Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0027819 (neuroblastoma)
27,800 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Neuroblastoma, which is primarily an extracranial disease, has remote manifestations which can be confusing. Neurologic signs and symptoms such as opsoclonus (dancing eyes), ataxia, blindness, and cord paralysis may precede by several months the manifestations of the primary tumor in a distant site such as the abdomen. Descriptions of nine cases demonstrate the various modes of presentation and some of the unusual aspects of this disease. The recent advent of computed tomography requires a reevaluation of the neuroradiologic approach to the evaluation of neuroblastoma.
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PMID:Remote effects of neuroblastoma. 9 12

Four of eight children with advanced neuroblastoma treated with a rapid delivery high dose intensity cisplatin based regimen developed acute neurological toxicity. Three had seizures and one developed transient blindness. In the absence of other causes it seems probable that high dose cisplatin (200 mg/m2) as a continuous infusion over five days followed 10 days later by 80 mg/m2 infused over 48 hours was responsible. Other risk factors included an associated deterioration in renal function and neutropenia related fever.
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PMID:Seizures and cortical dysfunction following high-dose cisplatin administration in children. 173 19

A 2-year-old boy presented with sudden blindness and epistaxis resulting from olfactory neuroblastoma with intracranial extension. This disease is uncommon in children, with only 27 cases reported in patients less than 17 years of age. This article reviews the clinical and histological features of this tumor and discusses treatment. Therapy has generally consisted of surgery and radiation. Our child and 2 others treated with radiation and combination chemotherapy (including cyclophosphamide and anthracyclines) have done well with follow-ups of up to 9 1/2 years. Chemotherapy is an important form of adjuvant therapy in this disease.
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PMID:Olfactory neuroblastoma (esthesioneuroblastoma) in a 2-year-old boy. 315 27

The authors present the case history of a child with neuroblastoma and early infiltration of the orbit accompanied by bilateral blindness. The typical clinical signs developed later. The thickening of the periosteum infiltrated by the tumor in the lateral wall of the orbit was demonstrated by computerized tomography. This may be regarded as an early sign of infiltration of the orbit by the neuroblastoma. In the case reported here a severe inflammatory reaction developed in the left orbit and anterior segment during massive chemotherapy and melted the cornea.
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PMID:[Pediatric neuroblastoma with early bilateral blindness]. 335 84

A case of olfactory neuroblastoma in a 9 month-old girl is reported. Blindness and purulent meningitis were the first symptoms. Radiological examinations including CT scan revealed a sphenoidal tumor with penetration of the meninges. Surgery revealed an ethmoido-sphenoidal tumor mass extending into the pituitary fossea which consisted of malignant cells with the histological aspect of esthesioneuroblastoma. The rarity of this tumor in early childhood and its clinical polymorphism are emphasized.
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PMID:[Olfactory neuroblastoma disclosed by blindness in a 9-month-old girl]. 400 68

A 2-year-old boy with blindness as an isolated symptom was found to have no light perception binocularly because of compression of both optic nerves by a neuroblastoma infiltrating the walls of the optic canals and medial sphenoid bone. Imaging disclosed a primary tumor near the kidney and multiple osseous metastases. Although neuroblastoma commonly causes blindness by metastasis to the orbit, it rarely causes bilateral blindness from intracranial compression of the optic nerves. This is the first report of bilateral blindness as the presenting feature.
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PMID:Metastatic neuroblastoma presenting with binocular blindness from intracranial compression of the optic nerves. 1517 64

Although methanol toxicity is well known for acute neurological sequelae leading to blindness or death, there is a new impetus to investigate the chronic effects of methanol exposure. These include a recently established link between formaldehyde, a methanol metabolite, and Alzheimer's disease (AD) pathology. In the present study, mice were fed with methanol to revisit the chronic effects of methanol toxicity, especially as it pertains to AD progression. Three groups of mice (n = 9) were given either water as a control or a methanol solution (concentrations of 2% or 3.8%) over a 6-week period. The methanol-fed mice were found to have impaired spatial recognition and olfactory memory in Y-maze and olfactory memory paradigms. Immunohistochemical analysis of the mouse brains found increased neuronal tau phosphorylation in the hippocampus and an increased cellular apoptotic marker in hippocampal CA1 neurons (~10% of neurons displayed chromatin condensation) in the methanol-fed groups. Two additional in vitro experiments in mouse embryonic cerebral cortex neurons and mouse neuroblastoma N2a cells found that formaldehyde, but not methanol or the methanol end product formic acid, induced microtubule disintegration and tau protein hyperphosphorylation. The findings of the behavioral tests and immunohistochemical analysis suggested that the methanol-fed mice presented with partial AD-like symptoms. The in vitro experiments suggested that formaldehyde was most likely the detrimental component of methanol toxicity related to hippocampal tau phosphorylation and the subsequent impaired memory in the mice. These findings add to a growing body of evidence that links formaldehyde to AD pathology.
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PMID:Alzheimer's disease and methanol toxicity (part 1): chronic methanol feeding led to memory impairments and tau hyperphosphorylation in mice. 2478 15