Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (prolapse)
11,717 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 9-year-old girl and an 11-year-old boy had ptosis, progressive external ophthalmoplegia, pigmentary retinopathy, and sensorineural hearing loss. The girl had diabetes mellitus and the boy had hypoparathyroidism. Both children also developed recurrent vomiting and cerebral infarcts with lactic acidosis. Muscle biopsy specimens showed ragged-red fibers and Southern analysis demonstrated a distinct heteroplasmic deletion of muscle mitochondrial DNA in each patient but no evidence of the point mutation in the transfer RNALeu(UUR) gene recently identified in mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes (MELAS). These 2 children had combined features of Kearns-Sayre syndrome and MELAS, suggesting that mitochondrial DNA deletions occasionally can have pleomorphic clinical expression.
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PMID:Deletion of mitochondrial DNA in patients with combined features of Kearns-Sayre and MELAS syndromes. 189 71

An increased prevalence of mitral-valve prolapse occurs in several connective tissue dysplasias, including Marfan syndrome, Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, and pseudoxanthoma elasticum. We evaluated 57 patients diagnosed as having the Stickler syndrome for mitral-valve prolapse by auscultation and two-dimensional echocardiography. The diagnosis was made on the basis of craniofacial and musculoskeletal abnormalities, sensorineural hearing loss, eye defects, and a family history of Stickler syndrome. Twenty-six patients (45.6%) had mitral-valve prolapse, including 11 of 22 females (50.0%) and 15 of 35 males (42.9%). The age range of our study population was 4 to 60 years. Prevalence of mitral-valve prolapse did not increase with age. Nine patients (34.6% of those with mitral-valve prolapse) had the click-murmur syndrome; only one of them was symptomatic. Because of the growing list of complications associated with mitral-valve prolapse, all patients with Stickler syndrome should be evaluated by auscultation, electrocardiogram, and echocardiography. Those with mitral-valve prolapse should be advised to have periodic follow-up and to instruct physicians caring for them of their need for antibiotic prophylaxis with certain surgical procedures.
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PMID:Prevalence of mitral-valve prolapse in the Stickler syndrome. 372 60

Twenty-three members of a 96-member family exhibited an autosomal dominant disorder which has not previously been described. This disorder involves progressive optic atrophy, abnormal electroretinography without retinal pigment changes, and progressive sensorineural hearing loss usually evident in the first or second decade of life. In midlife, ptosis, ophthalmoplegia, dystaxia, and a nonspecific myopathy occur.
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PMID:Dominant optic atrophy, deafness, ptosis, ophthalmoplegia, dystaxia, and myopathy. A new syndrome. 649 99

Reports of cases of primary and secondary syphilis are increasing in the United States, particularly in urban areas and among homosexual men. While primary syphilis poses little diagnostic difficulty, many physicians are unfamiliar with the multisystem nature of secondary lues. Patients who have secondary syphilis commonly present with systemic signs, skin rash, mucous membrane lesions and generalized adenopathy. Less commonly, secondary syphilis may occur as acute meningitis, sensorineural hearing loss, iritis, anterior uveitis, optic neuritis, Bell's palsy, gastropathy, proctitis, hepatitis, pulmonary infiltration, nephrotic syndrome, glomerulonephritis, periostitis, tenosynovitis and polyarthritis. The diagnosis of secondary syphilis is easily confirmed. Its various manifestations are readily treated with penicillin and, if treated early, are entirely reversible. Two recent cases of secondary syphilis, one presenting as nephrotic syndrome and one as chorioretinitis and ptosis, illustrate the usual and unusual features of this common infection.
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PMID:Secondary syphilis: uncommon manifestations of a common disease. 670 90

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

A case is reported of a 59-year-old Caucasian male with oculopharyngeal myopathy and sensorineural hearing loss. He presented with progressive ptosis, sensorineural hearing loss over several years and symptoms of mild dysphagia. Further enquiry into his family history revealed that every male member in his family that lived beyond the age of 60 exhibited identical symptoms. Symptoms of ptosis and dysphagia are consistent with the rare autosomal dominant condition of oculopharyngeal myopathy, believed to be due to mitochondrial disease. The combination of ptosis, dysphagia and sensorineural hearing loss with normal distant muscle group biopsy has not been described before.
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PMID:Oculopharyngeal myopathy with sensorineural hearing loss. 876 80

A novel mtDNA point mutation was detected in the tRNAleu(CUN) gene (G to A at position 12315) in a sporadic patient with chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia, ptosis, limb weakness, sensorineural hearing loss and a pigmentary retinopathy. The mutation disrupts base pairing in the T psi C stem at a site which has been conserved throughout evolution. Although the other mtDNA tRNAleu gene (UUR) is a hotspot for mutation, this is the first pathogenic mutation to be reported in the gene coding for tRNAleu(CUN). MtDNAs carrying the mutation constituted 94% of total mtDNAs in two separate muscle biopsies. Single fibre analysis showed that skeletal muscle fibres without detectable cytochrome c oxidase activity (COX-ve fibres) contained predominantly mutant mtDNAs (93-98%) while fibres with apparently normal COX activity had up to 90% mutant mtDNAs, demonstrating that the G12315A mutation is functionally recessive. Immunofluorescence studies with specific antibodies to mtDNA- or nuclear-encoded subunits of COX were consistent with a defect in mitochondrial protein translation. The mutation was not present in blood cells or cultured fibroblasts and surprisingly, it could not be detected in satellite cells cultured from the patient's muscle. This pattern, which may by typical of patients who have inherited new germline pathogenic mtDNA mutations, possibly reflects loss of the mutation by random genetic drift in mitotic tissues and proliferation of mitochondria containing the mutant mtDNA in post-mitotic cells. The absence of mtDNA carrying the mutation in satellite cells suggests that regeneration of skeletal muscle fibres from satellite cells could restore a wild-type mtDNA genotype and normal muscle function.
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PMID:A novel heteroplasmic tRNAleu(CUN) mtDNA point mutation in a sporadic patient with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy segregates rapidly in skeletal muscle and suggests an approach to therapy. 892 13

The Authors discuss post-operative failures and complications detected in their case-report of 1857 patients, operated for otosclerotic disease between 1982 and 1993 (399 large fenestra and 1458 small fenestra stapedotomies), with reference to the data from international literature. Their study reveals that the most frequent clinical event caused by complications arising is still hypoacusia of various degree, both conductive (2.7%) and sensorineural (6.6%); more precisely, conductive hearing loss points to revision surgery, while sensorineural lesions, often limited to high frequencies (5.7%), may unfortunately take the form of anacousia (0.9%). Some extra-auditory complications (temporary facial paralysis, ear drum perforation, disgeusia, tinnitus) are also present with relative frequency in stapes surgery (4.2%); among them, however, only impairment or appearance of tinnitus (0.6%) turn out to be a persistent disorder. Analysis of the results underlines that the complications rate is higher in the case of coexisting morphological anomalies (such as stenosis of the external ear canal, disjointing or amputation of the incus, difficulty in approaching the oval window, reobliteration of the oval window, facial nerve prolapse) or when intraoperative problems arise (excessive bleeding, profuse perylymph flow), which make the operation more difficult to perform. The data obtained in this study show that stapedotomy (using a 0.6 mm diameter prosthesis), gives a significantly lower rate of sensorineural complications (4.1%), than platinectomy (15.6%), because of the reduction of labirinthine traumatism. Lastly, the Authors performed 64 revision operations, evaluating intraoperative findings and hearing recovery rate. Causes of failure most frequently detected during revision surgery were: incus necrosis (24.6%) and prosthesis displacement (21.3%) with possible reobliteration of the oval window (23%); however it has not always been possible to detect pathogenesis of a postoperative conductive hearing loss. All things considered, results of revision surgery seem to be less satisfactory (56% improvements, 4.9% severe sensorineural hearing loss) than those obtained after the first operation.
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PMID:[The small fenestra vs large stapedectomy: comparative evaluation of failures and complications]. 892 69

A variety of neurologic phenotypes have been described in patients with mitochondrial disorders. We report a 32-year-old man in whom dystonia was the salient and presenting feature of a mitochondrial DNA mutation. He presented at age 23 with writer's cramp and progressed over 5 years to exhibit dystonia in facial muscles and lower limbs. He also has exercise intolerance, mild, bilateral ptosis, proximal muscle weakness, and sensorineural hearing loss. Molecular genetic analysis of blood, urine, and muscle biopsy demonstrated the presence of a heteroplasmic point mutation at nucleotide position 3243. The 3243 mtDNA mutation has pleomorphic manifestations, and dystonia should be added to the list of associated clinical features.
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PMID:Dystonia as a presenting feature of the 3243 mitochondrial DNA mutation. 1034 75

We report on two sibs, a 2.5-year-old girl and a 10-month-old boy, with a hitherto unreported combination of congenital anomalies: blepharophimosis, ptosis, midface hypoplasia, abnormal palate, low anterior and posterior hairlines, displaced hair whorl, apparently low-set and abnormally shaped ears, trigonocephaly, dental anomalies, laryngomalacia, sensorineural hearing loss, genital anomalies, hypotonia, and mental retardation. The occurrence of a similar pattern of anomalies in two sibs of opposite sex suggests autosomal recessive inheritance. To our knowledge, this combination of anomalies has not been reported previously, and thus we propose it to be a formal genesis syndrome.
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PMID:Blepharophimosis, minor facial anomalies, genital anomalies, and mental retardation: report of two sibs with a unique syndrome. 1052 53


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