Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C0029089 (ophthalmoplegia)
3,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A family was found to exhibit progressive external ophthalmoplegia, congenital cataracts, variable somatic weakness, gonadal dysgenesis, and, in one member, an abnormal chromosomal pattern. Muscle biopsy specimens showed "ragged-red" fibers; electron microscopy showed widespread paracrystalline mitochondrial inclusions. Orbicularis oculi reflex testing in the propositus showed bilateral absence of the late response. The family was evaluated in relation to other familial mitochondrial myopathies; a central defect in brain stem neural transmission was suggested as a mechanism for the progressive external ophthalmoplegia.
...
PMID:A familial mitochondrial myopathy with central defect in neural transmission. 22 46

Of 185 patients with myopathy, 22 showed abnormal muscle mitochondria. In 12 of the 22 patients, all of whom had ocular myopathy or the ophthalmoplegia-plus syndrome, muscle biopsies contained 5%-25% "ragged red" fibers. In 4 patients with a facioscapulohumeral distribution of weakness, ragged red fibers were less numerous (3%-8%). In both groups, routine histology showed almost normal muscle. The remaining 6 patients were clinically heterogeneous, all without ptosis or ophthalmoplegia. The biopsies of three of these patients showed severely affected muscle. It is possible that mitochondrial changes in these muscles were nonspecific. Electromyography indicated or suggested a myogenic lesion in 21 of the 22 patients; in 10, the serum creatine kinase was increased.
...
PMID:Myopathies with abnormal mitochondria: a clinicopathologic classification. 26 80

In skeletal muscle biopsies of nine patients with progressive external ophthalmoplegia of unknown origin "ragged red" fibers can be demonstrated. The occurrence of these abnormal fibers does not correlate with clinical muscle weakness, or additional signs of the ophthalmoplegia plus syndrome. Rarely, "ragged red" fibers are seen in other neuromuscular disorders but usually these are associated with various structural alterations. Numerous "ragged red" fibers in an otherwise normal muscle provide an essential criterion in establishing the diagnosis of the ophthalmoplegia plus syndrome.
...
PMID:[Muscle biopsy in progressive external ophthalmoplegia (author's transl)]. 49

An infant born with severe but nonprogressive somatic and cranial muscle weakness including bilateral external ophthalmoplegia was studied with a motor-point muscle biopsy. There was a strinking generalized decrease in the size of muscle fibers (hypotrophy), most marked in the type I fibers. Many of the small fibers were immature, resembling myotubes. Neuromuscular junctions on severely hypotrophic fibers were normal with esterase staining and by ultrastructural criteria. Although these are unusual clinical and biopsy characteristics, this infant's condition bears a resemblance to two other congenital nonprogressive neuromuscular diseases:myotubular myopathy and congenital fiber type disproportion. In these conditions and in our patient, there is no primary degenerative process affecting nerve or muscle but, rather, an apparent lack of maturation of fetal muscle fibers, indicating a defective normal trophic interaction between nerve and muscle.
...
PMID:Muscle fiber hypotrophy with intact neuromuscular junctions. A study of a patient with congenital neuromuscular disease and ophthalmoplegia. 55 54

Myasthenia gravis developed in two children at 2 and 3 years of age respectively. Minimal improvement followed chronic oral administration of cholinesterase inhibitors. Patient 1 had ptosis and ophthalmoplegia but no clinical or electromyographic involvement of muscles of the extremities, although a quadriceps muscle biopsy revealed lymphorrhages. Patient 2 had progressive generalized myasthenia for 3 1/2 years. Both children were given a 3-month course of prednisone followed by thymectomy. They both are in remission, 12 and 8 months after thymectomy, with only minimal residual ocular weakness, but this weakness is much more responsive to anticholinesterase drugs than before thymectomy. Long-term administration of steroids, with the attendant complication of growth retardation, is avoided.
...
PMID:Effective treatment of infantile myasthenia gravis by combined prednisone and thymectomy. 55 63

An infant born with marked hypotonia showed prompt regression of skeletal muscle weakness, but by 7 weeks of age had total external ophthalmoplegia. Biopsy of the gluteus muscle at 14 days showed marked variation in fiber size with a large proportion of very small fibers (less than 3 mu). By 10 months of age, biopsy of the vastus was virtually normal. The inferior oblique muscle was replaced by fibrous tissue containing a few remaining degenerating fibers. The child was normal at 2 years of age except for mild facial weakness and ophthalmoplegia. This syndrome may be the result of a reversible intrauterine process.
...
PMID:Neonatal ophthalmoplegia with microfibers: a reversible myopathy? 56 12

The case of a 16-year-old boy with progressive external ophthalmoplegia ("Ophthalmoplegia plus") is reported. Clinical symptoms consisted of complete external ophthalmoplegia, ptosis, short stature, atrophy and weakness of skeletal muscles, and elevated csf protein. Abnormal mitochondria were found by electron microscopy in scattered atrophic fibres of the muscle biopsy. The syndrome and it's relevance for paediatric differential diagnosis is discussed.
...
PMID:[Progressive External Ophthalmoplegia (authors transl)]. 56 96

Although a neuromuscular syndrome has been induced experimentally by vitamin E deficiency, a human syndrome has not yet been documented. This report describes a 7-year-old boy with severe malabsorption since birth who presented with progressive external ophthalmoplegia, proximal muscle weakness, peripheral neuropathy, hyporeflexia, and bilateral Babinski signs. Abnormalities on neurologic examination included elevated creatine phosphokinase and aldolase, slowed distal sensory latencies, type II muscle fiber atrophy, and a plasma vitamin E level of 8 microgram per deciliter (normal, 550-1500 microgram per deciliter). Treatment with oral water-solubilized vitamin E (400 IU daily; greater than 50 times the normal daily intake) was begun, with repeat laboratory studies at 3-month intervals. Over a 16-month period, plasma vitamin E content gradually increased to 350 microgram per deciliter, associated with declining sarcoplasmic enzyme activities and clinical improvement.
...
PMID:Reversibility of human myopathy caused by vitamin E deficiency. 57 10

The effect of head position on conjugate horizontal gaze was studied in healthy adults, in patients with multiple sclerosis without eye movement signs, and in patients with downbeat nystagmus indicative of low brain stem lesions. Displacements of gaze from primary position to 30 degrees left and right were recorded using the electro-oculogram, with the head in the primary position, and turned voluntarily to the left and right (in yaw). The quality of eye movements was noted and peak velocities of saccades were measured. The head turning test trebled the incidence of abnormal eye movements found in the multiple sclerosis patients and increased it by tenfold in the patients with downbeat nystagmus. Disorders of eye movement were also found in approximately 20--30% of healthy subjects tested. Weakness of abduction was the most common eye movement defect and appeared to be posterior internuclear ophthalmoplegia. A hypothesis is made which unifies the theoretical explanations of anterior and posterior internuclear ophthalmoplegia. The most likely cause of the disorders of eye movement observed is vertebrobasilar ischaemia induced by stretching and compression of the vertebral arteries during eccentric head posture.
...
PMID:Eccentric head positions reveal disorders of conjugate eye movement. 59 79

Two patients aged 17 and 25 years with Kearns syndrome are described. This condition is characterized by the triad of chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia, pigmentary degeneration of of the retina and cardiac conduction defects. A review of the literature reveals frequent association with other symptoms, mainly cerebellar ataxia, neurosensory hearing loss, small stature, muscle weakness, mental retardation or dementia and endocrine disturbances. In skeletal and extraocular muscle biopsies, abnormalities of mitochondria, at present of unknown significance, have been found. CSF protein is almost always increased. The etiology of this multisystem disorder remains obscure. The 58 published cases have been sporadic, with no evidence of hereditary transmission. The prognosis seems mainly to depend on the progressive cardiac conduction defects, since several patients have already died in the second or third decade due to heart block. Patients with progressive external ophthalmoplegia should be investigated for Kearns syndrome. If appropriate, implantation of a cardiac pacemaker should be considered.
...
PMID:[Kearns syndrome. Progressive external ophthalmoplegia, retinal pigment degeneration and heart conduction disorders]. 59 31


1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>