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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two typical cases of the Kearns and Shy syndrome are reported. Some of the authors have previously published observations on simple ocular
myopathy
and oculo-pharyngeal dystrophy associated with abnormalities of the mitochrondria in skeletal muscle cells. This disease, which is still called "ophthalmoplegia plus", combines a progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
, muscular defects and varied neurological signs with other symptoms particularly retinal, endocrine and cardiac. Histo-enzymological and ultra-structural studied of a fragment of skeletal muscle confirm the presence of mitochondrial anomalies.
...
PMID:[Drachman's "ophthalmoplegia plus" or Kearns and Shy syndrome. Apropos of 2 cases with mitochondrial abnormality ultrastructurally demonstrated in the muscle]. 13 Aug 79
A study was made of the retinal functions in 4 patients with chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
, general
myopathy
, EEG anomalies and pigment changes of the fundus oculi (ophthalmoplegia-plus). Three of them exhibited typical, granular pigmentations in a linear or reticular arrangement at the periphery. All four showed slight to moderate pigment epithelial defects in the maculae, mostly only discernible with fluorescence angiography. In all 4 cases, a slight decrease of the visual acuity, a mildly abnormal ERG, mild concentric restriction of the field of vision and, in two cases, an abnormal dark-adaptation curve led to the conclusion of a mild diffuse, widely disseminated receptor affection of the retina (both rods and cones). The EOG appeared normal in 3, and at the lower limit of normal in 1 case. On the basis of a detailed study of the literature we can conclude that the retinal lesions in chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
may vary from benign pigmentations without functional impairment to genuine 'retinitis pigmentosa' with all gradations of rod-cone or cone-rod dystrophy. Emphasis is laid on the possibility of a correlation between the mitochondrial abnormalities encountered in ocular
myopathy
and
ophthalmoplegia
-plus on the one hand, and the retinal abnormalities on the other, with special reference to a possible disorder of the utilization of pyruvate in the citric-acid cycle and a loose coupling of the oxidative phosphorylation.
...
PMID:Pigment changes of the retina in chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO). 21 91
Of 185 patients with
myopathy
, 22 showed abnormal muscle mitochondria. In 12 of the 22 patients, all of whom had ocular
myopathy
or the
ophthalmoplegia
-plus syndrome, muscle biopsies contained 5%-25% "ragged red" fibers. In 4 patients with a facioscapulohumeral distribution of weakness, ragged red fibers were less numerous (3%-8%). In both groups, routine histology showed almost normal muscle. The remaining 6 patients were clinically heterogeneous, all without ptosis or
ophthalmoplegia
. The biopsies of three of these patients showed severely affected muscle. It is possible that mitochondrial changes in these muscles were nonspecific. Electromyography indicated or suggested a myogenic lesion in 21 of the 22 patients; in 10, the serum creatine kinase was increased.
...
PMID:Myopathies with abnormal mitochondria: a clinicopathologic classification. 26 80
A child with a
myopathy
that started in the pelvic girdle, non-obstructive cardiomyopathy and retinitis pigmentosa is described. There was a progressive neurological deterioration with external
ophthalmoplegia
and ptosis. The clinical course could be predicted from the appearance of the muscle biopsy.
...
PMID:[Oculocraniosomatic neuromuscular disease]. 49 42
A quantitatives assessment of the pathological changes in extraocular muscle is presented in 8 patients with chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
(CPEO). Serial cross-sections of extraocular muscle were stained with a battery of histochemical and immunohistochemical techniques and compared with 36 normal extraocular muscles and 1 muscle from a patient who had longstanding third nerve plasy with anomalous reinnervation. Several of the patients had a striking increase in the number of ragged-red fibers in extraocular muscle, particularly if frequent ragged-red fibers also were found on limb muscle biopsy. One patients demonstrated extrajunctional acetylcholine receptor (AChR) in a small percentage of fibers, although this finding was not present in the reinnervated muscle. Numerous darkly staining central regions were noted in the ocular muscle fibers of a patient with Stephens syndrome (CPEO, peripheral neuropathy, and cerebellar disease) and in the reinnervated muscle. A patient with myotubular
myopathy
had single central nuclei in both limb and ocular muscle. All patients demonstrated in their extraocular muscles variation in both the size and distribution of each of the three histochemical fiber types. Extraocular muscle biopsy proved to be a safe, reliable technique. As a similar quantitative analysis is applied to the study of further patients, a better understanding of the pathogenesis of CPEO should be possible.
...
PMID:Extraocular muscle biopsy in chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia. 55 23
An infant born with severe but nonprogressive somatic and cranial muscle weakness including bilateral external
ophthalmoplegia
was studied with a motor-point muscle biopsy. There was a strinking generalized decrease in the size of muscle fibers (hypotrophy), most marked in the type I fibers. Many of the small fibers were immature, resembling myotubes. Neuromuscular junctions on severely hypotrophic fibers were normal with esterase staining and by ultrastructural criteria. Although these are unusual clinical and biopsy characteristics, this infant's condition bears a resemblance to two other congenital nonprogressive neuromuscular diseases:myotubular
myopathy
and congenital fiber type disproportion. In these conditions and in our patient, there is no primary degenerative process affecting nerve or muscle but, rather, an apparent lack of maturation of fetal muscle fibers, indicating a defective normal trophic interaction between nerve and muscle.
...
PMID:Muscle fiber hypotrophy with intact neuromuscular junctions. A study of a patient with congenital neuromuscular disease and ophthalmoplegia. 55 54
A case of progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
and a slight coincident affection of the scapulohumeral muscle group is recorded. Thorough examination including EMG and biopsy from ocular and skeletal muscle tissue confirmed the clinical diagnosis of
myopathy
. By means of electron microscopy the affection could be identified as a type of
myopathy
characterized by giant mitochondriae. Causative factors were not detectable. The function of the thyroid and the carnitine level in the muscle tissue and blood serum were normal.
...
PMID:[Ocular myopathy with giant mitochondriae (author's transl)]. 59 68
A patient with Friedreich's disease and chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
is descirbed. An investigation was performed into the nature of the ocular motor disorders, which appeared clinically to be supranuclear. The EMG of the ocular muscles suggested
myopathy
. A specimen of ocular muscle was obtained by biopsy and examined with the light microscope and-for the first time-under the electron microscope. Signs of mitochondrial myopathy were found alongside neurogenic features. Postmortem examination of the central nervous system confirmed the diagnosis of Friedreich's disease with lesions of the motor cells in the anterior horn of the spinal cord. No evidence was found for a supranuclear or inernuclear origin of the ocular palsies, but 20-30 per cent of the neutrons in the nuclei III and IV were atrophic. Lesions of the non-medullated motor nerve fibres were also visible under the electron microscope. That the origin of the c. p. e. o. in this heredo-ataxia is neurogenic-nuclear is postulated on the grounds of the neuropathological and electronmicroscopic findings. Resemblances to the microscopic and submicroscopic and submicroscopic appearance of many types of "ocular myopathy" and "ophthalmoplegia-plus" throw doubt upon the myogenic character of these conditions. Possibly chronic, slowly progressive atrophy in the nuclear areas of the ocular motor nerves must in these cases also be held responsible for the c. p. e. o. Perhaps Moebius's Kern-Schwund theory may be revived after 85 years.
...
PMID:Chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia in a heredo-ataxia: neurogenic or myogenic? A clinical, neuropathological and submicroscopic study. 60 73
Until such time as results of more rigorous studies are available, the morbidity rates for thyroid dysfunction cited here must suffice. The 1955 to 1956 outpatient "incidence" for England and Wales was 1.1 per 1,000 for thyrotoxicosis and 1.7 per 1,000 for myxedema (18). United States in-patient "incidence" for 1971 was 0.16 per 1,000 for thyrotoxicosis and 0.13 per 1,000 for myxedema (25). The 1935 to 1967 average annual incidence of Graves' disease for females in Olmsted County, Minnesota, was 30.5 per 100,000 (10). Well over 50% of hyperthyroid patients have clinical evidence of mild or moderate muscle weakness. Usually this weakness is proximal, and electro-myography and muscle biopsy confirm the existence of myopathic process (Table 11). Severe muscular weakness of acute onset is relatively rare and is encountered in approximately 1% of hyperthyroid patients (11,17,40).
Ophthalmoplegia
and psychosis are reported 4% and 2% of patients, respectively (17). Myasthenia gravis, although well publicized, is estimated to occur in less than 1% of patients (3,30). TPP is virtually nonexistent in the West; in the Orient it is reported in 2 to 8% of hyperthyroid patients and is 20 to 60 times more frequent in the hyperthyroid male than in the hyperthyroid female (Table 12). The neurologic symptomatology of myxedema is more extensive, and agreement among the various series is poor. The only unselected series addressing itself to neuromuscular manifestations of myxedema that is suitable for citation is that of Scarpalezos et al. (36). This comprehensive study was done without apparent patient selection, and it reported 2% of patients with definite carpal tunnel syndrome, 6% with
myopathy
, and 18% with polyneuropathy (Table 13). Reported percentages of hypothyroid patients found to have neurologic manifestations of cerebellar dysfunction are extremely diverse: ataxic gait was reported in 5 to 32% (6,7,12,27) of patients and dysdiadochokinesia in 6 to 52% (7,12,27). Psychosis is encountered in 2 to 5% (6,14,17,27,39) of myxedematous patients, memory loss in 23 to 55% (6,14,27), and coma in less than 1% (27).
...
PMID:Neurologic complications of thyroid dysfunction. 74 45
The authors describe a case of
myopathy
characterized physically by limb weakness, eyelid ptosis, voluntary and reflex paralysis of vertical movements of gaze, and loss of deep tendon reflexes; and morphologically by the abnormal presence of centrally located nuclei in muscle fibers and type 1 fiber hypotrophy. The establishment in this case study of two particular findings--the probably nuclear or supranuclear
ophthalmoplegia
and the apparently impaired nuclear migration from the center of the muscle fiber toward its periphery--supports the hypothesis of a neuromuscular disorder whose level of severity depends on the degree of difficulty in the nuclear migration itself. This would be linked to a reduction in central nervous system influence.
...
PMID:Centronuclear myopathy: possible central nervous system origin. 75 9
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