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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 42-year-old woman had a 10-year history of external
ophthalmoplegia
, malabsorption resulting in chronic malnutrition, muscle atrophy and polyneuropathy. Computer tomography revealed hypodensity of her cerebral white matter. A metabolic disturbance consisted of lactic acidosis after moderate glucose loads with increased excretion of hydroxybutyric and fumaric acids. Post-mortem studies revealed gastrointestinal scleroderma as the morphological manifestation of her malabsorption syndrome, ocular and skeletal myopathy with ragged red fibers, peripheral neuropathy, vascular abnormalities of meningeal and peripheral nerve vessels. Biochemical examination of the liver and muscle tissues revealed a partial defect of cytochrome-c-oxidase (complex IV of the respiratory chain). This mitochondrial multisystem disorder may represent a separate entity to be classified between the spectrum of myoencephalopathies and oculo-gastrointestinal
muscular dystrophy
.
...
PMID:Myo-, neuro-, gastrointestinal encephalopathy (MNGIE syndrome) due to partial deficiency of cytochrome-c-oxidase. A new mitochondrial multisystem disorder. 282 22
Combined histochemical and biochemical studies have shown, that the histochemical activity of mitochondrial Mg2+-activated ATPase closely correlates with the coupling state of oxidative phosphorylation (Meijer and Vloedman 1980). Using this histochemical method 646 unselected skeletal muscle biopsies have been investigated. Activation of the enzyme, i.e. loosely coupled mitochondria were present either focally or diffusely expressed in 28% of the biopsies irrespective of the underlying disorder. Most often it was found in mitochondrial myopathies and in progressive
muscular dystrophy
type Duchenne; in a lesser degree it was also present in neurogenic atrophy and in various other disorders. Ninety two percent of all cases with loose coupling showed mitochondrial proliferations. On the other hand in 20% of all cases with mitochondrial proliferations including 19 cases of diffuse mitochondrial myopathy and 3 of progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
no activation of the enzyme was found. The results show that loose coupling is closely but not absolutely associated with mitochondrial proliferation, it is present in mitochondrial myopathies but also in various other muscular disorders with different pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Activation of mitochondrial ATPase as evidence of loosely coupled oxidative phosphorylation in various skeletal muscle disorders. A histochemical fine-structural study. 294 45
A case of a mediterranean boy with congenital
muscular dystrophy
(CMD) and central nervous system (CNS) involvement with mild intellectual impairment and seizures is reported.
Muscular dystrophy
involved both skeletal and mimic muscles, and histological findings were consistent with a congenital dystrophy. EEG recordings showed generalized and localized paroxysmal activities. CT scan demonstrated low-density periventricular areas.
Ophthalmoplegia
was also observed. A literature review disclosed that in some western cases of CMD plus CNS involvement, cranial muscles other than mimic muscles may be involved.
...
PMID:Congenital muscular dystrophy with central nervous system involvement: case report. 381 82
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
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
To estimate the oxidative damage to skeletal muscle DNA in mitochondrial encephalomyopathies, we studied the amount of 8-hydroxy-deoxyguanosine (8-OH-dG) and the localization of superoxide dismutase (SOD) in the skeletal muscles of patients with progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
(PEO) or Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS). The molar ratio of 8-OH-dG/deoxyguanosine in skeletal muscle from PEO or KSS patients was significantly higher than the control value. The ratio from patients with polymyositis or Duchenne's
muscular dystrophy
was not significantly elevated. Immunohistochemical staining for both Mn-SOD and Cu,Zn-SOD showed pronounced staining in the subsarcolemmal and intermyofibrillar regions of cytochrome-oxidase-negative ragged red fibers of KSS or PEO muscles. Our findings suggest that overproduction of 8-OH-dG and mitochondrial dysfunction with gene deletions are associated with each other in muscle cells of patients with PEO or KSS, and that free radicals may play an important role in the pathophysiology of mitochondrial encephalomyopathies.
...
PMID:Oxidative damage to skeletal muscle DNA from patients with mitochondrial encephalomyopathies. 883 81
Progressive external ophthalmoplegia comprises many different disorders. Those of childhood onset can be separated from juvenile or adult onset. Among those of later onset the most common causes are oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy, oculopharyngodistal
muscular dystrophy
and the several mitochondrial disorders, especially those with large deletions of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) (sporadic), those with maternal inheritance (point mutations), or the autosomal dominant forms with multiple deletions of mtDNA.
Ophthalmoplegia
of presumably neurogenic origin is seen in some of the familial spinocerebellar ataxias. Advances in molecular genetics should provide information about affected gene products and, therefore, pathogenesis.
...
PMID:Oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy, other ocular myopathies, and progressive external ophthalmoplegia. 939 10
At least six different forms of congenital
muscular dystrophy
are associated with structural changes of the central nervous system, and three of these have been mapped: merosin-deficient congenital
muscular dystrophy
on chromosome 6q2, Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy on chromosome 9q31, and muscle eye brain disease on chromosome 1p32. Walker-Warburg syndrome, congenital
muscular dystrophy
with calf hypertrophy, pontocerebellar hypoplasia, and normal eyes, and congenital
muscular dystrophy
with severe mental retardation and cerebellar cysts are nosologically distinct and have been excluded from the known congenital
muscular dystrophy
loci with structural changes of the central nervous system. Here, we describe a novel congenital
muscular dystrophy
syndrome which is phenotypically distinct from the recognized forms of congenital
muscular dystrophy
with brain involvement. Two siblings, a boy and a girl, were born to consanguineous parents from Sicily. Both children were born with adducted thumbs and toe contractures. They were floppy from birth, walked late, showed profound generalized muscle weakness including facial muscles, elevated creatine kinase levels of 200-700U/l, and histological changes compatible with
muscular dystrophy
. In addition, both showed ptosis, external
ophthalmoplegia
, mild mental retardation, and mild cerebellar hypoplasia on MRI. Immunocytochemistry showed normal expression of muscle membrane proteins including laminin alpha 2, laminin beta 2, and alpha-dystroglycan. Linkage analysis excluded the candidate loci on chromosomes 6q2, 9q31, and 1q32. The gene locus for congenital
muscular dystrophy
1B, MDC 1B, on chromosome 1q42 was also excluded. Adducted thumbs are a distinct clinical sign that has not been reported in congenital
muscular dystrophy
before and should facilitate recognition of further patients with this disorder.
...
PMID:Congenital muscular dystrophy with adducted thumbs, ptosis, external ophthalmoplegia, mental retardation and cerebellar hypoplasia: a novel form of CMD. 1220 29
The syntrophins and dystrobrevins are members of the dystrophin-associated protein complex, and are thought to function as modular adaptors for signalling proteins recruited to the sarcolemmal membrane. We have characterised the expression of the syntrophins (alpha-, beta1-, and beta2-) and alpha-dystrobrevin by immunohistochemistry in normal human muscle and in biopsies from 162 patients with myopathies of unknown aetiology (with normal staining for dystrophin and other dystrophin-associated proteins). Unlike mice, beta2-syntrophin is expressed at the sarcolemma in post-natal human skeletal muscle. Deficiency of alpha-dystrobrevin +/- beta2-syntrophin was present in 16/162 (10%) patients, compared to age-matched controls. All patients presented with congenital-onset hypotonia and weakness, although there was variability in clinical severity. Two major clinical patterns emerged: patients with deficiency of beta2-syntrophin and alpha-dystrobrevin presented with severe congenital weakness and died in the first year of life, and two patients with deficiency of alpha-dystrobrevin had congenital
muscular dystrophy
with complete external
ophthalmoplegia
. We have sequenced the coding regions of alpha-dystrobrevin and beta2-syntrophin in these patients, and identified a new isoform of dystrobrevin, but have not identified any mutations. This suggests that disease causing mutations occur outside the coding region of these genes, in gene(s) encoding other components of the syntrophin-dystrobrevin subcomplex, or in gene(s) responsible for their post-translational modification and normal localisation.
...
PMID:Deficiency of the syntrophins and alpha-dystrobrevin in patients with inherited myopathy. 1289 72
Oculopharyngodistal myopathy is a rare type of hereditary myopathy characterised pathologically by the changes of
muscular dystrophy
with rimmed vacuoles and intra-muscular tubulofilamentous inclusions. Here we report the clinical and myopathological changes in a Chinese family with oculopharyngodistal myopathy. The proband showed external
ophthalmoplegia
, dysphagia, distal weakness and atrophy in all extremities. Serum creatine kinase level was mildly elevated and a myopathic pattern with myotonic discharge was demonstrated by electromyography (EMG). Molecular genetic analysis showed that the number of trinucleotide repeat expansions in the polyadenylate-binding protein nuclear 1 gene was within the normal limit. No mutations were indentified in the GNE gene. Five other persons with similar symptoms were found in the same generation. Muscle biopsy was performed on the tibialis anterior muscle in the proband.
Muscular dystrophy
changes with rimmed vacuoles were the main histopathological changes. Ultrastructural examination revealed numerous tubulofilamentous inclusions in both sarcoplasm and nucleus. EMG showed myotonic discharges in oculopharyngodistal myopathy. In addition to the sarcoplasm inclusions, we confirmed that tubulofilamentous inclusions appeared also in the nucleus.
...
PMID:The clinical and myopathological features of oculopharyngodistal myopathy in a Chinese family. 1850 9
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