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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (
ophthalmoplegia
)
3,338
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The autosomal dominant ataxias (ADA) are a diverse group of multisystem, neurodegenerative disorders characterized by mutations at several chromosomal loci (SCA types 1-5, SCA type 7,
DRPLA
). We excluded all the known SCA loci by mutational and linkage analyses is an American family of British origin with ADA and document that an additional ataxia locus must exist. The clinical characteristics and ethnic origin of our family are similar to the British Drew family of Walworth with the SCA type 3 mutation and differ from other families without a known ataxia locus. Individuals in our family and the Drew family initially show signs of ataxia but may develop variable degrees of
ophthalmoplegia
, Parkinsonian features and central demyelination. The phenotypic diversity in families without a known ataxia locus suggests that there may be several other undefined ataxia loci.
...
PMID:Evidence for a new spinocerebellar ataxia locus. 915 38
Spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) are a clinically heterogeneous group of disorders. Current molecular classification corresponds to the order of gene description (SCA1-SCA 25). The prevalence of SCAs is estimated to be 1-4/100,000. Patients exhibit usually a slowly progressive cerebellar syndrome with various combinations of oculomotor disorders, dysarthria, dysmetria/kinetic tremor, and/or ataxic gait. They can present also with pigmentary retinopathy, extrapyramidal movement disorders (parkinsonism, dyskinesias, dystonia, chorea), pyramidal signs, cortical symptoms (seizures, cognitive impairment/behavioral symptoms), peripheral neuropathy. SCAs are also genetically heterogeneous and the clinical diagnosis of subtypes of SCAs is complicated by the salient overlap of the phenotypes between genetic subtypes. The following clinical features have some specific values for predicting a gene defect: slowing of saccades in SCA2,
ophthalmoplegia
in SCA1, SCA2 and SCA3, pigmentary retinopathy in SCA7, spasticity in SCA3, dyskinesias associated with a mutation in the fibroblast growth factor 14 (FGF 14) gene, cognitive impairment/behavioral symptoms in SCA17 and
DRPLA
, seizures in SCA10, SCA17 and
DRPLA
, peripheral neuropathy in SCA1, SCA2, SCA3, SCA4, SCA8, SCA18 and SCA25. Neurophysiological findings are compatible with a dying-back axonopathy and/or a neuronopathy. Three patterns of atrophy can be identified on brain MRI: a pure cerebellar atrophy, a pattern of olivopontocerebellar atrophy, and a pattern of global brain atrophy. A remarkable observation is the presence of dentate nuclei calcifications in SCA20, resulting in a low signal on brain MRI sequences. Several identified mutations correspond to expansions of repeated trinucleotides (CAG repeats in SCA1, SCA2, SCA3, SCA6, SCA7, SCA17 and
DRPLA
, CTG repeats in SCA8). A pentanucleotide repeat expansion (ATTCT) is associated with SCA10. Missense mutations have also been found recently. Anticipation is a main feature of SCAs, due to instability of expanded alleles. Anticipation may be particularly prominent in SCA7. It is estimated that extensive genetic testing leads to the identification of the causative gene in about 60-75 % of cases. Our knowledge of the molecular mechanisms of SCAs is rapidly growing, and the development of relevant animal models of SCAs is bringing hope for effective therapies in human.
...
PMID:The wide spectrum of spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs). 1589 52