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

A study of chronic proximal spinal muscular atrophy was undertaken with the main aim of obtaining empirical recurrence risks for genetic counselling. Thirty-eight patients and their families were studied. Of these, 33 had similar clinical features and onset of disease in infancy or childhood. A division of these 33 patients by onset before or after 2 years (which was equivalent to whether or not they ever walked normally) gave recurrence risks for sibs which were higher with early onset. Among the sibs of patients with onset before 2 years, the incidence of disease was 1 in 5, due to most patients having an autosomal recessive disorder. A few patients, however, were thought to represent new dominant mutations. Among the families of index patients with onset after 2 years, the incidence of disease in sibs was only 1 in 15, but among their children it as 1 in 8. Both autosomal recessive and autosomal dominant forms therefore occurred in this age group, but it was concluded that nearly half the patients with onset after 2 had non-genetic motor neuron disease. The autosomal recessive form of chronic spinal muscular atrophy generally had onset before 2 years, but occasionally after 2. About a third of the patients never walked, and about half were in wheelchairs by age 10. No genetic heterogeneity within this form was demonstrated. Three remaining patients had distinctive clinical features associated with their proximal weakness, external ophthalmoplegia in one, dysarthria in another, and joint contractures in a third. Only 2 patients had onset in adult life, one of a probable recessive disorder and the other a probable dominant disorder.
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PMID:A clinical and genetic study of chronic proximal spinal muscular atrophy. 118 87

The clinical features and investigative findings of 50 patients with chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia (CPEO) were analysed. The group was found to be clinically, genetically and histologically heterogeneous. With the possible exception of patients with "ophthalmoplegia plus," namely those who in addition to muscular weakness had evidence of central and/or peripheral nervous system abnormality, there was no apparent justification for separating out from among the group patients' subgroups which were distinctive enough to be recognized as syndromes. CPEO therefore seems to represent a number of different degenerative disorders whose common denominator is ophthalmoplegia and for which there are to date no adequate criteria for further classification.
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PMID:Chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia. 118 88

We studied 4 siblings (3 men and 1 woman), ages 22 to 43 years, with congenital ptosis, external ophthalmoplegia, proximal muscle weakness and fatigability unresponsive to acetylcholinesterase (AChE) inhibitors. Repetitive nerve stimulation showed a significant compound muscle action potential (CMAP) area decrement at 2 or 3 Hz. Nerve conduction studies and concentric needle electromyography were normal, and repetitive CMAPs to single nerve stimulation were not observed. Voluntary single fiber electromyography (SFEMG) showed increased jitter and blocking. Assessment of individual end-plates using SFEMG with intramuscular axonal microstimulation showed no uniform relationship between jitter and the rate of stimulation, consistent with a postsynaptic defect of neuromuscular transmission. Edrophonium eliminated the decremental response to repetitive nerve stimulation, but caused no significant clinical improvement, suggesting an additional mechanism for weakness in these patients.
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PMID:A congenital myasthenic syndrome refractory to acetylcholinesterase inhibitors. 131 43

To characterize muscle pathology in 3 cases affected by ocular myopathy with eyelid ptosis and upper facial weakness, but without ophthalmoplegia, light microscopy and ultrastructural study were performed on levator palpebrae, orbicularis oculi and deltoid muscle biopsies. While levator palpebrae proved uninformative because of the massive fibrous degeneration of muscle, orbicularis oculi biopsies showed histochemical and ultrastructural alterations indicating a mitochondrial involvement, resembling that reported in ocular mitochondrial myopathies (OMM). On the other hand very mild aspecific findings were observed in deltoid. We suggest that these cases with ocular myopathy and without ophthalmoplegia should be considered a partial or initial form of OMM.
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PMID:Ocular myopathy without ophthalmoplegia can be a form of mitochondrial myopathy. 132 11

Multiple deletions of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) have recently been described in a number of patients with neurological disorders. Most cases have been clinically characterized by autosomal dominant inheritance, adult onset, and a slowly progressive course with external ophthalmoplegia and muscle weakness. Some patients have had evidence of central or peripheral nervous system involvement or episodes of myoglobinuria. Muscle biopsy findings include ragged-red fibres (RRF), muscle fibres with absent COX-activity and abundant abnormal mitochondria with paracrystalline inclusions. Biochemically, a generalized reduction in the activities of mtDNA-encoded enzymes is observed in skeletal muscle. Southern blotting or PCR analysis reveal multiple populations of deleted mtDNA. The deletions occur at multiple sites between the replication initiation sites, involving a large portion of mtDNA, and most deletions seem to be flanked by direct sequence repeats, shown to be "hot spots" in the case of single large deletions. Apparently, a defect in a nuclear gene results in multiple deletions of mtDNA. Both clinical, genetic and molecular genetic observations indicate heterogeneity of this new disease category, apparently based on a disturbance in the "cross-talk" between the nuclear and the mitochondrial genomes.
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PMID:Disorders associated with multiple deletions of mitochondrial DNA. 134 54

Myoclonus epilepsy with ragged-red fibers (MERRF) has been shown to be associated with a specific point mutation at the nucleotide 8344 in the tRNA(Lys) gene of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). We screened 6 patients with clinically diagnosed MERRF and 1 patient with ocular myopathy for point mutations in the tRNA(Lys) gene, using single strand conformation polymorphism (SSCP) analysis, which can detect even a 1-basepair difference between 2 DNA sequences. Using SSCP and consequent DNA sequencing, we identified the known MERRF mutation in 4 out of 6 MERRF patients, as well as in 1 patient with a new clinical phenotype associated with this mutation: progressive external ophthalmoplegia, muscle weakness and a lipoma, but no myoclonus or epilepsy. Two of the patients with clinical MERRF had neither the MERRF-mutation nor any other mutations in the tRNA(Lys) gene. Using SSCP analysis, we also detected a new polymorphism in 1 patient. Thus, SSCP analysis can be applied to search effectively and rapidly for point mutations or polymorphisms in mitochondrial DNA.
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PMID:Use of single strand conformation polymorphism analysis to detect point mutations in human mitochondrial DNA. 143 90

Two sisters in the first year of life presented with a proximal tubulopathy of unknown etiology. They subsequently developed a pluritissular disorder including diabetes mellitus, skin abnormalities, mitochondrial myopathy with ragged-red fibers, and cerebellar ataxia. Their mother had ptosis, ophthalmoplegia, and muscle weakness. Analysis of the mitochondrial respiratory chain showed a complex III deficiency in both skeletal muscle and lymphocytes of the second girl. Southern blot analysis provided evidence for a heteroplasmic partial duplication of the mtDNA (26 kb), involving one full-length and one partly deleted mitochondrial genome and with one single abnormal junction between the genes for ATPase 6 and cytochrome b. Using PCR amplification of lymphocyte DNA, we were able to detect minute amounts of duplicated molecules in the mother, which provided evidence for maternal inheritance of the partial duplication. While maternal transmission of point mutations have been reported in Leber disease, retinitis pigmentosa, and MERRF disease, this observation is, to our knowledge, the first example of a maternally inherited duplication of the mitochondrial genome in man.
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PMID:Maternally inherited duplication of the mitochondrial genome in a syndrome of proximal tubulopathy, diabetes mellitus, and cerebellar ataxia. 153 Nov 67

Patients (n = 41) with isolated weakness of the eyelids or extraocular muscles, who had been referred for single fiber electromyography (SFEMG), were followed up after 4 to 24 months, At follow-up the patients were classified as "definite ocular myasthenia gravis" (MG), "definite other diagnosis," or "no definite diagnosis" on the basis of the completed investigations and subsequent course. The original SFEMG findings in the frontalis muscle were then reviewed. The specificity and sensitivity of SFEMG for "definite ocular MG" could be maximized by using as criteria for abnormality greater than 8/20 pairs with jitter greater than 45 microseconds, or a mean jitter of 20 pairs of greater than 50 microseconds. Patients with abnormal SFEMG according to these criteria have MG, and are likely to require treatment in the immediate future. Patients who have normal SFEMG according to these criteria (and no other demonstrated disorder) may have MG, but it is so mild that they are unlikely to require treatment. Two patients whose final diagnosis was progressive external ophthalmoplegia had normal SFEMG according to these criteria.
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PMID:Single fiber EMG in the frontalis muscle in ocular myasthenia: specificity and sensitivity. 155 90

Two boys with symptoms of food borne botulism are presented. Confirmation of diagnosis relied on proof of toxin in the serum of both patients by the so called mouse neutralization test, whereas the EMG showed negative results. Both boys recovered fully without administration of equine antitoxin. Differential diagnosis and treatment of botulism are discussed. Signs of internal and external ophthalmoplegia, dry mouth, descending paralysis, obstipation with weakness, absence of fever and lucid sensorium as cardinal symptoms should always bring botulism to mind.
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PMID:[Food-borne botulism in 2 brothers]. 156 Sep 92

We report a new case of neuromuscular block overlap between Myasthenia Gravis and Eaton-Lambert syndrome. A 64-year-old man with a 4-months history of gait disturbance was admitted for ophthalmoplegia worsening during exercise and decreasing at rest. Clinical examination after exercise, revealed limbs weakness and areflexia, palsy of the left eye abduction and a left ptosis. The level of anti-acetylcholin-receptor antibodies was high. Electrophysiological explorations revealed a decrement at 3 Hz and a increment at 30 Hz, with a reduction in amplitude of the initial motor potential. This patient improved under a combination of guanidine and anticholinesterase drugs. From this case and 9 previously reported cases, we propose 4 criteria for the diagnosis of such neuromuscular blocks: 1) exercising symptoms and signs, including areflexia, 2) presence of anti-acetylcholin-receptor antibodies, 3) reduction of the amplitude of the initial motor potential, with a decrement at 3 Hz, and an increment at 30 Hz, and 4) clinical and electrophysiological improvement under guanidine and anticholinesterasic drugs therapy.
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PMID:[Mixed pre- and postsynaptic neuromuscular block]. 160 33


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