Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0028738 (nystagmus)
7,431 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The purpose of this study was to estimate the response on vestibular caloric and optokinetic stimulation in patients with congenital nystagmus and serious congenital anomalies of visual system. 58 patients, aged 11-20 (21 female, 37 male) underwent this stimulation with ENG registration. The patients had visual acuity from 0.04 to 0.4, caused by visual system diseases e.g. congenital cataract, optic atrophy, hypoplasia maculae, high refractive error, albinism ect. The correct response was observed with 15.5% of the patients on vestibular caloric stimulation. There was no statistically significant relationship between visual acuity or visual system disease and the correct response. 28% of the patients responded correctly on optokinetic stimulation. There was statistically significant relationship between visual system anomaly and correct OKN: 80% of this reaction was in the group of optic atrophy, 54% in the group of high refractive error. Statistically significant relationship was no observed between visual acuiy and correct OKN. High level of the incorrect response on the caloric and optokinetic stimulation in the persons with congenital nystagmus and congenital disorder of visual system limits using of this tests for diagnostic purpose.
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PMID:[Congenital nystagmus with sensory disorder: reaction to the caloric and optokinetic stimulation]. 951 20

The authors present ocular symptoms in 116 drug abusers. They have observed optic atrophy and defects in visual field in 9 cases, reduced convergence in 8 cases, slow pupillary reaction in 9 cases, ptosis in 3 cases, nystagmus in 2 cases, retinal haemorrhages in the nerve fibre layer in 2 cases, myopia in 45 cases and blepharoconjunctivitis in most of cases. The authors want to indicate the principal ocular signs in drug abusers in our country.
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PMID:[Examination of ocular lesions in drug abusers in Poland]. 964 21

We report an inbred Arab family from the United Arab Emirates with two children affected with mental retardation, iris coloboma, optic atrophy, nystagmus, and a distinctive facial appearance. This includes a long narrow face, downslanting palpebral fissures, a narrow nose with hypoplasia of the alae nasi, a small philtrum and a thin upper lip. We suggest that the combination of abnormalities in these children represents a previously undescribed autosomal recessive syndrome.
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PMID:Mental retardation, iris coloboma, optic atrophy and distinctive facial appearance in two sibs. 968 94

Recent advances in genetics tend to center on the discoveries of molecular biology. A disease is first linked to a region on a chromosome, a gene is later cloned, or a candidate gene identified, point mutations described, phenotype-genotype correlations made, and rationales for treatment proposed. Several neuro-ophthalmological diseases have recently been studied in this way; including Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy and other mitochondrial diseases, autosomal dominant (Kjer) optic atrophy, Wolfram syndrome, or DIDMOAD (diabetes insipidus, diabetes mellitus, optic atrophy, and deafness), Usher syndrome, neurofibromatosis types I and II, and two disorders of the paired box genes: aniridia and Waardenburg's syndrome. Apart from molecular biology there are still some new disease entities being described and new inheritance patterns identified for some syndromes, such as periodic alternating nystagmus.
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PMID:Recent advances in hereditary disease and neuro-ophthalmology. 1016 Apr 19

Mutations in nuclear or mitochondrial DNA may cause disorders of neuro-ophthalmic significance. These include disorders of the optic nerve, such as Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy and Kjer-type optic atrophy, and disorders of ocular motility, such as congenital nystagmus, autosomal dominant progressive external ophthalmoplegia, and oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy. In addition to more accurate disease classification and diagnosis, identification of genetic loci, genes, and their mutations has stimulated investigation into factors influencing disease expression and penetrance.
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PMID:Neuro-ophthalmic genetics. 1017 1

This paper reviews the author's personal experience with genetic eye diseases and discusses the significance of family studies in providing key information for the advancement of molecular research. CHOROIDEREMIA: This disease has long been known as an X-linked progressive tapetoretinal degeneration, but it was first described in Japan in 1974 after finding asymptomatic fundus changes in heterozygous female carriers that are compatible with X chromosomal inactivation. Mutations in the disease-causing gene (REP-1) provide a clue to the diagnosis and pathophysiology of the disease. LEBER'S HEREDITARY OPTIC NEUROPATHY: The clinical expression is so variable among affected individuals and families that mild optic nerve disease of insidious onset should be differentiated from autosomal dominant optic atrophy. Molecular assessment of mitochondrial DNA leads to a definite diagnosis of the disease, but mitochondrial DNA mutations do not fully account for the clinical manifestation and phenotypic variability of the disease. NORRIE DISEASE: This rare X-linked vitreoretinal dysplasia, characterized by congenital bilateral blindness, was documented in Japan some twenty years ago and the disease has been identified in four unrelated Japanese families. The disease, once diagnosed on the basis of elaborate clinical and familial studies, can now be defined by molecular assessment of the Norrie disease gene. CONGENITAL NYSTAGMUS: A four-generation family was described which presented with autosomal dominantly inherited congenital nystagmus, peripheral corneal opacity, and foveal hypoplasia without any iris tissue malformation. The diagnosis of this family was established by detection of a missense mutation in the paired domain of the PAX 6 gene, hence conforming to a forme fruste of congenital aniridia. SORSBY'S FUNDUS DYSTROPHY: Two Japanese families with Sorsby's fundus dystrophy showed late-onset retinal dystrophy characterized by submacular hemorrhage and atrophy. Our patients presented with visual loss as late as 50 years of age or older due to macula-confined degenerative changes that were similar in all respects to exudative age-related macular degeneration and showed a novel mutation in the tissue inhibitor of the metalloproteinases-3 gene. AGE-RELATED MACULAR DEGENERATION (ARMD): We have studied whether there is any association of candidate polymorphic genes involving xenobiotic or antioxidant metabolism with susceptibility to ARMD. Preliminary results suggest that the genetic polymorphism of microsomal epoxide hydrolase is related to potential risk of ARMD.
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PMID:[Introduction to genetics in ophthalmology. Value of family studies]. 1064 91

We describe two cases of infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy, which is a rare, neurodegenerative disease, with autosomal recessive inheritance. The first case was an 8 year old boy, with arrested motor and mental development, ataxia and muscle weakness. On physical examination there was horizontal and vertical nystagmus, optic disc atrophy, hypotonia; deep tendon reflexes were absent. The second case was a 1.6 year old boy with arrested motor and mental development, and seizures. On physical examination there was optic atrophy, hypertonia and hyperreflexia. Both patients had on sural nerve biopsy neuronal enlargement, consistent with neuroaxonal dystrophy. Diagnosis without pathological confirmation with neuroaxonal spheroids is very difficult, because the clinical picture is variable and the neurophysiological findings are non specific.
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PMID:[Infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy: report of 2 cases]. 1068 93

We report a case of optic glioma with bilateral optic atrophy. A 3-year-old girl presented with vomiting and left hemiparesis. She had hypothalamic dysfunction, right ptosis, right monocular nystagmus, left facial palsy, left hemiparesis, and left pes adductus. Neuroimaging studies showed obstructive hydrocephalus with a large suprasellar calcified tumor with a ring-like enhancement mimicking craniopharyngioma. Visual-evoked potentials showed delayed latency of N75 in the right occipital lead. The tumor, a pilocytic astrocytoma in the right optic tract and chiasma, was partially removed via a right frontotemporal craniotomy. The right optic nerve had shrunk to half the normal diameter and became twisted downwardly. Intracranial pressure (ICP) increased to 40 cm H2O. The fundus had bilateral optic atrophy without disc swelling. To our knowledge, this is the first report of a lamina/dot sign of the optic disc in a small child with a brain tumor and a normal neuroretinal fiber layer. These ocular findings may result from possible interruption of the axonal flow caused by the tumor and not increased ICP.
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PMID:Optic glioma with characteristic bilateral optic atrophy in a 3-year-old girl. 1070 32

This paper reviews the author's personal experience with genetic eye diseases and discusses the significance of family studies in providing key information for the advancement of molecular research. Choroideremia: This disease has long been known as an X-linked progressive tapetoretinal degeneration, but it was first described in Japan in 1974 after finding asymptomatic fundus changes in heterozygous female carriers that are compatible with X chromosomal inactivation. Mutations in the disease-causing gene (REP-1) provide a clue to the diagnosis and pathophysiology of the disease.Leber's Hereditary Optic Neuropathy: The clinical expression is so variable among affected individuals and families that mild optic nerve disease of insidious onset should be differentiated from autosomal dominant optic atrophy. Molecular assessment of mitochondrial DNA leads to a definite diagnosis of the disease, but mitochondrial DNA mutations do not fully account for the clinical manifestation and phenotypic variability of the disease.Norrie Disease: This rare X-linked vitreoretinal dysplasia, characterized by congenital bilateral blindness, was documented in Japan some twenty years ago and the disease has been identified in four unrelated Japanese families. The disease, once diagnosed on the basis of elaborate clinical and familial studies, can now be defined by molecular assessment of the Norrie disease gene.Congenital Nystagmus: A four-generation family was described which presented with autosomal dominantly inherited congenital nystagmus, peripheral corneal opacity, and foveal hypoplasia without any iris tissue malformation. The diagnosis of this family was established by detection of a missense mutation in the paired domain of the PAX 6 gene, hence conforming to a forme fruste of congenital aniridia.Sorsby's Fundus Dystrophy: Two Japanese families with Sorsby's fundus dystrophy showed late-onset retinal dystrophy characterized by submacular hemorrhage and atrophy. Our patients presented with visual loss as late as 50 years of age or older due to macula-confined degenerative changes that were similar in all respects to exudative age-related macular degeneration and showed a novel mutation in the tissue inhibitor of the metalloproteinases-3 gene.Age-Related Macular Degeneration (ARMD): We have studied whether there is any association of candidate polymorphic genes involving xenobiotic or antioxidant metabolism with susceptibility to ARMD. Preliminary results suggest that the genetic polymorphism of microsomal epoxide hydrolase is related to potential risk of ARMD.
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PMID:Introduction to genetics in ophthalmology, value of family studies 1091 64

Eighteen patients with a glioma of the chiasma were managed between 1980 and 1994. A retrospective analysis of this series showed that the most frequent functional ophthalmological signs were visual loss, nystagmus, or strabismus. Funduscopic examination was abnormal in 65%, mostly with optic atrophy. Other exams (visual field and electrophysiology) were inadequate for diagnosis. Our series demonstrated that early diagnosis of involvement of the chiasma could improve functional prognosis as rapid management can improve prognosis.
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PMID:[Clinical features of gliomas of the chiasma. A retrospective study of a series of 18 patients]. 1099 65


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