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)

Metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD) is a neurodegenerative disorder with autosomal recessive inheritance, in which cerebroside sulphate (sulphatide) accumulates in the central and peripheral nervous systems due to a deficiency of arylsulphatase A. This article presents a 2-year-old boy who had occasional shortness of breath, horizontal nystagmus and unstable gait for 3 months prior to the entry. He was admitted to our hospital due to shortness of breath, frequent apnea, generalized hypotonia and conscious disturbance. The lumbar puncture, brain CT scan, serum amino acid analysis, urine organic acid assay and nerve conduction velocity of lower extremities all showed negative findings. The electron microscopic finding of muscle elicited lipid deposition. The auditory brainstem response showed bilateral impairment. The routine EEG revealed diffuse slow waves. The brain MRI showed widespread low signals over the white matter of bilateral frontal and parietotemporal areas of the cerebral hemispheres, as well as the white matter of the bilateral cerebellar hemispheres, and the brain stem in the T1-weighted image corresponding the high signals in T2-weighted image. The blood leukocyte lysosomal enzyme activity test revealed arylsulphatase A deficiency. Rapid progressive neurological deterioration was noted since admission. Unfortunately, the patient expired due to respiratory failure in the final.
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PMID:Late infantile form metachromatic leukodystrophy: report of one case. 129 37

1. Perfusion of 1% procaine into the cerebral ventricles of conscious dogs produced mild paresis, defaecation, vomiting, jerky movements of eyelids, brisk nystagmus, increase in amplitude of respiration and sometimes loss of consciousness. Procaine 2% produced paralysis, loss of consciousness and sometimes respiratory depression.2. Procaine 2% perfused into the cerebral ventricles of dogs under chloralose anaesthesia produced an initial increase in amplitude of respiration, which preceded its final depression, which is due primarily to procaine and only partly to a change in pH.3. The site of action for the initial increase in amplitude of respiration was in the fourth ventricle, for it did not occur on perfusion of procaine into the cranial subarachnoid space.4. Perfusion of spinal subarachnoid space with procaine is enough to cause respiratory failure even when the procaine does not reach the medulla.
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PMID:Procaine perfused into cerebral ventricles and subarachnoid space in conscious and anaesthetized dogs. 568 94

A 55-year-old man with a subacute onset of slurred speech, ataxia, nystagmus, extrapyramidal rigidity, decreased tendon reflexes, vomiting, bilateral optic atrophy, and clonic jerks died of bronchopneumonia and respiratory failure. Neuropathological examination showed lesions characteristic of subacute necrotizing encephalopathy. Clinicopathological observations of reported cases of Leigh's syndrome in the adult are reviewed.
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PMID:Leigh's syndrome in an adult. 652 Jun 17

Subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy (Leigh's syndrome) is a rare neurodegenerative disease in the adult. The precise metabolic defect is unknown, but abnormalities of a mitochondrial enzyme system related to cytochrome-c oxidase or pyruvate dehydrogenase are described. The clinical picture usually consists of an altered breathing pattern, oculomotor paralysis, other signs of cranial nerve dysfunction, ataxia, myoclonic jerks, nystagmus, generalized seizures, optic atrophy and demyelinating peripheral neuropathy. Hypopnea leads to CO2-retention with consecutive loss of consciousness demanding mechanical ventilation. Respiratory failure is the most frequent cause of death. Here we describe two patients with adult onset Leigh's syndrome and we discuss the longterm treatment strategies including vitamin B1 and CPAP mask.
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PMID:[Adult Leigh syndrome. A rare differential diagnosis of central respiratory insufficiency]. 771 56

Cytochrome c oxidase (CCO) deficiency is associated with various types of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy. The enzyme activities in different tissues and organs are varied. We report an 11-year-old girl with CCO deficiency, who presented with nystagmus, ptosis and optic atrophy. Her younger sister died of respiratory failure at 7 years of age and had the same initial clinical manifestations. Their parents were consanguineous. The girl had mild mental retardation and frequent premature ventricular contractions. Brain magnetic resonance imaging of the patient on admission revealed multiple lesions in both the gray and white matter. Except for arrhythmia and marked right axis deviation of the heart on electrocardiography, no other evidence of cardiac involvement was noted. Although a muscle biopsy was normal for both histochemical stains and electron microscopy, the enzyme assays in cultured skin fibroblasts revealed partial CCO deficiency, which may explain the clinical presentations.
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PMID:Cytochrome c oxidase deficiency in fibroblasts of a patient with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy. 891 62

A 4 1/2-month-old girl suffered from psychomotor retardation, generalized hypotonia, poor feeding, hyperreflexia, nystagmus, optical atrophy and choreoathetosis from the age of 3 months. Her blood lactate level was elevated to 40 mg/dL. Magnetic resonance imaging of her brain showed low T1 and high T2 signal intensities in the bilateral putamen, thalamus, red nuclei, substantia nigra, superior and inferior colliculi, cerebral peduncles and periaqueductal lesions. Muscle histochemistry and electron microscopic examinations were all normal except for variation in fiber size showing a myopathic change. An assay of muscle mitochondrial respiratory enzyme activities revealed a deficiency of NADH-coenzyme Q reductase. Molecular analysis did not reveal the putative T to G transversion at the nucleotide 8,993 of mitochondrial DNA in muscle biopsies. Leigh's disease was indicated by the clinical and radiologic manifestations. The patient died at 10 months of age from pneumonia and respiratory failure. There have been only sporadic reports of patients with Leigh's disease in Taiwan, and, to our knowledge, this is the first documented case of a Taiwanese patient with mitochondrial NADH-coenzyme Q reductase deficiency.
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PMID:Mitochondrial NADH-coenzyme Q reductase deficiency in Leigh's disease. 893 3

The therapeutic efficacy of a regimen consisting of intravenous injection of Cardiocrome, containing cytochrome c, flavin mononucleotide and thiamine diphosphate for mitochondrial encephalomyopathy (MEM) was examined. This combined therapy was applied to nine patients with MEM, including four with mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes. For the standard regimen, Cardiocrome was first injected daily, usually for 4 weeks, and later by means of intermittent injections for maintenance treatment. Clinical improvement was obtained in eight of the patients. Improvement was observed in the muscle symptoms of easy fatigability, motor disability and severity of stroke-like episodes, as well as in various other symptoms such as phosphate, tinnitus, headache, corneal edema, chilblains, thalamic pain, respiratory failure, and nystagmus. This clinical improvement was maintained for more than 1 year by additional intermittent injections. In conclusion, this therapy was fairly effective for the management of patients with MEM.
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PMID:Treatment of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy with a combination of cytochrome C and vitamins B1 and B2. 918 76

A hemimedullary infarction, in which both medial and lateral medullary infarctions occur simultaneously, is a rare cerebrovascular disease. Pontomedullary lesions often cause central respiratory failure, and the majority of central respiratory failures are due to bilateral pontomedullary lesions. We report a 66-year-old man with central respiratory failure due to a hemimedullary infarction detected by magnetic resonance imaging. He was admitted to our hospital on March 7, 1998, because of a sudden onset of dysarthria, and both numbness and weakness on his left side. Soon after arriving at the hospital, his spontaneous respiration ceased. Therefore, he was intubated and artificial ventilation was started. Pertinent neurological abnormalities on admission consisted of dysarthria, dysphagia, right Horner's sign, right gaze evoked horizontal nystagmus, right soft palate palsy, and tongue deviation to the right. In addition, left hemiparesis, left Babinski's sign, sensory impairment on the left side including the face, and central respiratory failure were noted. Although voluntary respiration recovered in 12 days, sleep apnea continued for 5 months, which was considered to be due to the automatic respiratory failure. An important feature of this patient was that the hemimedullary infarction caused the central respiratory failure. To our knowledge, this is the third patient whose central respiratory failure occurred because of a hemimedullary infarction.
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PMID:[A case report of central respiratory failure due to hemimedullary syndrome]. 1118 17

A 15-month-old girl with severe hemolytic anemia and progressive respiratory failure is presented. She was well until the age of six months when she developed a pulmonary infection. During the next six months, she had frequent respiratory infections and her paleness became evident. At the age of 12 months, she was observed to have easy fatigability and muscle weakness, and she received her first blood transfusion. She was referred to our hospital at the age of 15 months. The physical examination revealed a malnourished girl with hypotonia, nystagmus, generalized muscle weakness and severe breathing difficulty requiring ventilatory support The hemoglobin (Hb) was 9.7 g/dl; hematocrit (Hct) 29%, mean corpuscular volume (MCV) 101 fl and reticulocyte count 15%. Peripheral blood smear revealed macrocytosis and stomatocytosis (30% of the red cells) and polychromasia. Sweat chloride test was 90 and 94 mEq/L on two separate occasions. The serum vitamin E level was 0.26 mg/dl (N: 0.44-0.68). She was found to be heterozygous for factor V Leiden mutation. Although malnutrition, low serum vitamin E and elevated sweat chloride test were suggestive of cystic fibrosis, this diagnosis failed to account for all the findings in the patient. A search for a red cell enzyme deficiency revealed that the red cell triosephosphate isomerase (TPI) activity was low. DNA analysis showed the 315 G-C (105 Glu-Asp) TPI mutation, thus confirming the diagnosis of TPI deficiency.
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PMID:Triosephosphate isomerase deficiency with elevated sweat chloride test: report of a case. 1119 50

Pelizaeus Merzbacher disease (PMD) is an X-linked recessive disorder of the central nervous system myelination caused by mutations involving the proteolipid protein gene (PLP). Early nystagmus and developmental delay, progressive pyramidal, cerebellar and dystonic signs as well as white matter changes in brain MRI are typical for PMD. The PLP gene can be affected by two major types of mutations. A duplication of the whole PLP gene is the most common mutation and results usually in the milder classical phenotype, whereas point mutations in PLP gene often result in the rarer and more severe connatal form of PMD. The PLP protein is a higly conserved across species and is identical in human, mouse and rat. We describe a 13-year-old Czech boy with an early and severe developmental delay. His maternal uncle died at the age of one year and was also early and severely psychomotoricly retarded. The patient was the first child of healthy unrelated parents born after an uneventful pregnancy and delivery in 1988. Hyperbilirubinemia and bronchopneumonia and early stridor complicated his neonatal period. Diffuse hypotonia, nystagmus, psychomotor retardation, visual and hearing impairment have been observed in the patient since the age of 6 weeks. White matter abnormalities, cortical and periventricular atrophy were detected by MRI at the age of 6 and 11 years, respectively. Despite these signs and results an accurate clinical diagnosis was unclear until the age of 11 years. Last neurological examination in 1999 showed no nystagmus anymore, but extremely dystrophic limbs, truncal deformation, due to severe scoliosis, tetraplegia with hyperreflexia in C5C7 and areflexia L2S2 and positive pyramidal signs. The boy had no visual or speech contact. DNA tests followed the clinical suspicion for PMD. At first, duplication of PLP gene was excluded by quantitative comparative PCR. Direct sequencing of PLP gene detected a novel mutation in exon 6, a missense mutation 725C-->A (Ala242Glu) in the patient and in his mother and later also in his maternal grandmother. The same codon, but to valine (Ala242Val) is mutated in jimpy(msd) mouse, which is the frequently used animal model for PMD. Prenatal diagnosis for the next pregnancy has been offered to the family. The patient died recently at the age of 13 years due to respiratory failure. Our results support the data on the importance of this conserved amino acid alanine at codon 242.
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PMID:A severe connatal form of Pelizaeus Merzbacher disease in a Czech boy caused by a novel mutation (725C>A, Ala242Glu) at the 'jimpy(msd) codon' in the PLP gene. 1178 21


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