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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Subacute necrotizing encephalopathy
(
Leigh syndrome
) is characterized by lactacidosis,
seizures
, ataxia, multiple cerebral hypervascularized lesions and mitochondrial oxidation defects. This is a report on a 21-year-old patient with proven
Leigh syndrome
, mild central and provokable peripheral lactacidosis, an extra-erythrocyte complex II defect, functionally reduced myokinase adenylate deaminase activity, but no ultrastructural mitochondrial changes. Determination of lactate, pyruvate and ammonia under ischemic conditions plus a pyruvate loading test were particularly useful. Oral flunarizine (Sibelium 30 mg/d) proved to be therapeutically effective.
...
PMID:Diagnosis and treatment in a case of juvenile subacute necrotizing encephalopathy Leigh without cytochrome c oxidase deficiency. 132 78
Fourteen new cases of cytochrome oxidase (COX)-associated
Leigh syndrome
(LS) are combined with 20 reported cases to describe the clinical, laboratory, and radiological features of this devastating metabolic condition. Three clinical stages are identified. Most patients have normal neurological development during the first 8-12 months (stage I). Somatic complaints are common, including chronic diarrhea, recurrent vomiting, anorexia, and decelerating body and head growth. The second stage evolves during late infancy and early childhood when motor regression becomes evident. Eye signs, altered breathing patterns, pyramidal, extrapyramidal, and cerebellar signs emerge and sudden clinical deterioration occurs during intercurrent infectious or metabolic stress. The last stage may extend from 2 to 10 years and is manifested by extreme hypotonia, swallowing difficulties and undernutrition. Feeding assistance is necessary and
seizures
may occur. The CSF lactate concentration is consistently elevated and MRI abnormalities are seen in the subcortical structures. COX deficiency affects most tissues, but is not always generalized. For example, 3 patients with a cardiomyopathy had normal COX activity in cultured skin fibroblasts. Nearly normal amounts of cross-reacting material are present by ELISA and immunoblot analyses. Parental consanguinity has been found in several families, the hereditary pattern is recessive and males are affected more commonly (2:1). The biomolecular abnormality causing COX deficiency in LS is unknown, but the available evidence implicates a nuclear-encoded protein that affects the structure or the stability of the holoenzyme complex.
...
PMID:Cytochrome c oxidase-associated Leigh syndrome: phenotypic features and pathogenetic speculations. 165 84
We report the cases of 2 siblings with progressive encephalopathy. The first symptoms were noted when they were 6 years old. The full clinical picture included myoclonus,
seizures
, cerebellar ataxia, blindness due to optic atrophy and retinal degeneration, deafness, swallowing difficulties with relatively spared intellectual functions. The course was progressive and led to death within 8 years. The pathological findings included bilateral and almost symmetrical lesions involving the thalami, the colliculi, and the pontine and medullar tegmentum, similar to the changes described in
Leigh disease
. Neuronal loss and gliosis were noted in the dentate nucleus and in the inferior olive, as in MERRF syndrome. Laminar necrosis of the cerebral cortex could have been due to episodes of severe hypotension before death. Cytochrome c oxidase deficiency was found in case 2. The enzyme deficiency was present in muscle and in fibroblasts in culture.
...
PMID:[Familial mitochondrial encephalopathy. A clinicopathologic study]. 166 Jan 81
In some toxic neuropathies we see only distal "dying back" of longer and larger diameter axons, the perikaryon appearing to be intact. Some of these are the result of chronic energy deprivation, others are not. In other neuropathies sensory and autonomic neuron cell bodies are damaged without apparent selectivity. Toxic neuropathies often mimic the neurological effects of vitamin deficiencies by causing juxtaposed lesions in the same metabolic pathways. In acute energy deprivation toxic syndromes in the CNS, the pattern of damage is restricted to specific grey centres: there are variations in this pattern according to the site of the metabolic lesion, the species studied, the development of
seizures
, and other factors. Such toxic responses mimic human and animal disease states, such as Wernicke's encephalopathy and
Leigh's disease
, both of which are essentially acute energy deprivation syndromes.
...
PMID:Lesion localisation: implications for the study of functional effects and mechanisms of action. 283 69
Two patients with mitochondrial encephalomyopathy (MEP) serve to emphasize the variability of this group of diseases. Cerebral insults, mitochondrial cardiopathy, relapsing ileus, cerebral angioma, ataxia, and myoclonic
seizures
characterized the first case of an adult man with similar diseases in his family, interpreted as transitional form between mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) and myoclonus epilepsy associated with ragged red fibers (MERRF). The second patient, a floppy infant with cardiomyopathy and myoclonism, statomotoric and mental retardation showed combined defects in mitochondrial respiratory chain at NADH-CoQ reductase and cytochrome c oxidase and a deficiency of carnitine. In both patients neuropathologically criteria of
Leigh
's syndrome could be demonstrated in the cerebral cortex, in case 2 also clinically. The classificatory problems of the relationships between KSS, MELAS, MERRF,
Leigh
's as well as Alpers' syndromes are discussed.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial myopathies with necrotizing encephalopathy of the Leigh type. 322 73
Seven hundred five cases of agenesis of the corpus callosum (ACC) are reviewed from the literature (n = 660) and from our own observations (n = 45). The diagnosis was made or confirmed using neuroradiological techniques (n = 519) and necropsy or surgery (n = 231). Association with abnormalities often of chromosomes 8, 11, 13-15 and 18 suggests their involvement in abnormal corpus callosum (CC) morphogenesis. Four syndromes (e.g. Aicardi, acrocallosal, Andermann and Shapiro) are characterized by ACC, while others are only sporadically associated (e.g. fetal alcohol syndrome, Dandy-Walker syndrome,
Leigh disease
, Arnold-Chiari II syndrome). In non-Aicardi patients, the male-to-female ratio was 3:2 and X-linked recessive inheritance is postulated to play a role in some cases. Common abnormalities in acallosal patients included: mental retardation (MR), 73% [corrected];
seizures
, 42%; ocular anomalies, 42%; gyral abnormalities, 32%; hydrocephalus, 23%; other central nervous system (CNS) lesions, 29%; costovertebral defects, 24%. Developmental disabilities are not attributable to absence of the CC per se, but due to other CNS malformation or dysfunction, which may be genetic or non-genetic. Future research using recombinant DNA techniques will enable isolation and identification of specific chromosomal defects in those cases with a genetic abnormality.
...
PMID:Clinicopathological findings associated with agenesis of the corpus callosum. 331 Jul 13
We measured local cerebral glucose utilization in 19 patients with Lennox-Gastaut syndrome (LG), partial
seizures
(PS), atypical and classical phenylketonuria (PKU),
Leigh disease
, and subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE), using positron emission tomography (PET). The mean values of regional glucose utilization in interictal scans of LG were significantly reduced in all brain regions when compared with that of PS (P less than 0.005). PET studies of glucose utilization in LG revealed more widespread hypometabolism than in PS. Two siblings with dihydropteridine reductase deficiency, a patient with classical PKU, and a boy with cytochrome c oxidase deficiency showed reduced glucose utilization in the caudate and putamen. A marked decrease in glucose utilization was found in the cortical gray matter of a patient with rapidly progressive SSPE, despite relatively preserved utilization in the caudate and putamen. The PET study of a patient with slowly progressive SSPE revealed patterns and values of glucose utilization similar to those of the control. Thus, PET provided a useful clue toward understanding brain dysfunction in LG, PS, PKU,
Leigh disease
, and SSPE.
...
PMID:Cerebral glucose utilization in pediatric neurological disorders determined by positron emission tomography. 349 26
Nine cases of mitochondrial myopathy are presented and the literature is reviewed. The clinical picture ranges from virtually pure ophthalmoplegia, through 'ophthalmoplegia plus' to predominantly central nervous system disturbance. Morphological mitochondrial abnormalities are likely to reflect generalised metabolic abnormalities of diverse aetiology, but producing common pathophysiological consequences. The association of mitochondrial myopathy with CNS disorders, which may ante-date muscle weakness, is emphasised. The myopathies constitute a clinical continuum within which the following syndromes may be delineated: (1) Kearns-Sayre syndrome (2) Luft's disease (3) a variant of Ramsay Hunt syndrome (4) relapsing febrile neurological deficits with headache and
seizures
. These may be specific diseases or artificially separated manifestations of some common metabolic disorder(s). There is a similarity between the CNS pathology, and also some clinical features, of
Leigh's disease
and the findings in certain of the mitochondrial myopathies. The review suggests that the following should be regarded as associations of mitochondrial myopathy and progressive external ophthalmoplegia (a) diabetes mellitus (b) cataracts, in which calcium deposits may, like basal ganglia calcification, be due to abnormal calcium metabolism. Diplopia, although unusual, does occur in progressive external ophthalmoplegia with mitochondrial myopathy.
...
PMID:The mitochondrial myopathies: 9 case reports and a literature review. 734 99
Two children are described with pathology-proven
Leigh disease
. Rather than the typical degenerative course with loss of acquired development, they presented with a static encephalopathy manifested by
seizures
from birth and failure to acquire any milestones. A similar connatal presentation has been reported in other degenerative disorders, such as Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease. Heredodegenerative disorders should be considered when no cause is discovered for a severe, congenital, static encephalopathy.
...
PMID:Connatal Leigh disease. 755 83
Subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy
(
Leigh
's syndrome) is a rare neurodegenerative disease in the adult. The precise metabolic defect is unknown, but abnormalities of a mitochondrial enzyme system related to cytochrome-c oxidase or pyruvate dehydrogenase are described. The clinical picture usually consists of an altered breathing pattern, oculomotor paralysis, other signs of cranial nerve dysfunction, ataxia, myoclonic jerks, nystagmus, generalized
seizures
, optic atrophy and demyelinating peripheral neuropathy. Hypopnea leads to CO2-retention with consecutive loss of consciousness demanding mechanical ventilation. Respiratory failure is the most frequent cause of death. Here we describe two patients with adult onset
Leigh
's syndrome and we discuss the longterm treatment strategies including vitamin B1 and CPAP mask.
...
PMID:[Adult Leigh syndrome. A rare differential diagnosis of central respiratory insufficiency]. 771 56
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