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Query: UMLS:C0029089 (ophthalmoplegia)
3,338 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Seven patients with histologically proven mitochondrial myopathy with ophthalmoplegia (OMM), 6 of them nondiabetic, 1 affected by diabetes mellitus (DM), were submitted to a study of glucose tolerance and of insulin receptors on peripheral mononuclear cells and cultured skin fibroblasts. The diabetic patient, who had the typical features of the Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS) and deleted muscle mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) presented a low insulin secretion rate under physiological stimuli (intravenous glucose and glucagon) whereas the insulin receptor parameters were found normal. The other patients showed a normal glucose tolerance and normal insulin receptors. Our data support the hypothesis that insulin receptors are not involved in the pathogenesis of DM associated with mitochondrial encephalomyopathies, in contrast to other neuromuscular inherited disorders. The clinical and biological features of DM presented by our KSS patient show normal insulin receptor parameters in spite of a defective insulin secretion, possibly depending on mitochondrial dysfunction.
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PMID:Normal insulin receptors in mitochondrial myopathies with ophthalmoplegia. 261 64

The mitochondrial myopathies give rise to a diverse group of clinical syndromes, variably involving skeletal muscle and the central nervous system, with onset in childhood or adult life. In vitro studies of mitochondrial metabolism have identified a variety of functional defects of the respiratory chain, predominantly affecting complex I or complex III in adults, and complex IV in children. The increased incidence of maternal, as opposed to paternal, transmission in familial mitochondrial myopathy has led to the suggestion that these disorders may be caused by mutations of mitochondrial (mt) DNA. This hypothesis is derived from observations that mtDNA encodes subunits of the respiratory chain proteins and is exclusively maternally transmitted. Analysis of muscle mtDNA shows two populations, one normal and the other deleted by up to nearly half its length, in about 40% of cases of mitochondrial myopathy. Only a single normal length population of mtDNA is seen in blood from these patients, and in blood and muscle from control subjects. Patients with muscle mtDNA deletions reported to date have all presented with progressive external ophthalmoplegia, including some with the Kearns-Sayre syndrome. They rarely have affected relatives. Deletions are not detected in cases of proximal myopathy alone, or those with adult onset syndromes predominantly affecting the central nervous system. There is no clear correlation between the deleted coding regions and the biochemical defects; even patients with seemingly identical muscle mtDNA deletions may be clinically and biochemically heterogeneous.
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PMID:Mitochondrial myopathies. 268 27

Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS) and progressive external ophthalmoplegia (PEO) are related neuromuscular disorders characterized by ocular myopathy and ophthalmoplegia. Almost all patients with KSS and about half with PEO harbor large deletions in their mitochondrial genomes. The deletions differ in both size and location, except for one, 5 kilobases long, that is found in more than one-third of all patients examined. This common deletion was found to be flanked by a perfect 13-base pair direct repeat in the normal mitochondrial genome. This result suggests that homologous recombination deleting large regions of intervening mitochondrial DNA, which previously had been observed only in lower eukaryotes and plants, operates in mammalian mitochondrial genomes as well, and is at least one cause of the deletions found in these two related mitochondrial myopathies.
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PMID:A direct repeat is a hotspot for large-scale deletion of human mitochondrial DNA. 271 Nov 84

We determined the nucleotide sequences of junctional regions associated with large deletions of mitochondrial DNA found in four unrelated individuals with a phenotype of chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia. In each patient, the deletion breakpoint occurred within a directly repeated sequence of 13-18 base pairs, present in different regions of the normal mitochondrial genome-separated by 4.5-7.7 kilobases. In two patients, the deletions were identical. When all four repeated sequences are compared, a consensus sequence of 11 nucleotides emerges, similar to putative recombination signals, suggesting the involvement of a recombinational event. Partially deleted and normal mitochondrial DNAs were found in all tissues examined, but in very different proportions, indicating that these mutations originated before the primary cell layers diverged.
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PMID:Directly repeated sequences associated with pathogenic mitochondrial DNA deletions. 281 77

Skeletal muscles from a mother and her daughter both with chronic progressive ophthalmoplegia were analyzed. Histological and biochemical analyses of their muscle samples showed typical features of this type of mitochondrial myopathy. Southern blot analysis revealed that, in both patients, there were two species of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA): normal one and partially deleted one. The sizes of the deletion were different; the mutant mtDNAs from the mother and the daughter had about 2.5- and 5-kilobase deletions, respectively. The two mutant mtDNAs shared a common deleted region of 1.2-kilobase. However, both the start and the end of deletion were different between them, implying a novel mode of inheritance. This is the first report that the mutant mtDNA is responsible for the maternal inheritance of a human disease.
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PMID:Maternal inheritance of deleted mitochondrial DNA in a family with mitochondrial myopathy. 284 28

We have examined 138 cases of a disorder previously described in people of Portuguese origin and which has received many names. By computer analysis of 46 different items of a standardized neurological examination carried out in each patient, we have been able to delineate the main components of the clinical presentation, to conclude that the marked variability in clinical expressions does not negate the homogeneity of the disorder, and to describe the natural history of this entity which should be called, for historical reasons, "Machado-Joseph Disease". This hereditary disease has an autosomal dominant pattern of inheritance, presenting as a progressive ataxia with external ophthalmoplegia, and should be classified within the group of "Ataxic multisystem degenerations". When the disease starts before the age of 20, it may present with marked spasticity, of a non progressive nature but often so severe that it can be accompanied by "Gegenhalten" countermovements and dystonic postures but little frank dystonia. There are few true extrapyramidal symptoms except akinesia. When the disease starts after the age of 50, the clinical spectrum is mostly that of an amyotrophic polyneuropathy with fasciculations accompanying the ataxia. For all the other cases the clinical picture is a continuum between these two extremes, the main determinant of the clinical phenotype being the age of onset and a secondary factor, the place of origin of the given kindred. The ataxic and amyotrophic components are clearly progressive with time in contrast to the spasticity component. Although the majority of known cases are of Portuguese origin, this is not obligatory. The next research endeavour should be a search for the chromosomal site of the gene, using molecular biology technology such as those for recombinant DNA.
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PMID:The natural history of Machado-Joseph disease. An analysis of 138 personally examined cases. 650 98

Multiple deletions of mitochondrial DNA have been detected by Southern blotting in the skeletal muscle of a 42-year-old woman with chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia. A PCR method, using several combinations of primers covering the whole mtDNA as well as sequence analysis, disclosed the wide spectrum of these multiple deletions differing in size, location and sequence at the breakpoint junction. Most involved the major region between the two replication origins. However, three deletions affected the minor region and lacked either the light strand origin of replication or the heavy strand promoter. These data suggest an impairment of mtDNA replication leading to illegitimate recombination and extensive damage of mtDNA.
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PMID:Fine mapping of randomly distributed multiple deletions of mitochondrial DNA in a case of chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia. 747 15

Mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy with lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) syndrome is one of the mitochondrial encephalomyopathies that has distinct clinical features including stroke-like episodes with migraine-like headache, nausea, vomiting, encephalopathy and lactic acidosis. We report a 27-year-old woman who presented with partial seizure, stroke-like episodes including hemiparesis, hemianopia and hemihypethesia, sensorineural hearing loss, migraine-like headache, and lactic acidosis. Brain computed tomographic scan showed encephalomalacia in the right parieto-occipital area and recent hypodensity in the left temporoparieto-occipital area with cortical atrophy. Muscle biopsy revealed ragged-red fibers and paracrystaline inclusions in the mitochondria. Genetic study revealed an A to G point mutation at nucleotide position (np) 3243 of mitochondrial DNA. External ophthalmoplegia and ptosis were also found during two exaggerated episodes in this patient. Therefore, the overlapping syndrome of chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia in the MELAS syndrome is considered in this case. Furthermore, we also found carnitine deficiency in this patient and she was responsive well to steroid therapy. Muscle biopsy also revealed excessive lipid droplets deposits. Therefore, the carnitine deficiency may occur in MELAS syndrome with the A to G point mutation at np 3243. We recommend the steroid or carnitine supplement therapy be applied to the MELAS syndrome with carnitine deficiency.
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PMID:CPEO and carnitine deficiency overlapping in MELAS syndrome. 748 81

Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) deletions have been found in the majority of patients with chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia and Kearns-Sayre syndrome. A large number of different mtDNA deletions have been identified. They generally spare the two origins of replication and are frequently flanked by direct or indirect repeats. We have found a 3.1-kb deletion of mtDNA in a patient with Kearns-Sayre syndrome that has some unusual features. First, it encompasses nucleotides 11259 to 14368, a localization that was not described before. Second, the deletion is not flanked by direct or indirect repeats, supporting the view that homologous recombination and slip-replication do not account for all mtDNA deletions.
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PMID:3.1-kb deletion of mitochondrial DNA in a patient with Kearns-Sayre syndrome. 748 86

The evaluation of the severity of progressive external ophthalmoplegia (PEO) with ragged-red fibers in muscle, at the onset of the disease, when PEO is most often the only presenting symptom, is a difficult problem in neurological practice. In order to address that issue, we have performed a comparative analysis of the clinical, morphological and molecular characteristics of 43 patients affected with that form of ocular myopathy. Quantification of mitochondrial accumulation was performed with an image analysis application on muscle sections stained with succinate dehydrogenase histochemical reaction. The proportion of muscle fibres appearing as cytochrome c oxidase deficient was used as an index of the muscle-energy defect. Muscle mitochondrial DNA deletions were detected, localized and quantitated by Southern blot analysis. Point mutations were screened in five transfer RNA genes in the mtDNA (tRNA(Leucine (UUR)), tRNA(Lysine), tRNA(Glutamine), tRNA(Isoleucine) and tRNA(Formylmethionine)) by a denaturing gradient gel electrophoresis technique. This investigation confirmed the high frequency of mtDNA deletions or point mutations in PEO. At the onset of the disease, no clinical, morphological or molecular features could predict whether PEO would remain isolated or become part of a more severe multisystem disease. However, patients with mtDNA deletions were characterized by more severe ophthalmoplegia of earlier onset. Their muscle alterations were roughly parallel in severity to the proportion of deleted mtDNA molecules in muscle. Patients with a multitissular disease and mtDNA deletions were always sporadic cases and their clinical presentation was, most often, closely related to Kearns Sayre syndrome.
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PMID:Chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia with ragged-red fibers: clinical, morphological and genetic investigations in 43 patients. 749 74


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