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Query: UMLS:C0028738 (
nystagmus
)
7,431
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Functional methionine synthase deficiency is generally characterized by homocystinuria and hypomethioninemia in the absence of methylmalonic aciduria. Patients are divided into two classes, cblE and cblG, on the basis of complementation analysis. Presentation has usually been in the first 2 years of life, but one patient came to medical attention at age 21 years with symptoms initially diagnosed as multiple sclerosis. Common findings among 11 patients (4 with cblE and 7 with cblG) have included megaloblastic anemia (all patients) and various neurological deficits including developmental retardation (10 patients),
cerebral atrophy
(8 patients), hypotonia (7 patients), EEG abnormalities (6 patients), and
nystagmus
(5 patients). Hypertonia, seizures, blindness, and ataxia were less frequent. All patients have responded to therapy with cobalamin with resolution of anemia and biochemical abnormalities; neurological deficits resolved more slowly and in some cases incompletely. Hydroxycobalamin has been more effective than cyanocobalamin. Fibroblasts from patients with cblE (5 patients) and cblG (6 patients) all showed decreased intracellular levels of methylcobalamin (MeCbl) and decreased incorporation of label from 5-methyltetrahydrofolate into macromolecules, suggesting decreased activity of the MeCbl-dependent enzyme methionine synthase. Methionine synthase specific activity in extracts of all cblE fibroblasts was normal or near-normal under standard reducing conditions; synthase specific activity in extracts of 5 cblG patients was low but was high in a 6th patient measured in another laboratory. Thus, there is heterogeneity among patients with functional methionine synthase deficiency both in clinical presentation and in the results of biochemical studies of cultured cells.
...
PMID:Functional methionine synthase deficiency (cblE and cblG): clinical and biochemical heterogeneity. 268 21
Of 99 children in the Royal Blind School, Edinburgh (which serves Scotland and part of N E England), 15 had optic atrophy (hydrocephalus 4, intracranial haemorrhage 2, prematurity 2, fetal distress 2, birth asphyxia 2,
cerebral atrophy
1, cardiac arrest during hernia operation 1, and leukaemia 1). Fourteen had congenital cataract, 12 congenital retinal aplasia (Leber's congenital amaurosis) and 11 retinopathy of prematurity. There were small numbers in many other diagnostic categories, including three with non-accidental head injury. Mental retardation, spasticity, and
nystagmus
were frequent other correlates in all diagnostic categories. 'Very probably hereditary' was a conservative attribution in 36, while 'probable' seemed appropriate for 12-that is, almost 48% were hereditary. Only about 11 cases might have been prevented through genetic counselling, which testifies to the frequency of autosomal recessive hereditary disease, although no parents were consanguineous.
...
PMID:Blindness in schoolchildren: importance of heredity, congenital cataract, and prematurity. 365 73
Xeroderma pigmentosum is an unusual neurocutaneous disorder. Recent studies have classified patients with xeroderma pigmentosum into 10 groups by somatic cell hybridization methods. In this report we describe 32 patients with Group A xeroderma pigmentosum, including 1 patient with an atypical case, who were assessed for neurological complications. Of these patients, 17 had microcephaly, 13 short stature, and 21 mental retardation. In patients over 7 years of age, sensorineural deafness and spinocerebellar signs such as
nystagmus
, dysarthria, tremor, and ataxia were frequently observed; no patients below 7 years of age had such neurological complications. Electroencephalographic studies revealed abnormal slow and low voltage background activity. Two patients had focal abnormal discharges, one of whom developed versive seizures. Cranial computed tomographic scans revealed abnormalities, including ventricular dilatation,
cerebral atrophy
, cerebellar and brainstem atrophy, and cranial bone thickening. A patient with an atypical case of Group A xeroderma pigmentosum had less skin and neurological involvement, and higher levels of postultraviolet colony-forming ability and host cell reactivation than did a typical Group A case. It is possible that these less severe cytological findings are responsible for the less severe skin lesions and neurological complications noted clinically.
...
PMID:Neurological manifestations in xeroderma pigmentosum. 374 Aug 15
Four patients with the classic form and 1 patient with the connatal form of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease were studied with magnetic resonance imaging, electroencephalography, and multimodal evoked potentials, including brainstem auditory evoked potentials, somatosensory evoked potentials, and visual evoked potentials. Comparisons between these findings were made. It was determined that the neurophysiologic studies, particularly brainstem auditory evoked potentials, are of value in early diagnosis of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease; brainstem auditory evoked potentials with only normal wave I may be a relatively reliable clue suggesting the classic form of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease in patients with
nystagmus
and chronic progressive encephalopathy. Magnetic resonance imaging allows an accurate assessment of the degree of hypomyelination; however, the clinical severity of various forms of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease seemed to be independent of the age of onset and the amount of residual myelin. The following may be distinguishing features between the connatal and classic forms of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease: hypoplasia of the cerebellum and brainstem, and diffuse
brain atrophy
on magnetic resonance imaging; optic atrophy with abnormal visual evoked potential; seizure disorder with abnormal electroencephalography, and/or auditory nerve impairment with abnormal wave I of brainstem auditory evoked potentials in the early stage of the disease.
...
PMID:Neurophysiologic studies and MRI in Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease: comparison of classic and connatal forms. 774 60
We report on a baby girl from non-consanguineous Palestinian parents with intrauterine growth retardation, low birth weight, and developmental delay. She had a short stature, microcephaly, a prominent metopic suture, a glabellar haemangioma, exophthalmos, hypertelorism, upslanting palpebral fissures, horizontal
nystagmus
, flat nose, cleft lip and palate, a short neck, widely spaced nipples, umbilical hernia, flexion deformity of the wrist, ulnar deviation of fingers, and right club foot.
Cortical atrophy
, enlarged ventricles, a thin corpus callosum, thoracic hemivertebrae, and a ventricular septal defect were detected as well. High resolution chromosome analysis identified in 92% of cells an isochromosome 18 and in 8% of cells a ring 18. Molecular cytogenetic investigations confirmed that it was an i(18q) and a r(18q). The hypothesis to account for this anomaly and its corresponding phenotype are discussed.
...
PMID:Cytogenetic investigation of a child with a mosaic isochromosome 18q and ring 18q. 1771 64
Proteolipid protein 1 (PLP1) gene-related disorders due to mutations in the PLP1 include a wide spectrum of X-linked disorders ranging from severe connatal Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD) to spastic paraplegia 2 (SPG2). Duplications, deletions or point mutations in coding and noncoding regions of the PLP1 gene may occur. We report the clinical, neuroradiologic and molecular findings in six patients from two unrelated families. The affected males showed severe mental retardation, spastic tetraparesis, inability of walking and pes cavus at onset in early infancy. Brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed hypomyelination and
brain atrophy
.
Nystagmus
was never observed. The affected females showed adult-onset progressive spastic paraparesis leading to wheel-chair dependency and subtle white matter changes on brain MRI. Molecular studies in the two families identified two different intronic mutations, the novel c.622+2T>C and the known c.622+1G>A, leading to the skipping of PLP1-exon 4. The clinical presentation of the affected males did not consistently fit in any of the PLP1-related disorder subtypes (i.e., connatal or classic PMD, SPG2 and 'PLP1 null syndrome'), and in addition, the carrier females were symptomatic despite the severe clinical picture of their respective probands. This study provides new insight into the genotype-phenotype correlations of patients with PLP1 splice-site mutations.
...
PMID:Further genotype-phenotype correlation emerging from two families with PLP1 exon 4 skipping. 2371 21
We present the case of a 66-year-old man who has been treated for essential tremor since the age of 58. He developed mild cerebellar gait ataxia seven years after tremor onset. Moderate, global
brain atrophy
was identified on MRI scans. At the age of 68, only temporary tremor relief could be achieved by bilateral deep brain stimulation of the ventral intermedius nucleus of the thalamus. Bilateral stimulation of the subthalamic nucleus also resulted only in transient improvement. In the meantime, progressive gait ataxia and tetraataxia developed accompanied by other cerebellar symptoms, such as
nystagmus
and scanning speech. These correlated with progressive development of bilateral symmetric hyperintensity of the middle cerebellar peduncles on T2 weighted MRI scans. Genetic testing revealed premutation of the FMR1 gene, establishing the diagnosis of fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome. Although this is a rare disorder, it should be taken into consideration during preoperative evaluation of essential tremor. Postural tremor ceased two years later after thalamotomy on the left side, while kinetic tremor of the right hand also improved.
...
PMID:Deep brain stimulation or thalamotomy in fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome? Case report. 2737 49
Galloway-Mowat syndrome (GMS) is an autosomal recessive disorder with a poor prognosis that was first defined as a triad of central nervous system involvement, hiatal hernia, and nephrotic syndrome. However, this syndrome is now known to have a heterogeneous clinical presentation. The nephrotic syndrome is steroid resistant and is responsible for the outcome. The combination of collapsing glomerulopathy and GMS is very rare. A 26-month-old boy presented with steroid-resistant nephrotic syndrome associated with neurologic findings, including microcephaly, psychomotor retardation, and
nystagmus
. Magnetic resonance imaging showed marked
cerebral atrophy
, optic atrophy, and hypomyelination. A renal biopsy was consistent with collapsing glomerulopathy. If collapsing glomerulopathy is associated with neurological abnormalities, especially with microcephaly, clinicians should consider GMS as a possible underlying cause.
...
PMID:Collapsing Glomerulopathy in a Child with Galloway-Mowat Syndrome. 2740 57
We report the case of a 42-year-old female with neurosarcoidosis who was hospitalized in year 2017 for gait disturbance. In 2011, she suddenly had vertigo that lasted for a few days. In 2013, she noticed left hemiplegia. A brain MRI revealed an acute infarction on the right side of the upper pons extending longitudinally from the ventral surface. In 2017, she again had left lower limb paralysis. A Brain MRI showed another infarction on the right side of the mid-pons. Hydrocephalus and brainstem atrophy were also noted. The patient was referred to our hospital. Upon neurological examination, she presented with down beat
nystagmus
, muscle weakness on the left side, and a broad-based spastic gait. CSF findings included an increased number of cells and protein levels with decreased glucose levels. A contrast-enhanced MRI revealed basilar meningitis causing hydrocephalus. A contrast CT scan revealed inguinal lymph node swelling, and scintigram found gallium accumulation. We diagnosed sarcoidosis via a lymph node biopsy. We speculate that chronic basilar meningitis obstructed the patient's branching penetrating arteries inducing infarction together with obstruction of the spinal fluid flow causing hydrocephalus and
cerebral atrophy
.
...
PMID:[A case of neurosarcoidosis with recurrent brainstem infarction, obstructive hydrocephalus and brainstem atrophy]. 2996 42
Intellectual disability (ID) is a clinically and genetically heterogeneous developmental brain disorder. The present study describes two male siblings, aged 7 and 1 yr old, with severe ID, spastic quadriplegia,
nystagmus
, and
brain atrophy
with acquired microcephaly. We used the exome sequencing to identify the causative gene in the patients and identified a hemizygous missense variant, c.1282T>A (p.W428R), in the p21-activated serine/threonine kinase 3 gene (
PAK3
), which is associated with X-linked ID. p.W428R is located within the highly conserved kinase domain and was predicted to induce loss of enzymatic function by three mutation prediction tools (SIFT, PolyPhen-2, and MutationTaster). In addition, this variant has not been reported in public databases (as of the middle of December 2018) or in the data from 3275 individuals of the Japanese general population analyzed using high-depth whole-genome sequencing. To date, only 13 point mutations and deletions in
PAK3
in ID have been reported. The literature review illustrated a phenotypic spectrum of
PAK3
pathogenic variant, and our cases represented the most severe form of the
PAK3
-associated phenotypes. This is the first report of a
PAK3
pathogenic variant in Japanese patients with X-linked ID.
...
PMID:A novel
PAK3
pathogenic variant identified in two siblings from a Japanese family with X-linked intellectual disability: case report and review of the literature. 3144 67
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