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Pivot Concepts:
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0033377 (
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11,717
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A girl of 10-5/12 years is described, who had diabetes mellitus from the age of 5 years on and who developed bilateral
ptosis
, pigment degeneration of the retina and bilateral impairment of hearing at the age of nine years. A few weeks before death she suffered from an acute gastrointestinal infection which was successfully treated by a hydroxyquinoline derivative. In the days following a severe encephalopathy and signs of cardiac involvement appeared. A month later the girl died of bulbar paralysis and acute heart failure. Histology showed remnants of a granulomatous inflammation in the heart, the kidneys, the pancreas and the skeletal muscles. Furthermore there was a widespread spongiosis in the white substance of the brain, with large astrocytes, and partly also in the basal ganglia, the brain stem and the cerebellum. Foci of sudanophilic tissue necrosis resembling Wernicke's Encephalopathy were found in the medulla oblongata and the spinal cord. The peripheral nerves appeared partially demyelinated and showed axonal lesions. This case is classified as a Juvenile Type of so-called Canavan's Disease. It shows some resemblence to the "Progressive Chronic Ophthalmoplegia with
Spongiform Encephalopathy
described by Daroff, Kearn and Sayre. The possible neurotoxical effects of the hydroxyquinoline therapy are discussed.
...
PMID:[Juvenile spongy dystrophy of CNS with necrosis of the medulla. A. complication of hydroxyquinoline therapy (author's transl)]. 124 13
A new patient with Leigh's syndrome (subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy due to pyruvate dehydrogenase complex deficiency) is presented. A Turkish boy of consanguinously married healthy parents developed progressive muscle weakness since infancy. At the age of 3 years he was unable to sit, stand or walk. Clinical examination showed general muscle weakness, hypotonia, muscle hypotrophy, bilateral
ptosis
, partial bilateral external ophthalmoplegia, nystagmus, intention tremor and hypoactive tendon reflexes. The EEG showed diffuse slowing, the cerebral CT scan disclosed mild hydrocephalus e vacuo. Motor nerve conduction velocity was slightly decreased, the EMG revealed signs of neuropathy. In the biopsied muscle only a mild hypotrophy of type 2 fibres was found, no abnormal mitochondria could be detected. The sural nerve was slightly abnormal: loss of large myelinated axons, loss of unmyelinated nerves. CSF protein was elevated to 80 mg/dl, protein electrophoresis revealed the pattern of markedly impaired blood-CSF barrier. Serum lactate and pyruvate were permanently elevated. In the urine the excretion of alanine was raised. The clinical state deteriorated during intercurrent infections; somnolence, vomiting and Cheyne-Stoke's respiration occurred. At the age of 3 1/2 years the child died of pneumonia. In the liver tissue a decreased activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex was found. Neuropathological examination of the brain demonstrated wide-spread changes of Leigh's
spongiform encephalopathy
. Several enzyme deficiencies have hitherto been associated with Leigh's syndrome: This patients confirms earlier findings that a subgroup of Leigh's syndrome is caused by pyruvate dehydrogenase complex deficiency.
...
PMID:[Leigh's subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy due to decreased activity of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex]. 312 26