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)

A 27-month-old girl presented with chest pain. Further evaluation confirmed posterior mediastinal neuroblastoma with bone marrow infiltration, which was treated with a combination of chemotherapy and surgery. Four months after completing treatment, she presented with myoclonus and weakness of her right arm. The myoclonus eventually subsided but her right arm weakness progressed to a right hemiplegia. High titers of antineuronal nuclear antibodies identified as anti-Hu were found in both serum and cerebrospinal fluid. One month later she presented with a relapse of her original tumor, from which she died. Identification of anti-Hu antineuronal nuclear antibodies in this neuroblastoma-associated paraneoplastic syndrome supports the hypothesis that the syndrome is due to autoimmune disease.
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PMID:Neuroblastoma-associated paraneoplastic syndrome with anti-Hu antineuronal antibodies presenting at the time of recurrence. 883 43

A 15-year-old boy with neuroblastoma associated with Poland syndrome is presented. He was admitted with a 2-month history of progressive back pain and a 3-day history of weakness of the lower extremities, encopresis and enuresis. On physical examination, in addition to paraplegia, absence of the pectoralis major muscle was diagnosed on the right side of his chest. A large heterogeneous mass in the right side of the thorax was revealed on computerized tomography. Neuroblastoma was diagnosed on histopathological analysis of the mass. To the authors' knowledge this is the first case of neuroblastoma associated with Poland syndrome in the literature.
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PMID:Neuroblastoma and Poland syndrome in a 15-year-old boy. 944 62

We report a 28-year-old woman who presented with severe proximal muscle weakness secondary to paraneoplastic hypophosphatemia and associated with recurrent neuroblastoma. The biochemical findings included hyperphosphaturia, a reduced serum level of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin-D3, elevated alkaline phosphatase and normocalcemia which are pathognomic for paraneoplastic hypophosphatemia. Following systemic chemotherapy and supplementation of 1,25-dihydroxyvitamin-D3 a complete remission of the neuroblastoma was achieved and all features of the paraneoplastic hypophosphatemia gradually disappeared. In the differential diagnosis of muscle weakness, hypophosphatemia should be included. Paraneoplastic hypophosphatemia associated with metastatic neuroblastoma has not been reported previously. Diagnosis, mechanism and therapy of paraneoplastic hypophosphatemia are shortly reviewed.
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PMID:Severe muscle weakness secondary to paraneoplastic hypophosphatemia in neuroblastoma. 985 9

Neuroblastoma is the second most common malignant solid tumor in the pediatric population. Recent advances in treatment options and identification of prognostic subsets have made early detection important. Early classification into a favorable stage and subset may carry a 10-year survival of about 90% (1). With newer treatment regimens, the probability of long-term survival in patients with metastatic disease has also increased about fourfold since 1979 (2). Emergency physicians can contribute to improved morbidity and mortality with appropriate evaluation and disposition of the patient presenting with neuroblastoma. Two patients, a 6-month-old and a 2-week-old, presented to the Emergency Department with weakness. Both had a presumptive diagnosis of neuroblastoma made by the emergency physician. A brief discussion of the incidence, presentation, and diagnosis of neuroblastoma follows.
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PMID:Two cases of neuroblastoma presenting to the emergency department. 1019 84

Patients with myasthenia gravis (MG) have antibodies to the muscle nicotinic acetylcholine receptor (mAChR) which are responsible for their muscle weakness: but some patients with MG and other neuroimmunological disorders have autonomic symptoms. We characterised the neuronal forms of AChRs (nAChRs) into two neuroblastoma cell lines and developed immunoprecipitation assays to test for antibodies to the alpha7- and alpha3-containing nAChR subtypes, present in the autonomic ganglia. We then tested 70 sera samples from MG patients, 38 from subjects with other neurological diseases, and 30 from healthy individuals, for antibodies to these two forms of neuronal AChR subtypes. We used the alpha7 subtype extracted from the human neuroblastoma IMR32 cell line labeled with 125IalphaBungarotoxin (alphaBgtx), and the alpha3-containing subtype extracted from the human neuroblastoma SY5Y cell line labeled with 3H-Epibatidine (Epi). Nine subjects (five MG, one GBS, one CIPD and two LEMS) were positive for the alpha7 subtype; and four for the alpha3-containing subtype (two MG patients, one LEMS and the same GBS patient). None of the MG patients with undetectable levels of antibodies against muscle AChR were positive. The patients with serum antibodies to alpha7 or alpha3-containing neuronal AChRs showed a range of clinical features including autonomic symptoms and thymoma in two MG patients. These results indicate that patients with MG and other immune-mediated disorders can have antibodies to neuronal AChRs, and that these may contribute to the clinical characteristics of the diseases.
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PMID:Antibodies against neuronal nicotinic receptor subtypes in neurological disorders. 1062 72

An infant presented with congenital weakness, hypotonia, arthrogryposis, atrial tachycardia, and a left intra-abdominal neuroblastoma. Muscle biopsy revealed marked excess of muscle spindles with atrophy of extrafusal fibers. The patient expired at age 14 months from progressive cardiorespiratory failure. Postmortem examination demonstrated muscle-spindle excess in other muscles, along with hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy and organomegaly. Muscle spindle excess has previously been reported in two patients with Noonan syndrome and progressive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Muscle spindle excess with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, organomegaly, and, possibly, congenital neuroblastoma suggests a syndromic association and may represent an unusual form of congenital myopathy.
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PMID:Myopathy with muscle spindle excess: A new congenital neuromuscular syndrome? 1115 Sep 80

The coupling between neuronal depolarization and astroglial swelling was examined. First, previous in vitro data for the swelling of cultured neurons (N18; rat neuroblastoma) and astroglia (C6; rat astroglyoma) upon exposure to a hypoosmotic solution were reappraised. Neurons swelled rapidly, forming blisters, and easily burst. whereas astroglia resisted swelling and slowly assumed a large full-moon shape. The time constant of swelling was 35.2 +/- 7.8 s for N18 and 594.8 +/- 554.0 s for C6. The glial plasmic membrane was found to be much stronger than the neuronal one, presumably due to a well-developed cytoskeleton. To overcome such neuronal membranous weakness, strong astroglial processes need to cover the neurons including the cell body and synapses, as demonstrated electron-microscopically. Next, in situ astroglial swelling was investigated in rats. During K(+)-induced cortical spreading depression, increases or decreases of a wave-ring spread of light (550 nm) transmission through a 1 mm-thick cerebral cortical layer was observed. The moving local optical density decrease in the cortex was attributable to local vascular bed compression induced by astroglial swelling, since concomitant occurrence of colocated dynamic capillary flow stall was confirmed by a hemodilution technique. Astroglial swelling may occur in an ensemble acting during neuronal depolarization, suggesting that neurons and astroglia behave like a unit complex.
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PMID:Astroglial swelling in the neuronal depolarization ensemble. 1475 39

Neuroblastoma, a common tumor of neural crest origin, demonstrates an extremely variable clinical presentation and behavior. Paraspinal tumors may occur anywhere along the spinal column where they may invade the intervertebral foramina and produce cord compression. Cervical involvement may produce Horner's syndrome. Opsoclonus-myoclonus syndrome is also a well-known neuroimmunologic finding of neuroblastoma. We report a 28-month-old female presenting with ptosis and muscle weakness, diagnosed as having a neuroblastoma.
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PMID:Neuroblastoma: an unusual presentation with bilateral ptosis. 1508 9

Environmental substances or metabolites induce neuronal damage through oxidative stress. Environmental organic solvent metabolite, 1,2-diacetylbenzene (1,2-DAB), treated rats develop limb weakness with neuropathological damage in both the central and peripheral nervous systems. In this experiment, we examined the relevance of 1,2-DAB-induced toxicity to increased oxidative stress using human dopaminergic neuroblastoma SHSY5Y cells. 1,2-DAB (4, 16, and 32 microM) disrupted cytoskeletal integrity and caused morphological changes. 1,2-DAB significantly decreased cell viability and induced cell cycle arrest in the G(1) phase in a concentration-dependent manner. At higher concentration, it produced apoptosis. Pre-treatment of cells with the antioxidants, GSH or N-acetylcysteine (NAC), effectively blocked 1,2-DAB-mediated cytotoxicity including cell viability, and morphological changes. These results therefore suggest that oxidative stress is involved in environmental metabolite 1,2-DAB-mediated neurotoxicity and that antioxidant treatment can effectively protect the nervous system from environmental hazards.
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PMID:Cytotoxicity of 1,2-diacetylbenzene in human neuroblastoma SHSY5Y cells is mediated by oxidative stress. 1806 64

Progressive spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), the most prevalent hereditary lower motor neuron disease, is caused by mutations in the telomeric copy of the survival of motor neuron (SMN1) gene. Unlike other cells, lower motor neurons cannot tolerate low levels of smn protein. However, it is unclear as to the nature of the cell death involved. There is evidence that lower motor neurons undergo apoptosis in SMA, leading to muscle weakness and wasting. This study investigated whether SMN1 regulation in a motor neuron model affected indices of apoptotic cell death. Decreased smn expression in neuroblastoma hybrid (NSC-34) cell lines by small interfering RNA (siRNA) was demonstrated at the mRNA and protein level. Smn-depleted cells showed elevated caspase-3 activity, decreased cell viability and increased percentage of TUNEL positive cells. Conversely, NSC-34 cell smn overexpression by adenoviral gene transfer decreased staurosporine-induced caspase-3 elevation and mitigated induced cell toxicity as assessed by 3-(4,5-dimethyl thiazol-2-yl)-2,5-diphenyl tetrazolium bromide (MTT) assay. However, increased smn expression by itself did not increase cell viability. These data suggest not only that decreased smn levels increase apoptosis in an in vitro model of SMA, but also that increased smn can protect against neural injury.
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PMID:Survival motor neuron protein regulates apoptosis in an in vitro model of spinal muscular atrophy. 1836 39


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