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 patient is described who has features of Pearson syndrome and who presented in the neonatal period with a hypoplastic anemia. He later developed hepatic, renal, and exocrine pancreatic dysfunction. At the age of 5 years he developed visual impairment, tremor, ataxia, proximal muscle weakness, external ophthalmoplegia, and a pigmentary retinopathy (Kearns-Sayre syndrome). Muscle biopsy confirmed the diagnosis of mitochondrial myopathy. Analysis of mtDNA from leukocytes and muscle showed mtDNA heteroplasmy in both tissues, with one population of mtDNA deleted by 4.9 kb. The deleted region was bridged by a 13-nucleotide sequence occurring as a direct repeat in normal mtDNA. Both Pearson syndrome and Kearns-Sayre syndrome have been noted to be associated with deletions of mtDNA; they have not previously been described in the same patient. These observations indicate that the two disorders have the same molecular basis; the different phenotypes are probably determined by the initial proportion of deleted mtDNAs and modified by selection against them in different tissues.
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PMID:Pearson syndrome and mitochondrial encephalomyopathy in a patient with a deletion of mtDNA. 198 62

The case of a patient showing bilateral ophthalmoplegia with proximal limb weakness, severe dysphagia and short stature, without family history, is described. The diagnosis of Kearns-Sayre syndrome was excluded because of the absence of pigmentary retinopathy and of all other common manifestations except short stature. The analysis of mitochondrial DNA of the patient's muscle revealed a deleted form accounting for 65% of the total mitochondrial DNA. The deletion, undetectable in the mitochondrial DNA of peripheral blood leukocytes, was apparently indistinguishable from that already described by others in a far more severe form of classic Kearns-Sayre syndrome.
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PMID:Mitochondrial DNA deletion in oculoskeletal myopathy. 204 31

We report acute complete external ophthalmoplegia and severe myopathy in a patient treated with high doses of IV methylprednisolone and pancuronium. Awareness of this rare syndrome in a common clinical setting can lead to prompt recognition and avoid confusion with other causes of acute weakness and ophthalmoparesis.
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PMID:Complete ophthalmoplegia as a complication of acute corticosteroid- and pancuronium-associated myopathy. 156 61

Among 189 consecutive cases with neuromyopathies, abnormalities of mitochondria in the muscles were seen in 5 cases. Ragged rad fibers (Rrf) were found with muscle biopsy with the use of staining of Gomory Trichrome. The ultrastructural abnormalities as revealed under the electron microscope in the mitochondria were as follows: 1. the mitochondria contained a lot of paracrystalline inclusion; 2. they were composed of lamellae; and 3., the mitochondria also showed dense spherical inclusions with abundant glycogen-rich sarcoplasm. The clinical manifestations of these patients consisted of: 1. muscular atrophy of various degrees. 2. muscular weakness of the proximal parts of the limbs, and 3. ptosis and ophthalmoplegia (in three cases). Three of the patients were treated with coenzyme Q10 with improvement of some of the symptoms and signs.
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PMID:[A clinical, histochemical and ultrastructural study of mitochondrial myopathy]. 217 86

An 11-month-old female infant with mild asphyxia at birth had severe generalized muscle hypotonia and weakness, predominantly in the neck flexors, a high-arched palate and a funnel chest from early infancy. Her facial muscles were also markedly involved. In addition, she showed striking non-progressive, complete external ophthalmoplegia and mild ptosis. A muscle biopsy specimen showed non-specific myopathic changes, including mild variation in fiber size, mild type 1 fiber predominance, type 2B fiber deficiency and slightly increased acid phosphatase activity. Complete ophthalmoplegia may thus be seen not only in myotubular myopathy but also in various forms of congenital non-progressive myopathy.
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PMID:Complete external ophthalmoplegia in a patient with congenital myopathy without specific features (minimal change myopathy). 224 Apr 64

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.
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PMID:[A new family of Machado-Joseph disease--an abnormal decrease in signal intensity of the putamen in magnetic resonance imaging]. 224 34

Mitochondria are unique among intracellular organelles because they contain their own DNA, which can be transcribed and translated to form proteins. Mitochondrial diseases include myopathies and multisystem disorders. The case of a patient showing bilateral ophthalmoplegia with proximal limb weakness, severe dysphagia and short stature, without family history, is described. The analysis of mitochondrial DNA of the patient muscle revealed a deleted form accounting for 65% of the total mitochondrial DNA. The Southern Blot Analysis of mtDNA allows a rather precise localization of deletions giving new insights in the pathogenesis of mitochondrial myopathies and representing a new precious diagnostic tool in these diseases.
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PMID:[Mitochondrial DNA deletion in a case of progressive ophthalmoplegia]. 227 55

The site of lesions responsible for horizontal gaze palsy and various types of internuclear ophthalmoplegia (INO) was established by identifying the common areas where the abnormal MRI signals from patients with a given ocular-motor disorder overlapped. Patients with unilateral gaze palsy had lesions in the paramedian area of the pons, including the abducens nucleus, the lateral part of the nucleus reticularis pontis caudalis and the nucleus reticularis pontis oralis. Patients with abducens nucleus lesions showed additional clinical signs of lateral rectus weakness. Lesions responsible for bilateral gaze palsy involved the pontine tegmental raphe. Since this region contains the saccadic omnipause neurons, this finding suggests that damage to omnipause cells produces slowing of saccades rather than opsoclonus, as previously proposed. All INOs, regardless of the presence of impaired abduction or convergence, had similar MRI appearances. Frequently the lesions in patients with INO, were not confined to the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF) but also involved neighbouring structures at the pontine and mid-brain levels. There was a statistically significant association between the clinical severity of the INO and the presence of abnormal abduction or convergence. The findings suggest that the lesions outside the MLF, which may affect abducens, gaze or convergence pathways, are responsible for the presence of features additional to INO, depending on the magnitude of functional disruption they produce.
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PMID:Abnormalities of horizontal gaze. Clinical, oculographic and magnetic resonance imaging findings. II. Gaze palsy and internuclear ophthalmoplegia. 232 52

A 56 year-old man presented with vertigo and the right sided weakness. Neurological examination revealed a lethargic man with good orientation to three spheres. His neck was supple. He had anisocoria, the right pupil being larger than the left by 1.5 mm with sluggish light reaction bilaterally. He had exotropia of the right eye in primary gaze. The abduction of both eyes were full with terminal horizontal nystagmus. The adduction of both eyes were quite limited in each eye. He had a limited upward gaze with poor convergence. These were interpreted as the syndrome of the medial longitudinal fasciculus (MLF) bilaterally. He had a depressed gag reflex on the right side with tongue deviation to the right. He had a mild weakness of the right side limb and also had the right sided hemihyperesthesia including his face to pain and temperature. Twenty four hours after the onset, the left brachial angiography revealed a complete occlusion of the rostral portion of the basilar artery without visualization of the posterior cerebral and superior cerebellar arteries bilaterally. CT scans three days after the onset revealed a low density area in the mid pons with extension rostrally up to the mesencephalon. Four days later he became quadriplegic with bilateral horizontal gaze palsy. No more internuclear ophthalmoplegia is noted on both sides. The midline location of the MLF in the pons, and the separate blood supplies by different paramedian branches of the basilar artery, form the anatomical explanation for the frequent unilaterality of vascular and bilaterality of demyelinating lesions. Bilateral MLF syndrome has been considered almost pathognomonic of multiple sclerosis.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Bilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia in association with basilar artery occlusive disease]. 235 Sep 28

The Kearns-Sayre syndrome is identified by the triad of progressive external ophthalmoplegia, atypical pigmentary retinopathy, and conduction disturbances. In addition, clinical manifestations may include mental retardation, sensorineural deafness, cerebellar ataxia, and facial and peripheral muscle weakness. Morphologic alterations in skeletal muscle may be characterized by ragged-red fibers. Two patients with Kearns-Sayre syndrome underwent electrophysiological examination. The first patient had a first and second degree AV block (Mobitz type II), right bundle branch block, and left axis deviation. The His-bundle electrogram showed a prolonged HV interval as a hint at an intraventricular conduction delay. The signal-averaging technique and endocardial mapping revealed ventricular after-depolarizations. The second patient had an unsuspicious ECG, recurrent atrial tachycardias, normal atrial and ventricular conduction, and after-depolarizations in endocardial mapping. Two months later he showed a second degree AV block combined with clinical symptoms. Pacemakers were implanted in both patients. Beside disturbances of the conduction system in both patients signs of electrical instability of the myocardium were found. In this way the Kearns-Sayre syndrome may be seen as a form of cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:[Electrophysiologic findings in patients with Kearns-Sayre syndrome--report on 2 cases]. 240 85


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