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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The propositus (case 1) was a 40 year-old man. He had begun to note unsteady walking at age 26. He was found to have cerebellar ataxia and pyramidal signs in addition to minor features such as progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
, gaze nystagmus, bulging eyes, intention
fasciculation
-like movements of facial and lingual muscles, and limb dystonia. These findings were categorized into type II form of the disease. One sister (case 3) aged 37 years, and one brother (case 4) aged 44 years of the propositus had also type II form of the disease. His uncle (case 2) had the same cerebellar and extrapyramidal signs accompanied with peripheral nerve signs such as muscle wasting, weakness, hypo-tonus and decreased deep tendon reflexes, and a diagnosis of type III form of the disease was made. In the T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging (1.5 T, TR 2000 or 3000 msec, TE 120 msec) of the three patients (case 1, 3 and 4), dorsolateral part of the putamen showed decreased signal intensity. Although hypo-intensity of the putamen is often observed in normal elderly people over 50 years old, it is considered to be abnormal when it exists in relatively young people as in this family members.
...
PMID:[A new family of Machado-Joseph disease--an abnormal decrease in signal intensity of the putamen in magnetic resonance imaging]. 224 34
A Portuguese family of non-Azorean origin is described as affected by an autosomal dominant inherited ataxia resembling Machado-Joseph disease. Clinical criteria for diagnosis are proposed, based on a complex clinical picture extending from extrapyramidal signs to peripheral amyotrophy associated with secondary, but more specific, minor features such as progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
, dystonia, intention
fasciculation
-like movements of facial and lingual muscles, and bulging eyes. Machado-Joseph disease may be more widespread than previously believed.
...
PMID:Clinical criteria for diagnosis of Machado-Joseph disease: report of a non-Azorena Portuguese family. 718 34
We report a patient with motor neuron syndrome similar to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) and with spontaneous recovery. At the age 40, the woman developed progressive muscular weakness, atrophy and
fasciculation
in extremities. She also noted a dyspnea, tongue atrophy and dysphagia. A neurological examination 6 months after onset revealed i) a tongue atrophy and
fasciculation
, ii) diffuse muscule weakness and atrophy in face, neck and extremities, and iii) marked hyperreflexia in the four limbs and bilateral Babinski reflex, but iv) neither sensory disturbance nor
ophthalmoplegia
. Electromyogram (EMG) detected such denervation potentials as fibrillation potentials,
fasciculation
potentials, positive sharp waves and polyphasic or giant MUPs diffusely in the limb muscles. Peripheral nerve conduction study detected neither conduction block nor delay. Thus, she was diagnosed as suffering from ALS. However, since approximate 1 year after onset, her muscle weakness has gradually been getting better. Simultaneously, the dyspnea and dysphagia gradually improved. Two years after onset, an EMG examination detected chronic denervation potentials in the left musculus sternocleidomastoideus and a few on-going denervation potentials in the left musculus extensor carpi radialis, but no denervation potentials in other limb muscles.
Fasciculation
potentials were found in tongue muscles. Thus, the present case was thought to have a reversible motor neuron syndrome clinically quite similar to ALS. A mild increase in IgE (346 U/ml) and a low-titer IgM-class anti-GM1 antibody were found in her serum though its pathological significance was uncertain. Any immunological aberrance may account for the pathogenesis. It should be noted that clinically diagnosed cases of ALS may rarely recover spontaneously.
...
PMID:[A patient with motor neuron syndrome clinically similar to amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, presenting spontaneous recovery]. 1133 88