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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Wernicke's encephalopathy has been associated rarely with fasting. We describe a middle-aged patient who presented in a subacute fashion with features of thiamin deficiency after marked weight reduction. Associated features were chest pain, possibly related to cardiac involvement, and a proximal
myopathy
. The Wernicke-Korsakoff syndrome has been described in the literature for around 100 years. However, the classic triad of ataxia,
ophthalmoplegia
and impaired conscious state that occurs in a person with chronic alcoholism is by no means its exclusive presentation.
...
PMID:Wernicke's encephalopathy after prolonged fasting. 373 79
Eight unrelated children with centronuclear (myotubular)
myopathy
are described, ranging in age at the time of diagnosis from 5 days to 12 years. Six had an intrauterine onset and 5 were severely asphyxiated at birth. All had facial involvement and 6 had
ophthalmoplegia
. Detailed study of the parents in 7 of the families suggested an autosomal recessive inheritance or sporadic occurrence in 2 and X-linked inheritance in 5. Classification in this very variable disorder should be based on severity and mode of presentation together with the genetic pattern, allowing three subgroups to be defined: a severe neonatal X-linked recessive type, a less severe infantile or juvenile autosomal recessive type and a milder autosomal dominant type. For genetic counselling, available relatives should be examined for mild degrees of clinical involvement and morphological abnormalities on needle muscle biopsy.
...
PMID:Congenital centronuclear (myotubular) myopathy. A clinical, pathological and genetic study in eight children. 407 80
A Japanese family with progressive spinal muscular atrophy is presented. Seven members in two generations were affected and the mode of inheritance was probably an autosomal recessive trait. A characteristic feature of this family was the presence of oculopharyngeal involvement in some of the affected members, in addition to the variable distribution of muscular atrophy among each of the affected members, such as mainly proximal or distal atrophies in the limbs. In one case the oculopharyngeal weakness appeared without limb involvement. The changes in the extremities were thought to be of neurogenic origin, and so was the progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
seen characteristically in these cases, although the latter was similar to ocular
myopathy
.
...
PMID:Oculopharyngeal involvement in familial neurogenic muscular atrophy. 469 81
An investigation was made into the occurrence of muscular atrophy and muscular pathology in a series of 170 patients with myasthenia gravis. The results can be summarized as follows: (1) Of the 148 patients with generalized myasthenia gravis, 14 showed local muscular atrophies. Of 10 biopsies from atrophic muscles, eight showed neurogenic changes, with or without lymphocytic infiltrations. One biopsy showed lymphocytic infiltrations only, and one showed type II-fibre atrophy (Table 1). No relationship was demonstrable between the presence of clilnical muscular atrophy and age, sex, duration of the disease, severity of the disease, presence of a thymoma, or drug resistant
ophthalmoplegia
. (2) In this group of patients 61 biopsies were examined from 46 individuals; 40 of these biopsies were taken from the quadriceps muscle. A thymoma was present in 17 patients. Examination disclosed neurogenic changes in 17 biopsies, lymphocytic infiltrates in 21, and myositis in one biopsy (Table 2). A distinct correlation was established between the presence of a thymoma and lymphocytic infiltrates, but none was demonstrable between thymoma and neurogenic changes (Table 3). (3) An enzyme-histochemical study was carried out in 35 cases, including 12 with neurogenic changes. A normal differentiation of type I- and type II-fibres was observed in eight instances, type grouping of type II-fibres in three, and type II-fibre atrophy in two cases. (4) In 21 patients and 19 controls, the smallest mean diameter was determined in the quadriceps muscle. Both type I- and type II-fibres proved to have a smaller mean diameter in the female patients than in the controls. In the male patients this could not be proven. (5) Of the eight patients who had died without disorders of ventilation, 90 muscle specimens were examined postmortem. Four of these patients had a thymoma. Lymphocytic infiltrations, found in 32 biopsy specimens, were mostly observed in the presence of a thymoma. Neurogenic changes were apparently unrelated to the presence of a thymoma (Tables 5 and 6). The post mortem examination included the spinal cord in five, and peripheral nerves in three cases. No abnormalities were found. (6) The muscular atrophy found in patients with myasthenia is not a
myopathy
but an affection of the lower motor neurone. Neurogenic changes were regularly found in the muscles of patients with myasthenia, even without muscular atrophy. The finding of these changes is no reason to reject the diagnosis. It is postulated that denervation occurs at the neuromuscular junction as a result of permanent absence of acetylcholine.
...
PMID:Neurogenic muscle involvement in myasthenia gravis. A clinical and histopathological study. 470 58
Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy is a localized or restricted variety of muscular dystrophy, characterized by bilateral ptosis, myopathic facies, external
ophthalmoplegia
and dysphagia. A patient with this unusual
myopathy
is described and detailed esophageal motility studies are presented that provide conclusive evidence of both striated and smooth muscle involvement.Because these unusual localized forms of muscular dystrophy exist and may be of late onset, previous rigid concepts concerning the dystrophies should be discarded.
...
PMID:Late-onset muscle dystrophy: oculopharyngoesophageal variety. 594 Mar 25
A 16-year-old boy with
myopathy
,
ophthalmoplegia
, and raised basal metabolic rate was examined by the non-invasive technique of phosphorus-31 nuclear magnetic resonance (31 P NMR). The muscles of the forearm showed an abnormal 31P NMR spectrum with a high inorganic phosphate (Pi) content in relation to phosphocreatine (PCr) (PCr/Pi = 4; control = 10). This finding was compatible with the abnormality of mitochondrial function already established by biopsy and offers in addition an explanation for the raised oxygen consumption in this patient. The method of 31P NMR is suited to rapid non-invasive diagnosis in various muscle disorders.
...
PMID:Examination of a myopathy by phosphorus nuclear magnetic resonance. 611 4
A case of nemaline
myopathy
with
ophthalmoplegia
is reported. The patient was a 35-year-old man born of consanguineous parents. He had a myopathic face, high-arched palate, nasal voice, scoliosis, very thin trunk and marked muscle weakness involving face, neck, limbs and trunk. He also had ptotis of the left eyelid and mild bilateral
ophthalmoplegia
, also detected by electrooculogram. Biopsy of gastrocnemius muscle revealed nemaline rods. At the ultrastructural level, the rods appeared to have axial and cross striations, and in cross-sections at high magnification they seemed to have a crystal lattice structure. Intranuclear rods were also observed. In addition to the rods, abnormal mitochondria including a number of paracrystalline inclusions were seen.
...
PMID:A case of nemaline myopathy with ophthalmoplegia and mitochondrial abnormalities. 624 53
It has been stated that peripheral neuropathy can be a feature of so-called
ophthalmoplegia
-plus syndrome, but to date only one case of hypertrophic neuropathy has been reported. This study is concerned with the clinical, electrophysiological, and pathological observations in a 37-year-old man with progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
and a ragged-red fiber
myopathy
associated with severe sensorimotor neuropathy. Histological and morphometric studies of the sural nerve revealed a marked loss of large myelinated fibers and an occasional degenerating axon. Residual fibers had disproportionately thin myelin sheaths in relation to axon calibers. In contrast to the muscle biopsy findings, no mitochondrial paracrystalline inclusions were observed in the nerve. However, the number of mitochondria per square micron of Schwann cell cytoplasm was elevated when compared with values obtained from normal subjects and a patient with a chronic neuropathy. These findings may indicate an alteration of mitochondrial function common to muscle fibers and Schwann cells which, in nerves, could lead to axon loss and abnormality of myelination.
...
PMID:Neuropathy and mitochondrial myopathy. 625 25
A partial deficiency of cytochrome oxidase has been found in 7 patients with chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
and proximal
myopathy
or craniosomatic abnormalities. Muscle biopsies from all these patients showed morphological mitochondrial abnormalities ("ragged red" fibres) and cytochemical assay of cytochrome oxidase showed that these fibres contained no demonstrable enzyme activity. The incidence of cytochrome oxidase-negative fibres was greater than that of "ragged-red" fibres suggesting that the enzyme defect preceded the development of morphological mitochondrial changes. Biochemical analysis of skeletal muscle mitochondrial fractions from 3 patients revealed in 1 case a significantly lower concentration of cytochrome aa3 and a decreased ratio of cytochrome oxidase/succinate-cytochrome c reductase. Fasting blood metabolites were elevated in 2 patients. We suggest that partial cytochrome oxidase deficiency is the underlying defect in mitochondrial myopathy associated with the oculocraniosomatic syndromes.
...
PMID:A partial deficiency of cytochrome c oxidase in chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia. 630 77
Three of 11 children, offspring of a consanguineous marriage, presented a progressive
myopathy
and seizures, associated with symptoms suggesting both central and peripheral nervous system involvement. The ultrastructural muscular lesions were not specific. The association of severe impairment of muscle tissue and of central nervous system is rare, being described in centronuclear myopathy, cerebromuscular dystrophy, Kearns-Sayre syndrome and in a few isolated cases. Clinically only these isolated observations and especially the Kearns-Sayre syndrome demonstrate analogies to our observations. These data lead us to the discussion of the specificity of ultrastructural lesions, especially mitochondrial abnormalities. Some authors consider these abnormalities to be the biochemical hallmark for
ophthalmoplegia
plus, whereas for others, especially Drachman, they are an inconstant and nonspecific finding, merely the consequence and not the cause of this disease. These observations argue for the relationship between muscular pathology and nervous system dysfunction.
...
PMID:[An autosomal recessive syndrome with myopathy and central and peripheral nervous system involvement (author's transl)]. 645 71
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