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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Members of a German family living in Ohio (United States) have been found to have dominantly inherited
amyloidosis
causing dementia,
seizures
, strokes, coma and visual deterioration. Pathological examination of affected individuals has shown severe, diffuse
amyloidosis
of the leptomeninges and subarachnoid vessels associated with patchy fibrosis and obliteration of the subarachnoid space. Amyloid deposits were prominent on the ependymal surfaces and severe and diffuse neuronal loss and generalized subpial gliosis were found in the cerebrum and cerebellum. On occasion superficial brain infarcts were seen. Amyloid was also found in the vitreous, the retinal internal limiting membrane and the retinal vessels, particularly those in the nerve fibre layer. There was only minimal amyloid elsewhere.
...
PMID:Familial oculoleptomeningeal amyloidosis. 741 77
Familial transthyretin (TTR)
amyloidosis
commonly presents with peripheral neuropathy and involvement of visceral organs. In contrast, signs of central nervous system (CNS) involvement are exceptional. We report that members of a kindred affected by a slowly progressive dementia,
seizures
, ataxia, hemiparesis, and decreased vision without neuropathy have TTR amyloid deposits in the leptomeninges, the brain parenchyma, and the eye. This condition, previously labeled oculoleptomeningeal
amyloidosis
, is linked to a mutation at codon 30 of TTR gene, resulting in the substitution of valine with glycine in this family, TTR amyloid deposits were present in the leptomeninges, especially the leptomeningeal vessels, and in the subependymal regions of the ventricular system where they disrupted the ependymal lining and resulted in amyloid-glial formations protruding into and narrowing the ventricular system. Hydrocephalus and atrophy and infarction of cerebral and cerebellar cortexes were also present. Review of the literature shows that amyloid deposition in the leptomeninges is not uncommon in TTR amyloidoses clinically characterized by peripheral neuropathy and lack of CNS signs. The present kindred, which presented exclusively with signs of CNS involvement, expands the phenotype of TTR
amyloidosis
and raises questions concerning the mechanisms determining phenotypic expression in TTR familial
amyloidosis
.
...
PMID:Transthyretin amyloidosis: a new mutation associated with dementia. 906 51
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy affects the cerebral vasculature selectively, and there is no systemic
amyloidosis
. Amyloid is deposited in small and medium-sized vessels of the cortex and leptomeninges. Cerebral amyloid angiopathy is a common cause of spontaneous lobar haemorrhage in elderly patients. However, cerebral amyloid angiopathy may have atypical clinical and radiological presentations. We report on five patients (three males and two females, aged 43-77 years) with histologically verified cerebral amyloid angiopathy. One patient experienced an acute headache attack and classical lobar haemorrhage. The other patients had various neurological symptoms and signs, such as
seizure
, disturbed vision, pareses, aphasia, and dementia that were initially diagnosed as cerebral infarction or tumour. Two patients with cerebral amyloid angiopathy and granulomatous angiitis responded to immunosuppressive treatment.
...
PMID:[Cerebral amyloid angiopathy]. 976 Aug 54
We describe a euthyroid patient who presented with a goiter that continued to enlarge despite levothyroxine administration. Three fine-needle aspirations for cytology were nondiagnostic. An open biopsy was complicated by bleeding from the surgical site. Primary systemic
amyloidosis
was diagnosed on the basis of the goiter histology, bone marrow aspirate, and urine immunoelectrophoresis. The patient received melphalan and steroid treatment and survived for an additional 16 months. This period was complicated by congestive heart failure, generalized
seizures
, and upper gastrointestinal bleeding. Our case illustrates the difficulties in making the diagnosis and in treatment of primary systemic amyloidosis.
...
PMID:Amyloid goiter due to primary systemic amyloidosis: a diagnostic challenge. 984 22
We report a middle-aged woman with a novel transthyretin (TTR) variant, Leu12Pro. She had extensive amyloid deposition in the leptomeninges and liver as well as the involvement of the heart and peripheral nervous system which characterizes familial amyloid polyneuropathy caused by variant TTR. Clinical features attributed to her leptomeningeal amyloid included radiculopathy, central hypoventilation, recurrent subarachnoid haemorrhage, depression,
seizures
and periods of decreased consciousness. MRI showed a marked enhancement throughout her meninges and ependyma, and TTR amyloid deposition was confirmed by meningeal biopsy. The simultaneous presence of extensive visceral amyloid and clinically significant deposits affecting both the peripheral and central nervous system extends the spectrum of amyloid-related disease associated with TTR mutations. The unusual association of severe peripheral neuropathy with symptoms of leptomeningeal amyloid indicates that leptomeningeal
amyloidosis
should be considered part of the syndrome of TTR-related familial amyloid polyneuropathy.
...
PMID:Transthyretin Leu12Pro is associated with systemic, neuropathic and leptomeningeal amyloidosis. 1007 Oct 47
Non-traumatic rupture of large tendons is identified as a contributor to morbidity in patients who receive haemodialysis. The injury is likely to become more common as the duration of survival on dialysis extends. A number of predisposing factors leading to tendon injury have been identified in the literature, including secondary hyperparathyroidism, beta(2)-microglobulin associated
amyloidosis
, corticosteroid treatment and fluoroquinolone antibiotic use. This is a case report of a 31-year-old male who presented with simultaneous large tendon ruptures following epileptiform
seizures
. These occurred after 10 years of treatment for end-stage renal failure, including haemodialysis, with progressive secondary hyperparathyroidism. A review of the literature confirms progressive hyperparathyroidism as an important risk factor for large tendon rupture in patients on haemodialysis.
...
PMID:Simultaneous multiple tendon ruptures complicating a seizure in a haemodialysis patient. 1550 37
Light chain deposition disease (LCDD) is a form of monoclonal immunoglobulin deposition diseases (MIDD) which in contrast to light-chain derived (AL)
amyloidosis
is characterized by non-congophilic, non-fibrillary monoclonal protein deposits. Systemic organ deposits are common with the kidney being a major target organ. A clonal lymphoplasmocytic proliferation, e.g. plasmacytoma, is present in the majority of cases. Here we report on a 19-year-old male who presented with generalized
seizures
and an enhancing white matter lesion on MRI scans. A stereotactic brain biopsy revealed a low-grade B cell lymphoma with plasmacellular differentiation as well as lambda light chain deposits without birefringence under polarized microscopy. No systemic lymphoma manifestations or systemic light chain deposits were found, nor was a monoclonal gammopathy detectable in serum and urine. After systemic chemotherapy with three courses high-dose methotrexate the size of the lesion and the condition of the patient have remained stable for 24 months now. This is the first description of cerebral LCDD developing without systemic disease in conjunction with the diagnosis of a cerebral low-grade B cell lymphoma. We present the clinical, laboratory and radiological findings and discuss the pathogenesis of this unusual LCDD manifestation.
...
PMID:A 19-year-old male with generalized seizures, unconsciousness and a deviation of gaze. 1676 60
The plasma cell dyscrasias are a diverse group of disorders characterized by the production of a clonal paraprotein. Sudden death is a recognized complication of the plasma cell dyscrasias, most commonly in individuals with cardiac involvement by
amyloidosis
. However, the current forensic literature has no reported cases in which sudden death resulted from complications of a plasma cell dyscrasia that was first diagnosed by postmortem histologic examination. We present the case of a woman whose sudden and unexpected death resulted from a
seizure
. Postmortem examination revealed no evidence of trauma or a grossly identifiable natural disease process that would have accounted for her death. However, microscopic and immunohistologic studies revealed a previously undiagnosed plasma cell dyscrasia, the clonality of which was determined by immunohistochemical studies for immunoglobulin light chains, that was not associated with amyloid deposition. This case elucidates a previously unrecognized cause of sudden unexpected death and illustrates the importance of microscopic studies in selected cases examined in medical examiner/coroner offices.
...
PMID:Sudden unexpected death due to a previously undiagnosed plasma cell dyscrasia. 1866 86
We report three non-inbred patients with Val 107 transthyretin (TTR)
amyloidosis
. Clinical features were remarkable by the combination of peripheral polyneuropathy, carpal tunnel syndrome, cardiomyopathy, and epilepsy. Pathologic examination disclosed unusual striking systemic amyloid angiopathy in all studied tissues including nerve, muscle, gut, lung, salivary glands, and synovial membrane. It appears that the rare TTR Val 107 variant causes a peculiar familial amyloid syndrome characterized by both widespread systemic TTR
amyloidosis
and central nervous system deposition sufficient to cause
seizures
, pointing out the extent of TTR
amyloidosis
phenotypic heterogeneity.
...
PMID:Marked systemic amyloid angiopathy in patients with val 107 transthyretin mutation. 1907 58
The number of amyloidogenic transthyretin (TTR) mutations described in the literature is more than 100. However, for several mutations, the phenotype has been described in a few individuals only; thus, the knowledge of the clinical course and the outcome after therapeutical interventions such as liver transplantation is limited. We describe the phenotype associated with five rare amyloidogenic TTR mutations that lately were discovered in Sweden: ATTR Val30Leu, Ala45Ser, Leu55Gln, Gly57Arg and Tyr69His of which ATTR Gly57Arg is previously unknown. The symptoms at onset differed, but cardiomyopathy and peripheral neuropathy were observed in all except the ATTR Tyr69His mutation. Likewise, carpal tunnel syndrome was found or had been present in all cases except the case with the ATTR Val30Leu mutation. The phenotype of the ATTR Tyr69His mutation was characterised by oculo-meningeal symptoms with
seizures
and a steadily progressing dementia, symptoms rarely found in ATTR
amyloidosis
, but similar to those previously described for this mutation, where all cases appear to originate from one Swedish family. Two patients with the ATTR Leu55Gln and Ala45Ser mutations have been subjected to liver transplantation, but echocardiographic examination has revealed an increasing cardiomyopathy after transplantation in both cases, the ATTR Leu55Gln patient succumbed 2 years after transplantation from progressive disease.
...
PMID:Report of five rare or previously unknown amyloidogenic transthyretin mutations disclosed in Sweden. 1992 32
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