the mitochondrial DNA, can produce the same phenotype.
...
PMID:Clinical features associated with the A-->G transition at nucleotide 8344 of mtDNA ("MERRF mutation"). 817 May 67
We describe a 42-year-old woman with overlapping syndrome of MELAS (mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes) and
MERRF
(myoclonus epilepsy and ragged-red fibers). Clinically, she had episodic headache, stroke-like episode with left hemiparesis and lactic acidosis commonly found in MELAS syndrome. However,
myoclonus
seizure, and ataxia with dyssynergic gait characteristic of
MERRF
were also noted. Computed tomographic scans showed a right temporo-parietal hypodense lesion. The lesion disappeared 20 months later, even magnetic resonance images also failed to reveal this abnormality. A molecular analysis of mitochondrial DNA was conducted by using restriction endonucleases ApaI and NaeI. A transition from A to G was found at the nucleotide position 3243, but not found at the 8344th nucleotide pair. In this report, we document the fluctuating CT changes and emphasize the importance of molecular analysis in patients with overlapping syndrome of mitochondrial encephalomyopathies.
...
PMID:Overlapping syndrome of MERRF and MELAS: molecular and neuroradiological studies. 835 81
Recent advances in molecular genetics have led to a better understanding of mitochondrially inherited diseases. Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy overlap syndrome is one such group of diseases in which ocular abnormalities are frequently manifest. The authors describe the clinical, molecular genetic, and pathologic findings of two patients with the mitochondrial encephalomyopathy overlap syndrome. The patients shared a similar clinical course with features overlapping the three traditionally distinct clinical phenotypes (the Kearns-Sayre syndrome; the syndrome of mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke [MELAS], and the syndrome of
myoclonus
, epilepsy, and ragged red fibers [
MERRF
]). The patients had identical mitochondrial DNA mutations (at nucleotide position 3243) and had similar ultrastructural abnormalities, including abundant enlarged mitochondria with "whorled" and "tubular" cristae. These abnormal mitochondria appeared to be preferentially distributed in cells with high metabolic activity (retinal pigment epithelium, corneal endothelium, and extraocular muscles).
...
PMID:Ocular clinicopathologic study of the mitochondrial encephalomyopathy overlap syndromes. 836 69
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