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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
In 1958, Kearns and Sayre described a multisystem entity, now known as Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS). The syndrome is defined as exhibiting a triad of thus far unexplained degenerative conditions: progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
, retinal pigmentary degeneration, and heart block. Commonly accompanying findings include cerebellar dysfunction and CSF protein levels above 100 mg/dl. Symptoms usually appear in early childhood, but the onset has been seen occasionally in young adults. KSS is a
mitochondrial disorder
that occurs rarely; the actual incidence is unknown. Ocular findings consist of bilateral ptosis, chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
, and pigmentary retinopathy. Corneal clouding and optic neuritis are infrequent. We herein report a classic case of Kearns Sayre syndrome and discuss the findings.
...
PMID:Kearns-Sayre syndrome: a case report and review. 163 60
Twenty-eight patients with
mitochondrial disease
were systematically investigated on clinical and electrophysiological grounds for peripheral neuropathy (PN): 25 had predominant
ophthalmoplegia
(including 4 with Kearns-Sayre syndrome) and 3 had predominant central nervous system involvement. There were 11 men and 17 women, mean age 43 years. Nine of the 28 patients had signs of sensory polyneuropathy involving mainly the lower limbs. These 9 patients and another asymptomatic patient had electrophysiological abnormalities: in the lower limbs, sensory potentials were absent or decreased in amplitude in all cases. In peroneal nerves, motor conduction nerve velocities were decreased in 4/10 cases. These data were consistent with an axonopathy. No correlation was found between the presence of PN and the clinical features of the mitochondrial diseases or with the respiratory chain defect (studied in 14 cases).
...
PMID:[Clinical and electrophysiologic study of the peripheral nerve in 28 cases of mitochondrial disease]. 166 Jan 83
We identified two patients with progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
, a
mitochondrial disease
, who harbored a population of partially deleted mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) with unusual properties. These molecules were deleted from mtDNA positions 548 to 4,442 and encompassed not only rRNA sequences but the heavy-strand promoter region as well. A 13-bp direct repeat was found flanking the breakpoint precisely, with the repeat at positions 535 to 547 located within the binding site for mitochondrial transcription factor 1 (mtTF1). This is the second mtDNA deletion involving a 13-bp direct repeat reported but is at least 10 times less frequent in the patient population than the former one. In situ hybridization studies showed that transcripts under the control of the light-strand promoter were abundant in muscle fibers with abnormal proliferation of mitochondria, while transcripts directed by the heavy-strand promoter, whether of genes residing inside or outside the deleted region, were not. The efficient transcription from the light-strand promoter implies that the major heavy-and light-strand promoters, although physically close, are functionally independent, confirming previous in vitro studies.
...
PMID:Replication-competent human mitochondrial DNA lacking the heavy-strand promoter region. 199 12
We describe a 55 years old man affected by eyelid ptosis, mild
ophthalmoplegia
externa and severe dysphagia owing to pharyngoesophageal dyskinesia. Skeletal and eyelid constrictor muscles EMG showed myogenic alterations. Muscle histological findings of ragged red fibers and oxidative histochemical alterations, together with ultrastructural investigation clue for mitochondrial myopathy diagnosis. This, considering the unusual clinical aspects of the case, confirms as
mitochondrial disease
can widely vary in their phenotypical expression.
...
PMID:[Mitochondrial oculopharyngeal myopathy: description of a case]. 210 41
The Kearns-Sayre syndrome is a mitochondrial myopathy characterised by ptosis, chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
, abnormal retinal pigmentation, and cardiac conduction defects. A unique case is reported in which there was rapid development of progressive congestive cardiac failure that required cardiac transplantation. A review of published reports of mitochondrial myopathy shows that a minority of cases (less than 20%) have cardiac involvement. This had previously been limited to abnormalities of cardiac conduction with progressive heart block. Myocardial biopsy has, however, shown ultrastructural evidence of a generalised
mitochondrial disorder
which hitherto has not been associated with a functional deficit.
...
PMID:Cardiomyopathy in the Kearns-Sayre syndrome. 337 Jan 84
The Kearns-Sayre syndrome is combined with a progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
(PEO), retinal pigmentary degeneration and heart block. In some patients, progression of incomplete forms has been described and potentially fatal conduction disturbances may occur. The disease is considered as a systemic
mitochondrial disorder
. As part of an ongoing prospective study 6 patients (3 female, 3 male; age 32 +/- 9 years) with PEO and typical ultrastructural changes of a mitochondrial myopathy in their skeletal muscle were examined. The ECG disclosed atrio/intraventricular conduction defects in 5 patients: 1 patient had a third degree AV block which was treated by a pacemaker. Another patient had left anterior fascicular block with complete right bundle branch block. In 3 other patients an incomplete right bundle branch block was registered. In 1 patient, His-bundle electrography disclosed a block distal to His by atrial high rate pacing before and after i.v. injection of ajmaline; prophylactically a pacemaker was implanted. The mean HV-interval increased significantly under ajmaline by 44% in patients with sinus rhythm. Hemodynamic studies were normal in 5 patients at rest; only 1 patient was abnormal during exercise. Myocardial biopsy demonstrated mitochondrial abnormalities such as variability in shape and size. In 4 patients concentric cristae mitochondriales were seen. Our results suggest that atrioventricular conduction defects are common in patients with PEO. By means of endomyocardial catheterbiopsy a mitochondrial cardiomyopathy could be detected.
...
PMID:[Heart involvement in progressive external ophthalmoplegia (Kearns-Sayre syndrome): electrophysiologic, hemodynamic and morphologic findings]. 370 87
Fatal infantile mitochondrial myopathy with lactic acidosis, morphologically abnormal mitochondria, deficient cytochromes aa3 and b, and a Fanconi-like aminoaciduria has been described. We report two infants, second cousins, with a similar fatal
mitochondrial disorder
, the cytochrome deficiency limited to skeletal muscle in one child and to liver in the other. The first child at 3 months of age had weight loss, hypotonia, external
ophthalmoplegia
, and a severe lactic acidosis with a high lactate/pyruvate ratio. Electron microscopy of muscle showed marked proliferation of enlarged mitochondria, many containing concentric rings of cristae. In skeletal muscle mitochondria, cytochromes aa3 and b were not detectable but cytochrome cc was found to be normal by spectroscopy. Cytochrome c oxidase activity was less than 1% of normal. Mitochondria from kidney, liver, heart, lung, and brain examined postmortem had normal cytochromes and preserved cytochrome c oxidase activity. The second cousin at 5 months of age had weight loss and hepatomegaly but no systemic lactic acidosis. Liver biopsy showed hepatocytes packed with enlarged mitochondria. The liver mitochondria showed deficient cytochromes aa3 and b postmortem, and cytochrome c oxidase activity was less than 10% of normal. Kidney mitochondria had normal cytochromes. Muscles was not studied. The mitochondrial abnormality in the two cousins presumably is related. Unexplained are the mode of genetic transmission or environmental exposure and the apparent involvement of a single different organ in each child.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial cytochrome deficiency presenting as a myopathy with hypotonia, external ophthalmoplegia, and lactic acidosis in an infant and as fatal hepatopathy in a second cousin. 631 75
A 20-year-old man with the characteristic findings of infantile onset Kearns syndrome is described. Morphological and biochemical investigations proved a
mitochondrial disease
which we believe to be the cause of the symptoms in various organs. We assume an autosomal-dominant inheritance, the marker sign of which is blepharoptosis in several family members. Characteristic clinical, morphological and biochemical findings, combined with an autosomal-dominant inheritance with very variable expression, mark the Kearns syndrome as an individual disease, not as a symptom complex (syndrome). Kearns disease can be divided into three forms--an infantile form ("Kearns-Sayre syndrome') with early onset, rapid progression, multisystemic involvement and a severe course; and a juvenile and an adult form with onset in the second, respectively third (or later) decades with a generally slower and more benign course and less widespread expression in various organ systems. Furthermore, the occurrence of a curious orthoptic abnormality is described, indicating one of the possible ways to avoid diplopia in chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
: the coexistence of normal and gliding abnormal retinal correspondence.
...
PMID:Kearns syndrome or Kearns disease. Further evidence of a genuine entity in a case with uncommon features. 705 39
Three patients with chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
of adult-onset, generalized muscle atrophy and myalgia are described. Two patients fulfilled the histological criteria for centronuclear myopathy, the third those for fiber-type disproportion. Additionally, typical ragged red fibers were found in all muscle specimens, and several muscle fibers were cytochrome c oxidase negative. NADH and succinate dehydrogenase stains showed increased subsarcolemmal accumulation of mitochondria. To determine whether these findings are coincidental or whether they indicated an additional
mitochondrial disorder
, all patients were investigated using biochemical analysis of the respiratory chain, molecular genetics, magnetic resonance spectroscopy of quadriceps muscle and ergometry. These tests suggested an additional mitochondrial dysfunction. Mitochondrial dysfunction seems to be more common in this group of myopathies than previously estimated, and may be of importance in the pathogenesis of these disorders.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial dysfunction in adult-onset myopathies with structural abnormalities. 773 87
Over the past 13 years at VGH-Taipei, five cases were morphologically defined as having
mitochondrial disease
and clinically presented with syndromes other than chronic progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
. There were two cases presenting with dementia, extensive and symmetrical intracerebral calcification but no clinical and other laboratory evidence of skeletal muscle affection; one case with MERRF syndrome; one case with congenital myopathy and cardiomyopathy; and one case with prednisolone-responsive and polymyositis-like myopathy. The following comments are made: 1. The inexplicably lower incidence of encephalopathy group might result from inadequate alertness of clinicians. 2. The clinical classification might have some clinical convenience, but, identification of defects at the DAN level and determination of the phenotypic expression with clinical, morphologic and biochemical methods are fundamental for future rational diagnosis and classification of mitochondrial diseases.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial disease with encephalopathy or limb girdle myopathy: a report of five cases. 817 14
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