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)

A 51-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital because of gait disturbance and dysuria. Neurological examination revealed limb and truncal ataxia, orthostatic hypotension, cogwheel rigidity in all limbs, generalized hyperreflexia without pathological reflex, and horizontal gaze nystagmus. She became progressively worse and bedridden at age 52. Then she developed abnormal eye movements. Electrooculogram revealed vertical, horizontal or oblique macro square wave jerks and pendular nystagmus. Macro square wave jerks appeared during fixation and disappeared with eye closure or in the dark room. Macro square wave jerks were characterized by a duration of about 200 msec and an amplitude of 10 to 15 degrees. Pendular nystagmus with a duration of several seconds and amplitude of 5 to 15 degrees appeared when she changed her fixation or the point of fixation disappeared. Macro square wave jerks and pendular nystagmus were mildly suppressed after the intramuscular injection of 100 mg of phenobarbital, the oral intake of sodium valproate of 600 mg/day or baclofen of 60 mg/day. They were almost completely depressed after the intravenous injection of 3 mg of diazepam or the oral intake of clonazepam of 1.5 mg/day. We suggested that both macro square wave jerks and pendular nystagmus in this patient might be caused by the dysfunction of GABAergic system in the saccadic eye movement system.
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PMID:[Multiple system atrophy with macro square wave jerks and pendular nystagmus]. 130 29

A 6-year-old male Doberman Pinscher developed multiple organ infarctions secondary to vegetative endocarditis. Clinical signs included fever, nystagmus, head-tilt, inappetence, dehydration, hematuria, and dysuria. The dog was azotemic and anemic and had a high WBC count and high liver enzyme activities. Disseminated intravascular coagulation was diagnosed on the basis of thrombocytopenia and prolonged activated clotting times. Vegetative mitral valvular lesions were evident on M-mode echocardiography. The dog underwent diuresis with physiologic saline solution and was treated parenterally with antibacterial and anticoagulant agents. Surgery was performed to remove an infarcted kidney and an infarcted spleen and to relieve urethral obstruction caused by a large blood clot. Gram-positive cocci were noticed in the biopsy specimens. Mortality associated with organ infarctions secondary to bacterial endocarditis is high, and combined medical and surgical therapy is rarely reported. This dog survived and was alive 38 months after surgery.
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PMID:Medical and surgical management of multiple organ infarctions secondary to bacterial endocarditis in a dog. 320 56

The patient, a 65-year-old woman, had liver cirrhosis, and had blood transfusion at the age of 49 and 56. Early in September, 1989, she gradually developed numbness of the legs, staggering gait, and apathy with hallucination. In October, she became incontinent and unable to stand, and was admitted to Konan Hospital. On admission, she was disoriented with poor comprehension. Cranial nerves were intact except for horizontal nystagmus on lateral gaze. She had generalized areflexia without pathological reflex. Muscular forces were fairly preserved. Superficial sensations were diminished in the upper limbs as well as below Th-7 level. Deep sensation was abolished in the distal parts of the extremities with athetotic finger postures on arm rising. She had urinary and fecal incontinence. Results of routine laboratory examinations were non-contributory. Chest CT scan and sputum cytology were normal. CSF contained one cell/microliter, 95 mg/dl of protein with positive oligoclonal IgG bands. Anti-HTLV-I antibody was positive in serum and CSF. Urodynamic studies showed neurogenic bladder of supranuclear type. MNCV was slightly decreased. SNAP and SEP were not evoked. On sural nerve biopsy, the density of myelinated fibers was 720/mm2, and that of unmyelinated fibers, 26,978/mm2. ABR and VEP were abnormal. EEG showed diffuse theta waves with paroxysmal delta and sharp waves. T2-weighted MR images of the brain showed patchy areas of high signal intensity in the cerebral white matter. Soon after administration of methylprednisolone, her consciousness became clear. EEG normalized in 4 months. Twenty months after the onset, she became ambulant with crutch, but still has dysuria and sensory deficits in the hands and lower limbs. The possible relationship between encephalomyeloneuritis and HTLV-I infection was discussed.
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PMID:[A case of encephalomyeloneuritis and HTLV-I infection]. 1047 58

Hereditary spastic paraplegia with thin corpus callosum is a rare degenerative disease, which is characterized by a progressive weakness of the lower limbs with a hypoplastic corpus callosum, and is often associated with other symptoms such as mental impairment, amyotrophy, sensory disturbances, dysuria, nystagmus and cataract. We describe two siblings (brother and sister) who showed a thin corpus callosum on MRI, one of whom showed the pure form of progressive spastic paraplegia, while the other showed predominant levodopa-responsive parkinsonism. The present cases are illustrative of a phenotypic heterogeneity in the same family of spastic paraplegia with a thin corpus callosum, despite the identical neuroimaging findings, and also presented another form of autosomal recessive juvenile levodopa-responsive parkinsonism.
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PMID:Levodopa-responsive parkinsonism in hereditary spastic paraplegia with thin corpus callosum. 1546

A 50-year-old Japanese man with no apparent family history noticed diplopia. He gradually showed gait disturbance and dysuria. Abducens disorder of eye movement with nystagmus, tongue atrophy with fasciculation, spastic tetraparesis, and sensory disturbance were also observed. MRI showed severe atrophy of the medulla oblongata to the cervical cord ("tadpole appearance"). Tracheotomy and gastrostomy were performed 7 years after onset due to the development of bulbar palsy. Death occurred following respiratory failure after 11 years total disease duration. The brain weighed 1,380 g. The cerebrum, cerebellum, midbrain, and upper pons were preserved from atrophy, but the medulla oblongata to the cervical cord showed severe atrophy. A few Rosenthal fibers were observed in the cerebral white matter, basal ganglia, and cerebellum, whereas numerous Rosenthal fibers were observed in the medulla oblongata to the cervical cord. Myelin loss with relatively preserved axons was extensively observed from the middle of the pons to the spinal cord. The clinicopathological diagnosis was adult-onset bulbospinal-form Alexander disease. Glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP) gene analysis revealed a novel mutation of S393R. Expression patterns of S393R mutant GFAP using adrenal carcinoma-derived cells (SW13 cells) showed a decreased number of filamentous structures and abnormal aggregates.
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PMID:An autopsied case of adult-onset bulbospinalform Alexander disease with a novel S393R mutation in the GFAP gene. 2582 73