Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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In an attempt to evaluate the impact of radiation therapy and cytotoxic chemotherapy on the outcome of immediate breast reconstruction by tissue expansion after mastectomy a prospective study on 32 patients was performed. The radiation therapy significantly worsened the surgical outcome, because the irradiated patients more often had pectoral muscle stiffness making the expansion more painful and the reconstructed breast too small, hard and with insufficient ptosis to obtain a natural breast mould. These results indicate that this technique should be avoided in patients likely to receive postoperative adjuvant cytotoxic chemotherapy and radiation therapy, thus reducing the indication to a small group of patients undergoing mastectomy for widespread ductal carcinoma in situ.
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PMID:The impact of adjuvant radiotherapy and cytotoxic chemotherapy on the outcome of immediate breast reconstruction by tissue expansion after mastectomy for breast cancer. 158 4

Although there are indications that beta-blockers affect the skeletal muscle in therapeutic dosages, their influence on mitochondrial disorders is unknown. A 52-year-old woman developed double vision, myalgias, muscle cramps, and hip and thigh muscle stiffness. Clinical neurologic examination revealed ptosis, dysarthria, sore neck muscles, weakness and wasting of the thighs, and generally brisk tendon reflexes. Lactate stress testing was significantly abnormal. Needle electromyography was nonspecifically abnormal and myopathic. Muscle biopsy showed mild myopathic changes, target fibers, and a single COX-negative fiber. Probable mitochondrial disorder was diagnosed. The patient had been on 30 mg of propranolol during 7 years for arterial hypertension. Shortly after discontinuation of the drug, her double vision gradually disappeared, myalgias and muscle cramps gradually resolved, and the patient reported an increase in muscle mass on repeated follow-ups. Long-term administration of propranolol may aggravate a mitochondrial disorder. Discontinuation of propranolol may result in a gradual resolution of these adverse reactions.
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PMID:Mitochondrial disorder aggravated by propranolol. 1686 49

The organ most frequently affected in mitochondrial disorders is the skeletal muscle (mitochondrial myopathy). Mitochondrial myopathies may be part of syndromic as well as non-syndromic mitochondrial disorders. Involvement of the skeletal muscle may remain subclinical, may manifest as isolated elevation of the creatine-kinase, or as weakness and wasting of one or several muscle groups. The course of mitochondrial myopathies is usually slowly progressive and only rarely rapidly progressive leading to restriction of mobility and requirement of a wheel chair or even muscular respiratory insufficiency. Frequently reported symptoms of mitochondrial myopathies are permanent tiredness, easy fatigability, muscle aching at rest or already after moderate exercise, muscle cramps, muscle stiffness, fasciculations and muscle weakness. The diagnosis is based on the history, clinical neurologic examination, blood chemical investigations, lactate stress test, electromyography, magnetic resonance imaging, magnetic resonance spectroscopy, muscle biopsy, biochemical investigations of the skeletal muscles, and genetic investigations. Only symptomatic therapy is available and includes physiotherapy and orthopedic supportive devices, diet, symptomatic drug therapy (analgetics, cramp-releasing drugs, antioxidants, lactate-lowering drugs, alternative energy sources, co-factors), avoidance of mitochondrion-toxic drugs, surgery (correction of ptosis or orthopedic problems), and invasive or non-invasive mechanical ventilation. General anesthesia needs to be performed in the same way as in patients with susceptibility for malignant hyperthermia.
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PMID:[Mitochondrial myopathies]. 1989 Jul 72

Myotonia congenita is a non-dystrophic skeletal muscle disorder characterized by muscle stiffness and an inability of the muscle to relax after voluntary contraction caused by a mutation in the gene encoding skeletal muscle chloride channel-1 (CLCN1). We encountered a case of Thomsen disease with ptosis. A short tau inversion recovery MR imaging demonstrated high-intensity lesions in the levator palpebrae superioris muscles. Molecular genetic testing revealed a heterozygosity for the c.1439C>A (p.P480H) mutation in the CLCN1 gene. The expression level of ClC-1 was significantly reduced on the sarcolemma of the biceps brachii muscle from the patient, compared with that from healthy volunteer. Functional analysis of the p.P480H mutation is required for further elucidating the pathogenesis of Thomsen disease.
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PMID:Thomsen disease with ptosis and abnormal MR findings. 2766 73

Stiff person spectrum disorders (SPSD) are a broad group of immune-mediated disorders. Clinical presentations include classical stiff person syndrome (SPS), focal SPS, and progressive encephalomyelitis with rigidity and myoclonus (PERM). The most frequently associated antibodies are anti-GAD65, anti-GlyR, anti-amphiphysin, and anti-DPPX. Immunotherapy is the primary treatment modality. We present an illustrative case series of three patients: anti-GlyR antibody-mediated PERM presenting as rapidly progressive dementia; anti-amphiphysin antibody-mediated SPS; and SPS presentation with anti-Zic4 antibodies, spasmodic laryngeal stridor and fluctuating eyelid ptosis. Clinical characteristics, CSF findings, neurophysiological features, adequate immunological assays and a high suspicion index are essential for prompt diagnosis and management.
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PMID:Stiff person spectrum disorders: An illustrative case series of their phenotypic and antibody diversity. 3208 60