Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0030552 (paresis)
5,831 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Myotonic reaction and paresis accompanied by painful muscle contractions limited to the upper limbs, which decrease remarkably in the cold, were observed in a 29 year old man. The histological investigation revealed minimal non-specific signs of myopathy. The biochemical studies of muscular tissue contained a normal amount of myophosphorylase, acid maltase and glycogen. Ischemic work induced normal elevation of venous lactate. The activities of CPK, LDH and SGOT in the blood serum were occasionally increased. The EMG showed typical myotonic bursts and electrical silence during painful muscle contractions. Repetitive high frequency stimulation demonstrated a clear initial increase of the amplitude of action potentials followed by a decrease in the contracted muscle. The father of the patient suffered from dystrophia myotonica. This coincidnece suggests that this myotonic myopathy is a variant of dystrophia myotonica.
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PMID:Myotonic myopathy with painful muscle contractions and decrease of symptoms by cold. 8 Dec 91

In the differential diagnosis of intermittent claudication some rare myopathies have to be considered. The most frequent is phosphorylase deficiency (McArdle's disease). Exercise-induced muscular pain, weakness, contractures and occasionally myoglobinuria are the most prominent clinical signs. Serum creatine phosphokinase, aldolase and lactic dehydrogenase may be elevated after exertion. In the ischemic forearm test there is no rise of serum lactic acid. The enzyme deficiency can be demonstrated by histochemical and biochemical examination of a muscle specimen. Further, but more infrequent, enzymatic disturbances of glycolysis are phosphofructokinase deficiency and phosphohexoisomerase inhibitor, which also yield an abnormal ischemic forearm test and must be demonstrated histochemically and biochemically. Apart from muscular signs, myopathy with lactic acidosis is associated with palpitation, dyspnea and exhaustion, and a disproportionate rise in serum lactic acid level after exertion. Histochemically and electronmicroscopically demonstrable fat accumulation in the muscle can be a sign of a disturbance in lipid metabolism. This type of exercise-induced myopathy has been reported only in a few cases with carnitine-pylmityltransferase deficiency, which has to be demonstrated biochemically. Muscular contractures also exercise-induced but painless and reversible within seconds may be due to deficient uptake of sarcoplasmic calcium in the tubular system. Dyskalemic paralysis causes painless paresis within minutes of hours after exertion, which disappears within hours to a few days. Myopathy with tubular aggregates can be differentiated from other exercise-induced myopathies by morphology. Myotonia combined with painful contractures characterizes myopathia myotonica.
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PMID:[Exercise-induced muscular weakness, myalgia and contractures. I. A clinical review]. 13 80

The study of a family affected with hereditary distal myopathy with onset in early infancy is presented. Complete neurological examination was necessary in several members of the two last generations to discover the existence of the abnormalities of which they were unaware. The propositus was the most affected member of the family iwth distal paresis of the upper and lower extremities and selective paresis of the deltoid muscles. In addition he had kyphoscoliosis, talipes valgus and limitation of mobility of several joints. The onset of the disease was estimated as before the age of 2 when the child started walking. There was no progression of the disease. Clinical examination suggested a myopathic origin of the condition. A sural nerve biopsy was normal. Light-microscopy histochemical studies disclosed a predominance of type I fibres which were at the same time hypotrophic. Subsarcolemmal deposits of mitochondria were present although they were scanty and of normal ultrastructural appearance. In view of the morphological presentation it is postulated that this disease should be classified within the groups of myopathies accompanied by disproportion of fibres and selective atrophy of type I fibres.
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PMID:Hereditary distal myopathy with onset in early infancy. Observation of a family. 68 74

Three pedigrees are described in which 28 living siblings suffered from a benign myopathy. The first symptoms were observed around the fifth year of life. The proximal muscles were more involved than the distal muscles, the extensors more than the flexors. Due to a marked paresis of the extensor digitorum communis muscles 22 patients showed a flexion contracture of the interphalangeal joints of the last four fingers. In addition 20 patients showed a flexion contracture of the elbows and 12 patients had a plantar flexion contracture of the ankles. A high incidence of congenital torticollis was found. The histopathological features were non-specific and remarkably uniform and consisted of a marked variation in muslce fibre diameter and a very marked increase of fatty tissue. Light-microscopy and electronmicroscopy did not show any specific structural changes. There was normal distribution of type I and type II fibres, without type-grouping or preferential atrophy of one of the fibre types. Lobulated type I fibres were found in 6 out of 12 biopsies. Post-mortem study of one case did not show any convincing features of a neurogenic disorder. As no relationship could be found between the siblings of the 3 pedigrees as far back as the beginning of the eighteenth century, this myopathy seemed to be a new nosological entity.
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PMID:Benign myopathy, with autosomal dominant inheritance. A report on three pedigrees. 96 33

A 41 year old man developed a myolysis with myoglobinuria during a period of high fever. The clinical signs were severe myalgia with general muscular weakness without manifest localized paresis. Electromyographically a diffuse generalized floride myopathy was found. Besides the extreme increase of CPK, a myoglobinuria was already macroscopically visible, which caused an acute renal failure. The treatment included corticosteroids and hemodialysis. An illness of several weaks was followed by complete recovery. As other known factors leading to myoglobinuria have been excluded, and the complement fixation reaction for Herpes simplex was more than 1:80, a viral-toxic etiology of this disease might be considered.
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PMID:[Acute myoglobinuria accompanied by renal failure in high febril infection (author's transl)]. 126 94

A necrotizing skeletal myopathy of rear limbs was diagnosed in 17 flocks of commercial turkeys. The mean mortality attributed to the myopathy was 2.29% (range = 0.13-9.7%) over a mean period of 9.6 days (range = 6-14 days). The mean age of the birds at the time of onset was 7.4 weeks (range = 4-10.5 weeks). Clinically, birds experienced an episode of watery droppings and high-pitched crying, followed by rear-limb paresis or paralysis. Creatine kinase and aspartate aminotransferase were markedly elevated in birds with the myopathy. Grossly, a few birds had pale streaking in the muscles of the thighs and legs. Histologically, acute and subacute degeneration was present in myofibers of the legs, abdomen, thighs, back, and tail. The subacute lesion was characterized by marked sarcolemmal cell proliferation. Feed analyses ruled out selenium deficiency and the presence of mycotoxins as etiologies. Monensin was present in approved usage or only slightly elevated levels. A known potentiating antibiotic was being used concurrently with monensin in only one flock.
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PMID:A syndrome in commercial turkeys in California and Oregon characterized by a rear-limb necrotizing skeletal myopathy. 148 64

Selenium toxicosis was diagnosed in feeder pigs on a central Michigan farm. Use of a commercial supplement, found to contain approximately 20 times the intended Se concentration, resulted in a Se concentration of 8.1 mg/kg of the complete feed. This was fed for 34 days during which daily feed consumption decreased approximately 35%, several pigs developed weakness and forelimb paresis, and 1 pig died. The highest serum Se concentration measured was 1,550 ng/ml (normal range, 140 to 190 ng/ml). Normal feed consumption returned when an alternative feed was provided. Mean serum Se concentrations of representative pigs, monitored over the subsequent 26 days, decreased from 905 to 258 ng/ml. Histologic examination of a recovering pig revealed skeletal and cardiac myopathy and bilaterally symmetric malacia of the gray matter of the ventral horns of the spinal cord. During the developing toxicosis, the pigs consumed an estimated 11.4 mg of Se/pig/d.
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PMID:Selenium toxicosis in feeder pigs. 150 Mar 26

The reflexlocomotion acc. to VOJTA is a neurophysiologic facilitation system for the whole CNS and neuromuscular apparatus. It consists of all components, in a reciprocal manner of locomotion: (i) automatic control of posture, (ii) uprighting, (iii) aimed movements. Consequently the indications for this type of kinesiologic facilitation are really extensive. In this article the following complete list of indications is described: CCD (central coordination disorder), CP (cerebral palsy), peripheral paresis, Spina bifida (MMC), Myopathies, congenital malformations, orthopaedic problems, traumatic cross sections, neuromuscular dysfunctions etc. Further the experiences of the treatment in each disease are discussed. Even EMG-detections have shown the effect of the therapy in peripheral and central damage. Therefore a good prognosis for improvement and rehabilitation can be given in a large number of disorders, irrespective of age.
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PMID:VOJTA neurophysiologic therapy. 153 38

We have used automatic decomposition electromyography (ADEMG) to study 41 muscles in 29 patients with well-defined peripheral and central motor disorders. In motor neuron diseases motor unit action potentials (MUAPs) showed increased amplitudes, firing rates and firing variability. Relatively large MUAPs sometimes were not identified by the computer program if they lacked sufficient high-frequency signal content, or were too variable in shape. In myopathies the MUAPs showed reduced amplitudes, durations and turns, and sometimes dramatic increases in firing rates. Also, the mean number of MUAPs per recording site was often increased, indicating excessive recruitment. In polymyositis (the best studied myopathy) the nature and magnitude of the MUAP shape and firing abnormalities were usually similar at different levels of contractile force, suggesting that motor units are affected without regard to recruitment order. In upper motor neuron paresis (multiple sclerosis), the shape properties of the MUAPs were normal, but mean firing rates were reduced, and firing variability increased. These findings confirm many of the traditional criteria for distinguishing neurogenic from myopathic disease electrophysiologically at the level of the individual MUAP. In addition, they demonstrate the potential diagnostic sensitivity of MUAP firing rate measurements for detecting neuromuscular dysfunction, and for differentiating between some cases of central and peripheral paresis, but not for distinguishing peripheral neurogenic from myopathic weakness, since firing rates tend to increase in both. Increased firing rate variability may be a marker of central or peripheral neurogenic weakness.
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PMID:Motor unit firing rates and firing rate variability in the detection of neuromuscular disorders. 247 26

During the second stage of an illness caused by Borrelia burgdorferi, a young woman developed a myopathic syndrome characterised by severe muscular pains, incapacitating weakness of the proximal limb and the neck, as well as the bulbar muscles and elevated serum CK levels. Muscle biopsy revealed a non-inflammatory necrotising myopathy. B. burgdorferi infection was confirmed by a considerable rise of specific IgG antibodies. A course of high dose steroids alleviated the myalgias, but paresis began to improve only after treatment with antibiotics. Our observations confirm that B burgdorferi can cause, through an undertermined mechanism, a necrotising myopathy, in addition to the wide spectrum of already known neurological complications.
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PMID:Myositis during Borrelia burgdorferi infection (Lyme disease). 279 56


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