Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0031117 (peripheral neuropathy)
10,577 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Certain aspects of the clinical syndrome of dementia, cerebral atrophy, predominantly sensory neuropathy, and vacuolar myelopathy in AIDS resemble those seen in vitamin B12 deficiency. Pathologically, there are similarities not only in the changes in the spinal cord, but also in the brain and peripheral nerves. The pathogenesis of vacuolar myelopathy may be secondary to a combination of immune mediated myelin and oligodendrocyte injury, and simultaneous impairment of repair mechanisms due to a deficiency of S-adenosylmethionine (SAM). Products derived from macrophages may interfere directly with the methyl transfer cycle through the generation of reactive oxygen intermediates and reactions involving nitric oxide and peroxynitrite which may limit the supply of methionine for conversion to SAM, both by direct interaction as well as through inhibition of methionine synthase. Macrophage activation with secretion of cytokines and other biologically reactive substances within the nervous system is sustained in the late stages of HIV infection by the general effects of immune depletion, including loss of T cells (with concomitant reduction of macrophage regulatory molecules) and recurrent opportunistic infections, and may be further augmented by the local presence of the virus itself (or its surface glycoprotein gp120). This would account for the common, but not exclusive, occurrence of vacuolar myelopathy in AIDS. The ability of the virus and its products to stimulate macrophage and microglial activation may also explain the association between severity of vacuolar myelopathy and the presence of HIV encephalitis. A similar mechanism may underlie the pathogenesis of dementia, cerebral atrophy, and peripheral neuropathy. Local factors or differential susceptibility between the central and peripheral nervous system may determine whether myelinotoxic or neurotoxic processes predominate; the prominence of myelin involvement in the spinal cord, and axonal involvement peripherally may reflect both ends of this range, with the brain manifesting a more equal balance of both processes.
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PMID:Hypothesis on the pathogenesis of vacuolar myelopathy, dementia, and peripheral neuropathy in AIDS. 1020 45

A majority of patients with neurological disorders with chronic exposures to toxigenic molds and mycotoxins has vitamin B12 deficiency that is unrelated to dietary insufficiency. Vitamin B12 is a source of coenzymes, and participates in intracellular recycling of methionine, and in methionine synthase reactions. The biochemical processes that lead to B12 depletion and deficiency are not fully understood. This paper examines and assesses various most likely biochemical reasons that could impede upon the normal intracellular functions of vitamin B12 that lead to neurological manifestations. By biochemical implications and derivations, it is most likely that mycotoxins interrupt the structure and function of vitamin B12 through reactive interference with the normal One-Carbon metabolism leading to the observed clinical neurological manifestations such as nerve damage and, demyelination, degeneration of PNS leading to paralysis, progressive peripheral neuropathy, and spinal degeneration.
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PMID:Biochemical impedance on intracellular functions of vitamin B12 in chronic toxigenic mold exposures. 1798 99

Respiratory failure is a well-documented potential presentation of inherited isolated remethylation disorders (IRDs). It appears to be a combination of both central and peripheral neuropathy and has previously often been considered to herald an irreversible neurological decline. We present three patients, one with methionine synthase (cblG) and two with methyltetrahydrofolate reductase deficiency (MTHFR). One patient with MTHFR presented in infancy, and other patients in later childhood. All three patients required intubation for respiratory failure but in all three, this was totally reversed by the initiation of medical therapy. This consisted of betaine and folinic acid supplementation in all three, methionine in two and cobalamin supplementation in two. The rate of respiratory improvement was variable, though two of the cases were successful extubated within a week of commencement of medical therapy. We document their subsequent clinical, biochemical and electrophysiological progress and review the potential pathological mechanisms underlying respiratory failure in these disorders.
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PMID:Reversal of respiratory failure in both neonatal and late onset isolated remethylation disorders. 2499 12