Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0032285 (pneumonia)
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An autopsied case of autosomal recessive hereditary spastic paraplegia with severe neurogenic muscular atrophy is described herein. This patient, a 16-year-old woman, presented with gait disturbance. She developed progressive spastic paralysis of the upper and lower limbs and mental deterioration. She became bedridden at approximately 40years of age. Dysarthria worsened at 45 years of age. She died of pneumonia at 50 years of age. Her younger sister has shown similar clinical symptoms and became bedridden at 37 years of age. Their parents were second cousins. Autopsy revealed a severely atrophic brain, weighing 720 g. The cerebral cortex was thin, and the white matter was extremely reduced in volume. Microscopically, neuronal loss and variable astrogliosis with diffuse spongy changes were evident at the cerebral cortex, thalamic nuclei, basal ganglia and hippocampus. The remaining neurons were atrophied with heavy deposition of lipofuscin. In the spinal cord, the pyramidal tracts as well as the dorsal spinocerebellar tracts were degenerated. In addition, marked loss of the anterior horn cells was seen. Severe neuronal loss of the nucleus gracilis was also detected. In contrast, only mild degeneration of the ventral spinocerebellar tracts and fasciulus cuneatus in the spinal cord were observed. In the frozen sections of skeletal muscle, severe neurogenic atrophy and fatty infiltration were evident. In addition, several rimmed vacuoles were observed in the atrophic fibers, and cytochrome coxidase-deficient fibers were present in part. Reduced nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide (NADH)-tetrazolium reductase reaction revealed abnormal accumulation of mitochondria around the center of the non-atrophic muscle fibers. It is suggested that an analysis of mitochondrial function of Japanese autosomal recessive hereditary spastic hemiplegia may provide additional information to clarify the pathogenesis.
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PMID:Autopsy case of autosomal recessive hereditary spastic paraplegia with reference to the muscular pathology. 1166 18

We report a 52-year-old Japanese woman who developed dyskinesia, epilepsy, and gait disturbance. She was well until 35 years of age, when she noted the onset of gait disturbance. She also noted abnormal involuntary movements in her limbs. She also noted dysarthria at age 38. A neurologist examined her at age 41. The neurologist found cerebellar ataxia and dyskinesia. The atrophy of the brain stem and the cerebellum was on CT. She started to have generalized convulsion with loss of consciousness. Dementia became apparent at age 40. In October, 1993, she became psychotic in which she behaved violently taking off her clothes shouting as "Fire". She was treated with major tranquilizers and became quiet. However, choreic movements became prominent. Her subsequent course was complicated with dysphagia, dementia, convulsion, and frequent bouts of pneumonia. She expired on January 24, 2000 after developing pneumonia. Her father and one sibling had similar motor disturbances. She was discussed in a neurological CPC. The chief discussant arrived at conclusion that the patient had dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy. Most of the participants agreed with this diagnosis. Postmortem examination revealed that entire brain looked smaller than normal including the brain stem and the cerebellum. The cerebellar dentate nucleus showed loss of neurons and gliosis; glumose degenerations were also seen. The external segment of the pallidum showed neuronal loss and gliosis. The subthalamic nucleus showed gliosis without neuronal loss. A demyelinated focus was found in the pons; the lesion looked similar to central pontine myelinolysis. The cerebral white matters were unremarkable. Other areas were unremarkable. The pathological diagnosis was dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy. The pathologic lesion which might explain her dementia was not apparent.
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PMID:[A 52-year-old woman with dyskinesia, epilepsy and gait disturbance]. 1247 84

A previously neurodevelopmentally intact 5-year-old male was admitted to hospital with a right lower lobe pneumonia with pleural effusion, subsequently confirmed to be a Mycoplasma pneumoniae infection. On the seventh day of the illness he had a prolonged generalized tonic or tonic-clonic convulsion, requiring intubation and ventilation. He was slow to regain consciousness (Child's Glasgow Coma Score 7-10 over 6 days) and brain imaging with CT and then MRI demonstrated bilateral thalamic lesions with oedema and central haemorrhage suggestive of acute bilateral thalamic necrosis, without striatal or white-matter involvement. He was treated with a 2-week course of erythromycin, and as an autoimmune process was considered possible, 5 days of intravenous methylprednisolone (20 mg/kg/day) followed by a 4-week oral prednisolone taper. He made a slow recovery over the next few weeks with almost complete neurological recovery by 2 months but with significant dysarthria, drooling, and a mild left hemiparesis. At 9 months, significant dystonia continued to affect his speech and, together with tremor, his upper-limb fine motor function bilaterally. His gait, personality, and higher cognitive functions appeared to have recovered fully. Although acute striatal necrosis, acute disseminated encephalomyelitis, and encephalitis have been reported with Mycoplasma pneumoniae and a similar picture of acute bilateral thalamic necrosis with influenza-A ('acute necrotizing encephalopathy'), this is the first reported case of Mycoplasma pneumoniae-associated isolated acute bilateral thalamic necrosis.
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PMID:Acute bilateral thalamic necrosis in a child with Mycoplasma pneumoniae. 1499 91

We report an 80-year-old woman who had rheumatoid arthritis and antiphospholipid syndrome. She was treated for rheumatoid arthritis since her thirties. At 76 years of age, she was diagnosed antiphospholipid syndrome serologically. She felt It. limb weakness and dysarthria and was admitted to the hospital on July 18, 2003. The brain MRI showed T2 hyperintensity signal on the rt. pre-central lobe. She was treated by the argatroban, edaravone, glycerol, and aspirin. However, she became bedridden and fed by NG-tube because her symptoms progressed in spite of the therapy. Progression of stroke stopped by adding heparin at last. After that, she repeated pneumonia. She was found dead on the bed August 2, 2003. The patient was discussed in a CPC. The chief discussant arrived at a conclusion that the cause of infarction was angitis due to rheumatoid arthritis. Other possibilities were multiple thrombus due to antiphospholipid syndrome, amyloid angiopathy, and atherosclerotic infarction. Post-mortem study revealed sputum obstruction in her bronchus, string deposition in her organs. The brain showed infarction on the rt. pre-central lobe. There were multiple thrombus in the leptomeningeal artery, but few atherosclerotic changes of the small arteries. Amyloid didn't deposit in the brain artery and the parenchyma. Pathologist concluded that her infarction was induced with multiple thrombus due to antiphospholipid syndrome.
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PMID:[An 80-year-old woman with progressive stroke, who had rheumatoid arthritis and antiphospholipid syndrome]. 1651 17

Spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA) is an adult-onset motoneuron disease caused by a CAG-repeat expansion in the androgen receptor (AR) gene and for which no curative therapy exists. However, since recent research may provide opportunities for medical treatment, information concerning the natural history of SBMA would be beneficial in planning future clinical trials. We investigated the natural course of SBMA as assessed by nine activities of daily living (ADL) milestones in 223 Japanese SBMA patients (mean age at data collection = 55.2 years; range = 30-87 years) followed from 1 to 20 years. All the patients were diagnosed by genetic analysis. Hand tremor was an early event that was noticed at a median age of 33 years. Muscular weakness occurred predominantly in the lower limbs, and was noticed at a median age of 44 years, followed by the requirement of a handrail to ascend stairs at 49, dysarthria at 50, dysphagia at 54, use of a cane at 59 and a wheelchair at 61 years. Twenty-one of the patients developed pneumonia at a median age of 62 and 15 of them died at a median age of 65 years. The most common cause of death in these cases was pneumonia and respiratory failure. The ages at onset of each ADL milestone were strongly correlated with the length of CAG repeats in the AR gene. However CAG-repeat length did not correlate with the time intervals between each ADL milestone, suggesting that although the onset age of each ADL milestone depends on the CAG-repeat length in the AR gene, the rate of disease progression does not. The levels of serum testosterone, an important triggering factor for polyglutamine-mediated motoneuron degeneration, were maintained at relatively high levels even at advanced ages. These results provide beneficial information for future clinical therapeutic trials, although further detailed prospective studies are also needed.
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PMID:Natural history of spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA): a study of 223 Japanese patients. 1662 16

We report the case of a 31-year-old man with bipolar disorder who was on a combination therapy of lithium, lamotrigine and escitalopram. Serum lithium level was within therapeutic range. Cerebellar symptoms such as dysarthria, ataxia, and dyskinesia developed in the patient following the pneumonia. Cerebellar syndrome was most likely due to lithium neurotoxicity, which was associated with additional factors such as acute febrile pneumonia, fever and hyponatremia. The reported case suggests that infections may increase the risk of cerebellar toxicity of lithium, even in the therapeutic doses.
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PMID:Cerebellar syndrome in a patient with pneumonia under lithium treatment: A case report. 1680 24

We report a clinicopathological study of a patient suffering from frontotemporal dementia (FLD) with severe dysarthria and concomitant motor neuron disease (MND). The patient was a 52-year-old woman with almost simultaneous emergence of severe dysarthria and FTD. The severe dysarthria subsequently evolved into anterior opercular syndrome. Motor neuron signs then emerged, and the patient developed akinetic mutism approximately 2 years after the onset of the disease. The patient died of pneumonia after a 7-year clinical illness. Pathologically, severe and widespread degeneration in the frontal and temporal lobes, including the anterior opercular area, limbic system, basal ganglia, spinal cord and cerebellum, and frequent ubiquitin- and tau-negative basophilic inclusions were observed. The pyramidal tracts and anterior horns of the cervical cord also showed marked degeneration. Cases showing basophilic inclusions reported so far have been divided into two groups: early onset FTD and MND with basophilic inclusions. Our case presented clinicopathological features of both FTD and MND, which suggests that cases showing basophilic inclusions may constitute a clinicopathological entity of FTD/MND.
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PMID:An autopsy case of frontotemporal dementia with severe dysarthria and motor neuron disease showing numerous basophilic inclusions. 1708 Jul 24

A 65-year-old man was admitted to our hospital complaining of diplopia, dysarthria, difficulty in walking and progressive dysesthesia that developed in his left hand and leg. Brain MRI revealed high signal intensity regions on T2-weighted and FLAIR images of the hippocampus and the corpus amygdaloideum. After admission, the patient's neurological symptoms progressed to delirium and dementia with hallucinations. When he eventually developed severe respiratory failure requiring ventilatory support, brain MRI revealed new high signal intensity regions on T2-weighted images of the medulla oblongata and pons. Chest CT scans showed a mass under the aortic arch, and based on subsequent histopathological examination of a transesophageal endoscopic ultrasonography-guided fine needle aspiration biopsy of the tumor, a diagnosis of small cell lung cancer was made. In addition, anti-Hu antibody was found in the patient's serum, leading to a diagnosis of paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis/sensory neuropathy. One course of chemotherapy (carboplatin + etoposide) was administered; however, the protocol was not completed because the patient developed severe pneumonia. Given that neurological symptoms usually precede a diagnosis of malignancy in paraneoplastic neurological syndromes, it is important that these are considered carefully, as they may contribute to early diagnosis and treatment. Here we report a rare case of severe central hypoventilation in paraneoplastic encephalomyelitis/sensory neuropathy.
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PMID:[Paraneoplastic neurological syndrome accompanied by severe central hypoventilation and expression of anti-Hu antibody in a patient with small cell lung cancer]. 1851 96

We report the case of a patient receiving subcutaneous methotrexate (MTX) treatment for rheumatoid arthritis (RA) who developed a complex pattern of neurological and pulmonary symptoms. Fluctuant dysarthria, magnetic gait, weakness and dysmetria of the lower limbs, as well as symptoms and signs consistent with a diagnosis of pneumonitis started within 6 weeks of initiating MTX treatment and slowly resolved after its discontinuation. This case highlights the fact that even the relatively low doses of MTX in the therapy of RA can produce neurotoxicity, which can become manifest in a broad range of symptoms.
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PMID:Neurological and pulmonary adverse effects of subcutaneous methotrexate therapy. 1861 32

Legionnaires' disease is primarily a pneumonic process caused by Legionella pneumophilia, a gram-negative aerobic bacillus but also has multiple system involvement. The most common manifestation is encephalopathy suggesting a generalized brain dysfunction but focal neurological manifestations have been reported. We report a patient with Legionella pneumonia associated with cerebellar dysfunction and unilateral facial nerve weakness. 51-year-old previously healthy male presented with shortness of breath, cough, slurred speech, and unsteadiness on feet associated with malaise, fevers and myalgias. Patient's family reported facial asymmetry for 2 days. Patient had no significant medical history and was not on any medication. He denied smoking, alcohol or illicit drug use. Chest X-ray showed bilateral lower lobe infiltrates. Urinary antigen assay for Legionella pneumophilia serogroup 1 was positive. Patient was started on intravenous moxifloxacin. On day 5 the patient was discharged home and continued oral moxifloxacin for two weeks. After the two weeks, his respiratory symptoms, gait ataxia and dysarthria resolved. We report the first case of Legionnaires' disease with cerebellar dysfunction and seventh nerve palsy. Legionnaires' disease should be considered in patients with any neurological symptoms in the setting of pneumonia. Failure to recognize and treat the infection may lead to poor outcomes.
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PMID:Legionnaires' disease with facial nerve palsy. 2146 Oct 48


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