Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
To our knowledge, the juvenile form of spongy degeneration of the CNS (SD-CNS); van Bogaert-Bertrand disease) has been described previously only three times. We report the case of 21 1/4-year-old Japanese woman who was first seen at the age of 11 with growth retardation, ptosis, and
ophthalmoplegia
. Her progressive neurodegenerative disease included retinitis pigmentosa, blindness, partial deafness, cerebellar dysfunction, hyporeflexia, and muscle wasting. Simultaneous endocrine defects were diabetes mellitus and probable hyperaldosteronism. Heart block developed later. She died of
bronchopneumonia
. Autopsy showed CNS stigmas typical of spongy degeneration. Additional findings included peripheral nerve demyelination, neurogenic muscle atrophy, pituitary and pancreatic atrophy, right adrenal agenesis, and a left adrenal coritcal lipid-cell adenoma. To our knowledge, our patient was the oldest survivor, the first patient of Japanese ancestry, and had a unique concurrence of certain oculoendocrine defects.
...
PMID:Spongy degeneration of the CNS: an instance of the rare juvenile form. 50 59
A 51-year-old woman with no history of any familial neurological diseases initially presented with numbness in her extremities, slowing of movements, comprehension deficit, memory disturbance, dyscalculia, muscle rigidity, hyperreflexia, Parkinsonian gait, increasing disorientation, left-right disturbance, finger agnosia, alexia, acalculia, apraxia, aspontaneity, euphoria, gait disturbance, aphasia, echolalia, and in the terminal stage, mutism, contracture of lower extremities and cachexia. She died of
bronchopneumonia
at the age of 55. The brain showed widespread cerebral lesions, consisting of nerve cell loss and neurofibrillary tangles in the frontal, parietal and occipital cortex, demyelination and gliosis in the frontal, parietal and occipital subcortical white matter in addition to the typical pathological findings of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP): severe neuronal loss with gliosis and neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) in the subthalamic nucleus, globus pallidus and substantia nigra. In conclusion, we present a case of PSP with unusual clinical features (extrapyramidal signs, frontal and parietal lobe syndromes without
ophthalmoplegia
) and neuropathologically widespread cerebral lesions in addition to the typical pathological findings of PSP. The differential diagnosis of PSP and Alzheimer's disease and other degenerative disorders is discussed.
...
PMID:Progressive supranuclear palsy with widespread cerebral lesions. 147 14
The records of 52 children with Niemann-Pick disease type C were reviewed to establish whether the disease process and outcome varied with the initial clinical pattern; 34 children (65%) had cholestatic liver disease and hepatosplenomegaly in infancy; 18 were seen at a mean age of 4 years with splenomegaly or neurologic disease or both. Of the 34 children with early cholestatic liver disease, three died in the neonatal period; cholestasis and hepatomegaly subsided in the remaining 31 children, although splenomegaly persisted. Of these 31 children, 15 had persistent liver disease with elevated aminotransferase values. Serial liver biopsy specimens showed that 3 of the 15 children had normal architecture and 12 had hepatic fibrosis, with progression to cirrhosis in 5. No other significant morbidity or additional deaths were associated with the liver disease. The clinical importance of persistent liver disease was overshadowed by the subsequent development of severe neurologic disease. There was no difference in the age at onset of the disease (mean, 4.5 years) or in the pattern of neurologic disease, including supranuclear
ophthalmoplegia
, whether or not the child had early liver disease. Overt neurologic disease has not yet developed in seven surviving children with liver disease at onset. Sixty-seven percent of children died during the study; the main cause of death was
bronchopneumonia
. We conclude that the diagnosis of Niemann-Pick disease type C should be considered in patients with unexplained neonatal hepatitis, especially if splenomegaly is a persistent feature. Because liver biopsy specimens may not demonstrate storage cells, bone marrow aspiration to detect the characteristic storage cells is recommended in such patients.
...
PMID:Niemann-Pick disease type C: diagnosis and outcome in children, with particular reference to liver disease. 815 88
We report an autopsy case of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) with a five-year clinical course. A 67-year-old man was suffering from a gait disturbance and mental deterioration. Neurological examination at the age of 71 revealed pseudobulbar palsy, horizontal
ophthalmoplegia
, and truncal dystonia, and a diagnosis of PSP was made. Mental deterioration including forgetfulness and character change was also noted, and the patient sometimes exhibited intermittent stuporous states. Cranial computed tomography and magnetic resonance images revealed moderate brain atrophy, predominantly in the frontal lobes. The patient died of
bronchopneumonia
at the age of 71. Neuropathological examination confirmed typical pathological changes of PSP, such as neuronal loss, neurofibrillary tangles, and fibrillary gliosis in the subcortical nuclei. Gallyas-Braak silver impregnation revealed neurofibrillary tangles, silver-positive glia and thread-like structures in degenerating subcortical nuclei. In addition to these classical lesions, the argentophilic structures were detected in the cerebral cortex, cortical white matter and cerebellar white matter. In the cerebral cortex, they were abundant mostly in the precentral gyrus and subcortical white matter. Immunohistochemical studies revealed that most silver-positive structures were also tau 2 antibody-positive. Thus, these argentophilic structures seemed to be closely related to abnormal tau protein. Their distribution in this case implies that lesions related to abnormal tau protein may occur more extensively in the brains of PSP than expected.
...
PMID:[Widespread argentophilic structures in progressive supranuclear palsy--an autopsy case report]. 806 Jun 88
We report a 46-year-old female who presented progressive
ophthalmoplegia
and limb weakness. She was well until the age of 15 years when there was an onset of bilateral deafness. She became completely deaf by 20 years of age. She noted an onset of weakness in her legs when she was 27-years-old and of ptosis at 34 years of age. She was admitted to our hospital when she was 41-years-old. Neurological examination revealed near total
ophthalmoplegia
, bilateral ptosis, dysphagia, generalized muscle atrophy and weakness of approximately 4/5 degree, facial grimacing, athetotic movements in four limbs. Laboratory examinations revealed increase in blood lactate and pyruvate levels and diffuse low density change in the cerebral white matter in CT scans. She was thought to have a mitochondrial encephalomyopathy. She was discharged for follow-up, but her clinical course was that of a relentless deterioration. She was readmitted to our service in December 1989. She showed further progress in her weakness and muscle atrophy. Otherwise neurological examination was essentially similar to the previous one. Her cranial CT scans showed low density changes in striatum, thalamus and midbrain in addition to the white matter. Enzyme activities of the electron transport complexes revealed a moderate decrease in the succinatecytochrome c reductase activity, and the Southern blot analysis of mtDNA revealed multiple deletions in mitochondrial genomes. Two months after her admission, she developed
bronchopneumonia
, and expired on March 13th, 1990. Post-mortem examination revealed diffuse pallor of myeline in the cerebral white matter in K-B staining. A marked neuronal loss and gliosis were observed in putamen bilaterally. Skeletal muscles showed typical changes of mitochondrial myopathies with ragged-red fibers in Gomori-Trichrome staining, and crystalline inclusion bodies by electron microscopic observations. Some neurogenic atrophies were also seen. Oculomotor nuclei appeared intact. It was thought that she had an incomplete form of Kearns-Sayre syndrome. The patient was discussed in a neurological CPC of the departments of Neurology and Pathology of Juntendo University School of Medicine.
...
PMID:[Forty-six-year-old woman with progressive external ophthalmoplegia and limb weakness]. 847 58