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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Fourteen patients (10 boys, 4 girls) aged from 4 months to 14 years old were diagnosed with mitochondrial disease based on the clinical manifestations together with abnormal muscle mitochondrial morphologies. Their clinical diagnoses included Leigh syndrome, three; Menkes' syndrome, three; Kearns-Sayre syndrome, two; myoclonic epilepsy with ragged fibres, one; and infant-onset progressive myoclonic epilepsy, one; fatal infantile mitochondrial myopathy, one; fatty acid oxidation defect, two; and myopathy with cardiopathy, one. Organs involved other than muscles included central nervous system, ten; heart, six; eye, two; liver, two; and kidney, two. Clinical manifestations varied to include hypotonia,
seizures
, myoclonus, mental retardation, nystagmus, ataxia, ptosis,
ophthalmoplegia
, retinal degeneration, muscle atrophy, spasticity etc. Nine had an abnormal rise in lactate after glucose loading. Ragged-red fibres were found in four patients. Abnormal mitochondrial morphology included abnormal accumulation, abnormal cristae pattern of tubular, concentric, or parallel form, some contained osmiophilic inclusion bodies. One patient of Leigh syndrome had had brain necropsy which showed intramyelin splitting of myelinated axons.
...
PMID:Clinical manifestation of mitochondrial diseases in children. 821 54
Neurological involvement in Wegener's granulomatosis was studied by reviewing the charts of 324 consecutive patients in whom the diagnosis was made at the Mayo Clinic. One hundred nine patients (33.6%) had neurological involvement. Peripheral neuropathy occurred in 53; cranial neuropathy, in 21; external
ophthalmoplegia
, in 16; cerebrovascular events, in 13;
seizures
, in 10; cerebritis, in 5; and miscellaneous involvement, in 25. The mean age and sex ratio were similar in the patients with and those without neurological involvement. Among the patients with peripheral neuropathy, 42 had mononeuropathy multiplex; 6, distal symmetrical polyneuropathy; and 5, unclassified peripheral neuropathy. Multiple mononeuropathy was a major presenting symptom in 8 patients. A significantly higher percentage of patients with peripheral neuropathy, compared to those without peripheral neuropathy, had kidney involvement (p < 0.001). The second, sixth, and seventh cranial nerves were most frequently affected. Multiple cranial nerves were affected in 8 patients. Unusual neurological manifestations in the miscellaneous group were spastic paraparesis, temporal arteritis, Horner's syndrome, and papilledema.
...
PMID:Neurological involvement in Wegener's granulomatosis: an analysis of 324 consecutive patients at the Mayo Clinic. 838 87
Review of the medical records of 2 major adult teaching hospitals for a 4-year period revealed 33 instances of carbamazepine overdose. These patients had a mean age of 30 years and 58% were known epileptics. They ingested a mean of 12g carbamazepine (range 1.6 to 45g), with 51% of cases involving other drugs, particularly alcohol. The clinical manifestations of toxicity formed a recognisable clinical picture of diminished conscious state (100% of patients), mydriasis (42%), abnormal muscle tone and tendon reflexes (55%) and ataxia, nystagmus or
ophthalmoplegia
(48%). 24% of cases were complicated by
seizures
. The incidence of hyperglycaemia and hypokalaemia were related to higher drug concentrations. 12% showed hyponatraemia and 50% had transient evidence of hepatic dysfunction. The pharmacokinetic properties of carbamazepine play a role in determining management strategies. Management is largely supportive through avoidance of drug interactions, large doses of activated charcoal, careful airway management and correction of electrolyte disturbances.
...
PMID:Carbamazepine overdose. Features of 33 cases. 847 Nov 90
The mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) transfer RNA (tRNA)Lys A-->G(8344) mutation was identified in seven patients. These patients and their relatives were assessed clinically; in one family the mutation was deduced to be present in four generations. The phenotype in index cases was consistent with the syndrome of myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibres, with the core clinical features of myoclonus, ataxia and
seizures
. Amongst other features, progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
, Leigh's syndrome and stroke-like episodes were observed, well recognized in mitochondrial myopathies but novel manifestations of this genotype. Samples of blood and muscle were analysed for the proportion of mutant mtDNA using an oligonucleotide hybridization technique. The proportion of mutant mtDNA in blood was significantly greater in symptomatic than asymptomatic cases. Furthermore, the proportion of mutant mtDNA in blood correlated with age of onset of disease and clinical severity assessed by a simple scale. Study of disease associated with the tRNA(Lys) A-->G(8344) mutation provides further insight into the pathogenesis and transmission of mitochondrial diseases. Quantification of the proportion of mtDNA in tissues demonstrates that this is a major factor determining the course of disease, but other, as yet unidentified factors are also likely to play a role.
...
PMID:The mitochondrial DNA transfer RNA(Lys)A-->G(8344) mutation and the syndrome of myoclonic epilepsy with ragged red fibres (MERRF). Relationship of clinical phenotype to proportion of mutant mitochondrial DNA. 851 95
Three sisters suffering from an unusual form of Gaucher's disease are described. These patients had cardiovascular abnormalities consisting of calcification of the ascending aorta and of the aortic and mitral valves. Neurological findings included
ophthalmoplegia
and saccadic eye movements in two patients, and tonic-clonic
seizures
in the third. The three patients died, two of them after having undergone aortic valve replacement. Tissue was obtained from one of the sibs and fibroblast and liver beta-glucocerebrosidase activity was reduced to 4% and 11% of mean normal values. Genotype analysis indicated that the patient was homozygous for the D409H mutation. It is tempting to relate the phenotype of severe cardiac involvement to the D409H/D409H genotype, although further cases will be needed before this association can be confirmed.
...
PMID:Unusual expression of Gaucher's disease: cardiovascular calcifications in three sibs homozygous for the D409H mutation. 904 1
We report an Italian family with maternally inherited encephalomyopathy including progressive external
ophthalmoplegia
,
seizures
, and neurophysiological evidence of brainstem dysfunction. Mitochondrial DNA analysis showed a heteroplasmic point mutation at position 5814 in the tRNA gene for cysteine (A5814G), previously reported in a 5-year-old girl of Portuguese origin. The mutation was very abundant (> 95%) in both muscle and blood from the proposita and was present in lower proportions (average 85 +/- 6%) in blood from three less severely affected maternal relatives. This observation confirms pathogenicity for the A5814G mutation.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial tRNA(Cys) gene mutation (A5814G): a second family with mitochondrial encephalopathy. 918 78
A 32-year-old woman developed chronic progressive hearing impairment, trunkal ataxia, bilateral ptosis and external
ophthalmoplegia
. She also showed slowly progressive mild to moderate proximal dominant muscle weakness and atrophy. ECG showed incomplete right bundle branch block. An aerobic exercise test showed abnormal blood lactate elevation and muscle biopsy revealed ragged-red fibers in addition to the myopathic change. Analysis of mitochondrial DNA extracted from biopsied muscle and fibroblast samples revealed a 1,758bp deletion from the cytochrome b to ND6 coding regions. Common mutations in tRNALeu(UUR) coding region to the mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) were not present. She was diagnosed as having incomplete Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS). Since the age of 35, she developed complex partial seizure attacks with secondary generalization frequently and at the age of 42, she had a severe generalized seizure with delayed consciousness loss followed by left hemiplegia. MRI showed wide T2-high signal lesions in the right temporo-parieto-occipital area. The proton MR-spectroscopy showed prominent increase of lactate beyond the lesions detected by MRI, indicating diffuse aerobic metabolic dysfunction in the central nervous system. We reviewed two other KSS cases with a stroke like episode, who also had epilepsy and large deletion but no tRNALeu(UUR) mutation, in mitochondrial DNA. Patients with KSS who have
seizure
may develop the stroke-like episode as seen in MELAS patients.
...
PMID:[A case of incomplete Kearns-Sayre syndrome with a stroke like episode]. 940 43
The objective of this article was to evaluate the etiologies, findings, and treatment of ocular neuromyotonia (ONM) in three case reports. The etiologies of ONM were determined by the histories, neuroradiologic tests, or biopsies. Clinical observations, videotaping, and electronic eye movement recordings documented the eye movement abnormalities. Intermittent diplopia developed several years after myelography with thorium dioxide (Thorotrast), radiation treatment for a pituitary tumor, and radiotherapy for medulloblastoma of the posterior fossa. All of the patients had intermittent, variable tropias that occurred spontaneously or were induced by eccentric gaze. One patient had a partial third nerve palsy, and another had a unilateral internuclear
ophthalmoplegia
(INO). ONM involved the paretic third nerve, extraocular muscles, and ipsilateral lateral rectus muscle in one patient, the paretic medial rectus muscle (INO) in one patient, a lateral rectus muscle (INO) in one patient, and a lateral rectus muscle in the last patient. Eye movement recordings were consistent with spasms of the involved muscles. Carbamazepine (Tegretol) abolished the ONM in two patients. The other patient had been taking carbamazepine for
seizures
and developed ONM when the dose was decreased. Increasing the dose abolished the ONM. ONM is an unusual cause of intermittent diplopia and strabismus, but its distinctive history and signs identify it easily. Damage to the peripheral cranial nerves might produce segmental demyelination, axonal hyperexcitability, and a self-perpetuating, reverberating circuit that causes spasms of the extraocular muscles.
...
PMID:Ocular neuromyotonia: three case reports with eye movement recordings. 953 30
Mitochondrial DNA syndromes are an emerging class of diseases that can present at any age. Clinical findings are legion and may include renal tubulopathy, growth retardation, myopathy,
seizures
, and
ophthalmoplegia
. Mitochondrial DNA syndromes have presented with symmetric cervical lipomas, poikiloderma, and anhidrosis. We describe a child with a novel mitochondrial DNA syndrome who had poikiloderma on sun-exposed areas. We also reviewed 274 patients with mitochondrial DNA disorders for skin findings. Symmetric cervical lipomas were consistently associated with myoclonic epilepsy as part of 1 syndrome. With the exception of lipomas, skin findings were reported in 16 patients.
...
PMID:Skin manifestations of mitochondrial DNA syndromes: case report and review. 981 Sep 6
Glucosylceramide lipidosis results from a defective lysosomal degradation of this glycolipid. Lipid degradation is controlled by two components, the enzyme beta-glucocerebrosidase and a sphingolipid activator protein. While most Gaucher cases are due to mutations within the gene that codes for the lysosomal enzyme, only two patients have been described with normal enzyme levels and mutations in the gene for the sphingolipid activator protein C (sap-C). Here we present the detailed neurological manifestations, neuropathological findings and brain lipid composition in one sap-C-deficient patient. The patient was an 8-year-old boy who presented with transient losses of consciousness, myoclonic jerks and generalized
seizures
resistant to all antiepileptic drugs. He developed progressive horizontal
ophthalmoplegia
, pyramidal and cerebellar signs, and died at the age of 15.5 years. Neuropathological studies demonstrated neuronal cell loss and neuronophagia, massive intraneuronal lipid storage and lack of perivascular Gaucher cells. Electron microscopy examination showed different types of storage including lipofuscin granules as well as the cytosomes with parallel arrays of bilayers that are assumed to be formed by stored lipids. General brain lipid composition did not show a remarkable increase or loss of any of the major lipid fractions but the glucosylceramide concentration in the cortex of several anatomical regions showed a striking increase. Fatty acid composition of the ceramide moiety clearly suggests that gangliosides are the main precursors in the cerebral cortex, while it implies an additional and distinct source in the cerebellum. Studying the phenotypic consequences of mutant sphingolipid activator proteins is critical to a better understanding of the physiological significance of these proteins.
...
PMID:Neuronopathic juvenile glucosylceramidosis due to sap-C deficiency: clinical course, neuropathology and brain lipid composition in this Gaucher disease variant. 993 Sep
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