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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The ultrastructural finding of abnormal muscle mitochondria has been reported in various conditions, but mostly in association with the clinical picture of
ophthalmoplegia
, and in cases of "floppy infant" syndrome. In the case herein reported, the mitochondrial abnormalities were found in the muscle biopsy of a 49-year-old man suffering from a late onset proximal
myopathy
; he was affected also by polyneuropathy, subclinical thyroid dysfunction, disturbances of heart conduction, and unilateral gynaecomastia. The association of abnormal muscle mitochondria and late onset
myopathy
without involvement of the extraocular muscles has been reported in a very few cases. It is not possible, at present, to state that these cases represent a nosological entity; the existence of an underlying biochemical defect, accounting for the mitochondrial abnormalities, could be suspected, but it seems more probable that these changes are non-specific features of muscular damage, possibly related to the stage and the degree of the process. In this view, the coexistence of neurogenic damage, gastrointestinal malabsorption, and thyroid dysfunction, could play an additional role in the case herein described. Finally, the coexisting findings of cardiac, endocrine, and neuropathic damage are discussed with regard to the Kearns-Sayre syndrome, which also associates mitochondrial myopathy and multisystemic involvement.
...
PMID:[Late myopathy with mitochondrial changes in the muscle]. 645 35
A clinical, electrophysiological and pathological review of 14 patients having oculoskeletal
myopathy
with abnormal mitochondria was undertaken. These patients present with
ophthalmoplegia
, and mild skeletal muscle weakness. The clinical course is slowly progressive. Electromyographic examination shows myopathic changes. Serum enzymes are normal. The diagnosis is confirmed by skeletal muscle biopsy which shows abnormal mitochondria, including crystalloid inclusions on electron microscopy. These patients form a distinct clinical group in which the risk of sudden cardiac death is much less than it is in the Kearns-Sayre syndrome.
...
PMID:Oculoskeletal myopathy with abnormal mitochondria. 646 92
Twenty-three members of a 96-member family exhibited an autosomal dominant disorder which has not previously been described. This disorder involves progressive optic atrophy, abnormal electroretinography without retinal pigment changes, and progressive sensorineural hearing loss usually evident in the first or second decade of life. In midlife, ptosis,
ophthalmoplegia
, dystaxia, and a nonspecific
myopathy
occur.
...
PMID:Dominant optic atrophy, deafness, ptosis, ophthalmoplegia, dystaxia, and myopathy. A new syndrome. 649 99
A new visceral
myopathy
family was identified. The disease in this family is transmitted by an autosomal recessive gene. Only 3 patients were identified from approximately 1500 family members. All 3 patients are the products of intermarriage. The patients had gastric atony, dilatation of the entire small bowel, and multiple diverticula throughout. Pathology of the jejunum showed fibrosis and degeneration, mainly of the longitudinal muscle layer, indistinguishable from that of previously reported families. Two of the patients also had ptosis and external
ophthalmoplegia
. Jejunal manometric studies were performed on the proband's asymptomatic mother and five siblings. All had normal esophageal manometric studies and upper gastrointestinal x-rays. The mother and three siblings had abnormal jejunal manometric studies characterized by the absence of phase 1 in some of the migrating motor complexes and increased motility indices in phase 2. We conclude that familial visceral
myopathy
can be transmitted by an autosomal recessive gene, and that jejunal manometry is a sensitive technique to identify asymptomatic heterozygotes.
...
PMID:A familial visceral myopathy with external ophthalmoplegia and autosomal recessive transmission. 668 59
Distal limb
myopathy
with onset at 30 years, followed by the development of progressive ptosis, external
ophthalmoplegia
, and pharyngeal
myopathy
was observed in a 37-year-old Melanesian man from the Gulf Province of Papua New Guinea. Ptosis and external
ophthalmoplegia
without apparent distal muscle involvement or dysphagia with onset at 35 and 25 years of age, respectively, were noted in the patient's 44- and 27-year-old sisters. Autosomal recessive inheritance appears to be likely in this family. This myopathic syndrome has not previously been reported in Melanesians.
...
PMID:Oculopharyngeal and distal myopathy: a case study from Papua New Guinea. 672 Jul 43
The author reports on four patients (one male, three females) from the same kindred with a newly recognized autosomal recessive condition involving striated and smooth muscle that has been designated oculogastrointestinal muscular dystrophy. It is characterized by ptosis,
ophthalmoplegia
, and progressive intestinal pseudo-obstruction leading to malnutrition and death before 30 y. Autopsy studies in two cases showed a severe primary
myopathy
of smooth muscles of the stomach and intestine with intact myenteric plexus and vagus nerves. The proposita notably had myopathic changes of striated muscles but also involvement of the peripheral nerves and central nervous system characterized by demyelinating and axonal neuropathy and focal spongiform degeneration of the posterior columns.
...
PMID:Oculogastrointestinal muscular dystrophy. 685 10
Seven cases of chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
(CPEO) have been studied. They all present palpebral ptosis, slowly progressive ophthalmoparesis without diplopia, descending
myopathy
and hypoacusia. Additional symptoms were small stature in 5 cases, vestibulo-cerebellar dysfunction in 4 cases, cardiac conductive defects in 6 cases, pigmentary degeneration of the retina in 2 cases, endocrine abnormalities in 2 cases. Muscle biopsy displays in all patients numerous ragged red fibers with typical mitochondrial changes, glycogen accumulation and abnormal amounts of lipid droplets. Metabolic studies reveal in all cases abnormal levels of pyruvic and lactic acid both in basal condition and after an oral glucose load. All the patients have been treated with pyridoxine-alpha-ketoglutarate (PAK). This substance is known to reduce pyruvic and lactic acid concentration in normal subjects after muscular exercise. Two months later a reduction of blood pyruvic and lactic acid both in normal condition and after oral glucose load was observed. The AA. discuss the possible physiological mechanism which can explain their findings.
...
PMID:Ophthalmoplegia plus: neuropathological and metabolic studies with a therapeutic trial in seven cases. 693 62
Six cases of
Ophthalmoplegia
Plus (OP) have been studied: all the patients had palpebral ptosis, ophthalmoparesis and descending
myopathy
. Hypoacusis, cardiac conduction impairment, small stature, mental deficit and vestibulo-cerebellar dysfunction were present only in some cases. EMG showed a severe slowing of motor and sensory conduction velocity in one patient. Polyphasic and long duration MU action potentials, which are indicative of a neurogenic
myopathy
, were found in all cases. Every muscle biopsy showed many "ragged red fibers" which, in EM, appeared to contain abnormal mitochondria. According to the literature and our data, OP appears to be a multisystemic disorder with severe muscle mitochondrial abnormalities, but it is not certain whether it must be considered a syndrome with multiple etiological factors or a single nosological entity with different possibilities of clinical manifestations.
...
PMID:Ophthalmoplegia plus. A multisystem disorder of unknown etiopathogenesis. 733 54
A 62-year-old female had severe progressive
ophthalmoplegia
associated with facial, pharyngeal and limb muscle involvement. When 40, she had undergone surgery for bilateral cataract present for about 20 years. Biopsies of skeletal muscles indicated
myopathy
; histochemistry and electron microscopy gave evidence of abnormal mitochondria in type I fibres. Bilateral cataract needing surgical treatment at 32 was the prominent symptom in her daughter, then with only mild facial weakness. Despite absence of
ophthalmoplegia
, similar pathological changes were observed in an inferior oblique muscle. The child of the former, a 10-year-old clinically healthy boy, had been surgically treated for a bilateral cataract at the age of 3. As indicated by a review of literature, cataract is not an exceptional occurrence in this particular type of ocular
myopathy
and therefore should be included within its multisystem associations. The same HLA haplotype (A2-B21) was found in the three patients.
...
PMID:Familial mitochondrial myopathy with cataract. 736 99
The evaluation of the severity of progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
(PEO) with ragged-red fibers in muscle, at the onset of the disease, when PEO is most often the only presenting symptom, is a difficult problem in neurological practice. In order to address that issue, we have performed a comparative analysis of the clinical, morphological and molecular characteristics of 43 patients affected with that form of ocular
myopathy
. Quantification of mitochondrial accumulation was performed with an image analysis application on muscle sections stained with succinate dehydrogenase histochemical reaction. The proportion of muscle fibres appearing as cytochrome c oxidase deficient was used as an index of the muscle-energy defect. Muscle mitochondrial DNA deletions were detected, localized and quantitated by Southern blot analysis. Point mutations were screened in five transfer RNA genes in the mtDNA (tRNA(Leucine (UUR)), tRNA(Lysine), tRNA(Glutamine), tRNA(Isoleucine) and tRNA(Formylmethionine)) by a denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis technique. This investigation confirmed the high frequency of mtDNA deletions or point mutations in PEO. At the onset of the disease, no clinical, morphological or molecular features could predict whether PEO would remain isolated or become part of a more severe multisystem disease. However, patients with mtDNA deletions were characterized by more severe
ophthalmoplegia
of earlier onset. Their muscle alterations were roughly parallel in severity to the proportion of deleted mtDNA molecules in muscle. Patients with a multitissular disease and mtDNA deletions were always sporadic cases and their clinical presentation was, most often, closely related to Kearns Sayre syndrome.
...
PMID:Chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia with ragged-red fibers: clinical, morphological and genetic investigations in 43 patients. 749 74
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