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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
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
The records of 52 children with Niemann-Pick disease type C were reviewed to establish whether the disease process and outcome varied with the initial clinical pattern; 34 children (65%) had cholestatic liver disease and hepatosplenomegaly in infancy; 18 were seen at a mean age of 4 years with splenomegaly or neurologic disease or both. Of the 34 children with early cholestatic liver disease, three died in the neonatal period; cholestasis and
hepatomegaly
subsided in the remaining 31 children, although splenomegaly persisted. Of these 31 children, 15 had persistent liver disease with elevated aminotransferase values. Serial liver biopsy specimens showed that 3 of the 15 children had normal architecture and 12 had hepatic fibrosis, with progression to cirrhosis in 5. No other significant morbidity or additional deaths were associated with the liver disease. The clinical importance of persistent liver disease was overshadowed by the subsequent development of severe neurologic disease. There was no difference in the age at onset of the disease (mean, 4.5 years) or in the pattern of neurologic disease, including supranuclear
ophthalmoplegia
, whether or not the child had early liver disease. Overt neurologic disease has not yet developed in seven surviving children with liver disease at onset. Sixty-seven percent of children died during the study; the main cause of death was bronchopneumonia. We conclude that the diagnosis of Niemann-Pick disease type C should be considered in patients with unexplained neonatal hepatitis, especially if splenomegaly is a persistent feature. Because liver biopsy specimens may not demonstrate storage cells, bone marrow aspiration to detect the characteristic storage cells is recommended in such patients.
...
PMID:Niemann-Pick disease type C: diagnosis and outcome in children, with particular reference to liver disease. 815 88
Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) is a fatal neurovisceral lipid storage disease of autosomal inheritance resulting from mutations in either the NPC1 (95% of families) or NPC2 gene. The encoded proteins appear to be involved in lysosomal/late endosomal transport of cholesterol, glycolipids and other molecules but their exact function is still unknown. The clinical spectrum of the disease ranges from a neonatal rapidly fatal disorder to an adult-onset chronic neurodegenerative disease. Based upon a comprehensive study of 13 unrelated adult patients diagnosed in France over the past 20 years as well as the analysis of the 55 other cases published since 1969, we have attempted to delineate the major clinical, radiological, biochemical and genotypic characteristics of adult NPC. Overall, mean age at onset (+/-SD) of neuropsychiatric symptoms was 25 +/- 9.7 years. The diagnosis of NPC was established after a mean delay of 6.2 +/- 6.4 years and the mean age at death (calculated from 20 cases) was 38 +/- 10.2 years. Major clinical features included cerebellar ataxia (76%), vertical supranuclear
ophthalmoplegia
(VSO, 75%), dysarthria, (63%), cognitive troubles (61%), movement disorders (58%), splenomegaly (54%), psychiatric disorders (45%) and dysphagia (37%). Less frequent signs were epilepsy and cataplexy. During the course of the disease, clinical features could be subdivided into (i) visceral signs (
hepatomegaly
or splenomegaly), (ii) cortical signs (psychiatric cognitive disorders and epilepsy); and (iii) deep brain signs (VSO, ataxia, movement disorders, dysarthria, dysphagia, cataplexy) which exhibited different evolution patterns. Asymptomatic and non-evolutive visceral signs were often noticed since early childhood (38.5% of our patients), followed by mild cortical signs in childhood (learning difficulties) and early adulthood (62% of cases among which 38% were psychiatric disorders). Deep brain signs were observed in 96% of patients and were usually responsible for death. In general, there was a good correlation between clinical signs and the localization of brain atrophy on MRI. The 'variant' biochemical phenotype characterized by mild abnormalities of the cellular trafficking of endocytosed cholesterol was over-represented in the adult form of NPC and seemed associated with less frequent splenomegaly in childhood and lesser psychiatric signs. Involvement of the NPC1 gene was shown in 33 families and of the NPC2 gene in one. Improving the knowledge of the disease among psychiatrists and neurologists appears essential since emerging treatments should be more efficient at the visceral or cognitive/psychiatric stages of the disease, before the occurrence of widespread deep brain neurological lesions.
...
PMID:The adult form of Niemann-Pick disease type C. 1700 72
Thirty five floppy children seen during two year period, were subjected to clinical examination, electroneuromyography and muscle biopsy. The muscle biopsy was sent for routine histology, histochemistry and electron microscopy. Using muscle pathology as the 'gold standard' for diagnosis, the aetiological entities were spinal muscular atrophy (16), congenital muscular dystrophy (6), mitochondrial myopathy (3), congenital fibre type disproportion (2), acid mutase deficiency (1) and benign congenital hypotonia (6). Mental subnormality, seizures, ptosis and
ophthalmoplegia
suggested mitochondrial disease (n=2). Macroglossia,
hepatomegaly
and cardiomegaly along with the dive bomber effect on electromyography were useful clues to the diagnosis of Pompe's disease (n=1). Positive decremental test established the diagnosis of congenital myasthenia in one patient. Contrary to most previously published reports, infantile onset of spinal muscular atrophy did not always spell a poor prognosis on follow up. 'Floppy infant syndrome' has varied etiology. Comprehensive evaluation including clinical, electrophysiological and detailed histological examination is necessary for proper diagnosis and prognosis of this heterogenous entity.
...
PMID:Neuromuscular disorders in infancy and childhood. 2951 74