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)

Conventional electromyography (EMG) and single fiber EMG (SFEMG) were performed in a 64-year-old diabetic woman with mild type B botulism. The main clinical signs were autonomic dysfunction and cranial nerves paresis. Conventional EMG was normal, except for small changes that were consistent with mild mixed peripheral neuropathy in the lower limbs and were related to diabetes. Repetitive stimulation and results of single stimulus before and after full effort were normal. SFEMG showed increased jitter and impulse blocking in clinically normal muscles. The jitter was frequency dependent and improved at a higher innervation rate. Impulse blocking in potentials with only slightly increased jitter was found. The follow-up showed improvement of the jitter in agreement with clinical recovery. Jitter abnormalities were recorded after 16 weeks, when clinical signs of botulism had been reversed to normal. Motor unit fiber density increased progressively, and on examination at 8 weeks, some potentials showed very high jitter values. Both findings might suggest new endplate formation, perhaps due to ultraterminal sprouting development.
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PMID:Electrophysiologic study in benign human botulism type B. 299 5

Disulfiram is known to produce toxic encephalopathy and peripheral neuropathy. The case of a 37-year-old alcoholic who attempted to commit suicide by taking 22.5 g disulfiram is described. During the first 6 days after the intoxication he was stuporous and had cerebellar ataxia and dysarthric speech. Then he became comatose, and as he recovered from coma, he showed peripheral neuropathy including diplegia faciei and severe tetraparesis. Denervation potentials were detected in both facial muscles and distal muscles of the upper and lower limbs, while conduction velocity was normal. Axonal degeneration was verified by sural nerve biopsy. In addition neurofilamentous axonopathy was documented. The recovery from his paresis lasted 2 years.
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PMID:[Polyneuropathy caused by disulfiram poisoning]. 686 Jan 22

The effects of high toxic doses of the anticancer drugs, etoposide and its phosphate derivative, BMY-40481, on the nervous system of female CD-1 mice were examined by light microscopy (LM) and transmission electron microscopy. Mice were euthanatized 4 wk following a single iv injection of either 0, 50, 100, or 150 mg/kg of BMY-40481 or 44 or 88 mg/kg of etoposide. Mice treated with 100 or 150 mg/kg of BMY-40481 or 88 mg/kg of etoposide had clinical symptomology of progressive ataxia, impaired righting reflex, and splaying and paresis of fore- and hindlimbs at day 8. Similar, dose-related LM changes were observed with both drugs at all doses and consisted of degeneration of dorsal root ganglion cells and axonal degeneration of their distal and proximal processes in peripheral nerves, dorsal spinal roots, and dorsal funiculi of spinal cord. Axonal degeneration was characterized by LM as shrinkage, swelling, and fragmentation of axon cylinders accompanied by secondary demyelination. Degenerative changes in ganglion cell bodies included eccentric nuclei, cytoplasmic vacuolation, central chromatolysis, and peripheral clumping of Nissl's bodies. Ultrastructurally, ganglion cell bodies had focally extensive dilation of the rough endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondrial swelling, increased numbers of phagolysosomes and prominent aggregations of microfilaments (globular filamentous bodies). Ultrastructural axonal changes occurred primarily in large, myelinated fibers and consisted of axonal swelling or loss, thinning of myelin sheaths, and a decrease in the number of organelles. This is the first report of etoposide-related sensory neuropathy in laboratory rats, a model that my be useful for the study of etoposide-related peripheral neuropathy in humans.
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PMID:Etoposide- and BMY-40481-induced sensory neuropathy in mice. 789 82

Combined paresis of all three ocular motor nerves is a rare ocular manifestation in diabetic patients. We present a case of a 73-year-old female with complete ophthalmoplegia. There was no evidence of peripheral neuropathy. Diagnostic angiography showed atherosclerotic stenosis in the cavernous segment of left internal carotid artery. The ophthalmoplegia had a self-limited course despite the severe vascular lesions.
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PMID:Complete ophthalmoplegia in a hypertensive diabetic patient. 818 Dec 42

We have generated mice transgenic for a human MDR3 mini-gene, under control of a hamster vimentin promoter. Expression of the MDR3 transgene was found in mesenchymal tissues, peripheral nerves, and the eye lens. These MDR3 transgenic mice have a slowed motor nerve conduction and dysmyelination of their peripheral nerves. An extensive dysmyelination in some transgenic strains results in a severe peripheral neuropathy with paresis of the hind legs. How expression of the MDR3 transgene causes these abnormalities is unknown. The MDR3 gene encodes a large glycosylated plasma membrane protein with multiple transmembrane spanning domains, which are involved in the translocation of the phospholipid phosphatidylcholine through the hepatocyte canalicular membrane. The ability of the MDR3 P-glycoprotein to alter phsopholipid distribution in the plasma membrane of Schwann cells may cause the damage. It is also possible, however, that the presence of a large glycoprotein in the cell membrane may be sufficient to severely disturb myelination of peripheral nerves.
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PMID:Peripheral neuropathy in mice transgenic for a human MDR3 P-glycoprotein mini-gene. 881 17

We report a 69-year-old woman of Mexican origin with a 6-year history of progressive paresis, mild peripheral neuropathy, and recent onset of fluctuating mental status. Head and spinal MRI revealed contrast enhancing thickened meninges which on biopsy disclosed amyloid deposition. Immunohistochemistry identified the amyloid as transthyretin (TTR), and polymerase chain reaction/restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis of blood revealed a Val30Met mutation in one of her TTR genes. This mutation causes familial (hereditary) amyloidotic polyneuropathy of the Portuguese type (FAP 1). However, unlike FAP 1, in which peripheral neuropathy is a dominant feature, our patient's clinical manifestations, which included communicating hydrocephalus and myelopathy, were more suggestive of familial oculoleptomeningeal amyloidosis (FOLMA). In summary, the clinical presentation of TTR Met 30 mutation is more varied than previously suspected, and leptomeningeal amyloidosis should be considered in the differential diagnosis of obscure conditions involving meninges.
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PMID:Massive leptomeningeal amyloidosis associated with a Val30Met transthyretin gene. 885 32

We report on a 27-year-old Caucasian female with congenital cataract and mental retardation complaining of progressive paresis and atrophy of the lower legs beginning at the age of 16 years followed by atrophy of the thighs and small hand muscles. Motor and sensory conduction velocities (CV) of the upper and lower limbs were reduced (distal peroneal nerve: 21 m/s; median nerve: motor CV: 28 m/s, sensory CV 30 m/s). In the sural nerve biopsy specimens there were unique endoneurial cells immunoreactive for antibodies against the epithelial membrane antigen with multiple surface indentations and projections considered to be dysplastic perineurial cells. To the best of our knowledge these cells have not been reported in any other type of human peripheral neuropathy. The present case with the above clinical and structural findings appears to represent a new, complex, demyelinating type of a sporadic or possibly recessively inherited motor and sensory neuropathy.
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PMID:Demyelinating sensorimotor neuropathy with congenital cataract, mental retardation, and unique, dysplastic perineurial cells within the endoneurium. 1050 49

Two cases are described, one with a multifocal cranial and limb neuropathy of adult onset associated with optic neuropathy, and the other with a diffuse demyelinating neuropathy characterized by congenital cataract, mental retardation and progressive lower limb paresis with an onset in childhood. Extensive investigation in both failed to establish the causation. No family history of similar disorder was obtained in either case. Nerve biopsy in both showed similar perineurial abnormalities, the endoneurium being compartmentalized by hypertrophic perineurial cells that exhibited dysplastic features. The appearances resemble those described in a previously reported case of multifocal neuropathy and probably represent an unusual but non-specific response to a peripheral neuropathy.
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PMID:Hypertrophic perineurial dysplasia in multifocal and generalized peripheral neuropathies. 1112 20

Carbon monoxide (CO) has the toxic effects of tissue hypoxia and produces various systemic and neurological complications. The main clinical manifestations of acute CO poisoning consist of symptoms caused by alterations of the cardiovascular system such as initial tachycardia and hypertension, and central nervous system symptoms such as headache, dizziness, paresis, convulsion and unconsciousness. CO poisoning also produces myocardial ischemia, atrial fibrillation, pneumonia, pulmonary edema, erythrocytosis, leucocytosis, hyperglycemia, muscle necrosis, acute renal failure, skin lesion, and changes in perception of the visual and auditory systems. Of considerable clinical interest, severe neurological manifestations may occur days or weeks after acute CO poisoning. Delayed sequelae of CO poisoning are not rare, usually occur in middle or older, and are clinically characterized by symptom triad of mental deterioration, urinary incontinence, and gait disturbance. Occasionally, movement disorders, particularly parkinsonism, are observed. In addition, peripheral neuropathy following CO poisoning usually occurs in young adults.
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PMID:Carbon monoxide poisoning: systemic manifestations and complications. 1141 Jun 84

Nine Gelbvieh calves originating in four herds and clinically presenting with rear limb ataxia/paresis had histopathologically confirmed peripheral neuropathy and a proliferative glomerulopathy. Degenerative lesions were severe in peripheral nerves, dorsal and ventral spinal nerve roots, and less marked in dorsal fasciculi of the spinal cord. Cell bodies of spinal ganglia were minimally diseased; ventral horn neurons occasionally had central chromatolysis and nuclear displacement. Glomerular lesions ranged from mild mesangial hypercellularity to glomerulosclerosis. Pedigree analysis of affected animals from one herd indicated a strong familial relationship and probable hereditary basis for the syndrome.
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PMID:A familial peripheral neuropathy and glomerulopathy in Gelbvieh calves. 1262 14


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