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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (
seizures
)
80,221
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The gangliosidoses belong to the family of diseases known as the lipidoses and are due to an excess of ganglioside I (GM1) or II (GM2). The illness described by Landing belongs to Group I, whilst
Tay-Sachs
and Sandhoff's disease are type 2. This study was particularly concerned with the electro-clinical aspects of group 2, and 4 stages have been differentiated: --the first occurs between 4-10 months: the child is apathetic, hypotonic and has occasional audiogenic
seizures
; fundoscopy revealing the classical cherry red spot on the macula. The diagnosis can be confirmed by biopsy. The EEG is irregular but abnormalities are minor. --the second stage (10 months-2 years) the child spastic and amaurotic, often unresponsive is suffering from frequent
seizures
. The EEG is of high voltage, with slow and sharp waves. Auditory stimulation does not produce EEG changes. --in the third and 4th stages (after 2 years) the child is in a vegetative state with a progressive reduction in EEG voltage and sharp waves until death aged 3 or 4. Although there is a good correlation between clinical signs and EEG this is of no diagnostic value.
...
PMID:[Clinical and electrophysiological aspects of the gangliosidoses (author's transl)]. 9 99
Two adult Ashkenazi Jewish siblings have had slowly progressive deterioration of gait and posture since early childhood, distal to proximal muscle atrophy, pes cavus, foot drop, spasticity, mild ataxia of limbs and trunk, dystonic features, and dysarthria. Vision and optic fundi are normal, verbal intelligence is stable, and no
seizures
have occurred. The sister of the patients died at 16 years of age with the same illness. Autopsy showed diffuse neuronal storage, predominating in subcortical areas, consisting of membranocytoplasmic bodies, zebra bodies, and complex lamellar structures. GM2 ganglioside was increased in her brain. Hexosaminidase A was decreased in serum and leukocytes of the living patients, and was in the range for carriers of
Tay-Sachs disease
in their parents. The disease found in this family represents a new, more indolent variant of GM2 gangliosidosis.
...
PMID:Adult (chronic) GM2 gangliosidosis. Atypical spinocerebellar degeneration in a Jewish sibship. 17 70
The patients was a 3-year-old boy with psychomotor retardation and attacked by
seizures
since 8 months of age. On funduscopy, the maculla presented a cherry-red spot. Serum hexosaminidase A activities were as low as 8.2 percent. Both parents were carriers. The patient was diagnosed as classical
Tay-Sachs disease
by neurological examination. Diphenylhydantoin was continuously given for 2 years and 2 months till his death. Autopsy revealed swelling of the cerebrum, atrophy and sclerosis of the cerebellum, hepatomegaly and mild enlargement of the lymph nodes. Histologically, the cerebrum showed ballooned swelling of nerve cells, slight gliosis and demyelination, while cerebellar Purkinje's cells and granular cells were degenerated and disappeared. The cerebellar cortex showed small focal spongy degeneration. By electron microscopy, membranous cytoplasmic bodies were found in the nerve cells. The change of brain observed in this case were interpreted as a combined result of (i) essential change to classical
Tay-Sachs disease
, (ii) ischemic change due to frequently repeated
seizures
, (iii) chronic toxicity by long-term anticonvulsant administration.
...
PMID:Histological observation of the brain of Tay-Sachs disease with seizure and chronic DPH intoxication--report of an autopsy case. 20 60
Neurophysiological studies (EEG, ERG, VEP and BAEP) have been carried out on a total of fifty-four patients (fourty-five GM2 and nine GM1 gangliosidosis) at various stages of the disease process. In infantile GM2 gangliosidosis, the EEG was midly abnormal from an early age but by the age of one year there was a rapid and progressive deterioration. EEG changes in late onset GM2 gangliosidosis were very variable and unrelated to age or enzyme defect. In both Type 1 and Type 2 GM1 gangliosidosis there was a progressive deterioration of the EEG. Paroxysmal features were not prominent in any of the gangliosidoses, despite the occurrence of
seizures
. The ERG remained normal in both GM2 and GM1 patients. In the infantile GM2 patients there was progressive loss of the VEP between nine and fifteen months of age but the timing of VEP changes were more variable in all the other groups. Evidence of brainstem dysfunction was found in one of the two
TSD
patients tested. The combined neurophysiological features appear to be characteristic for each group of gangliosidosis and differ from other neurometabolic disorders of childhood.
...
PMID:Neurophysiological investigations in GM1 and GM2 gangliosidoses. 610 Jul 98
A 2 year-old non-Jewish boy had muscle hypertonia, a black cherry spot, dementia, and
seizures
. His skin biopsy showed membranous cytoplasmic bodies in axonal terminals and zebra body-like inclusions in Schwann cells. Biochemically, a deficiency of Hex A and two separate Hex B peaks indicated a type 1 (B variant, Tay
Sachs
) like subvariant of GM2-gangliosidosis.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural pathology of skin biopsy and fibroblast enzyme studies in a case of GM2-gangliosidosis with deficient hexosaminidase A and thermolabile hexosaminidase B. 625 71
After the introduction of 4-methylumbelliferyl-2-acetamido-2-deoxy-beta A-D-glucopyranoside (4MUG) and its sulfated form (4MUGS) in the pre- and postnatal diagnosis and carrier identification of gangliosidosis genotypes, infrequent forms of the GM2 gangliosidosis Type B (
Tay-Sachs disease
) have been observed which show normal activity of Hexosaminidase A (Hex A) isoenzyme with the substrate 4MUG but absent or deficient activity against the sulfated form 4MUGS. Here we report the observation of a German/Hungarian boy aged 12 when he died with a prolonged course of a neurodegenerative disorder, later biochemically identified as a GM2 gangliosidosis B1-variant which is characterized by a deficient Hex A activity only against 4MUGS. The first clinical symptoms had occurred after the age of 14 months with a clear manifestation of the disease at age 3, when he presented disturbances of movement and tended to fall down. The slowly progressive course with brain atrophy,
seizures
and severe mental deterioration resulted in death after almost 9 years. At autopsy, the typical light microscopic neuronal changes of a "lysosomal storage disorder" were found, with multilamellar concentric bodies (MCB) and Zebra bodies in the neuronal cytoplasm at the electron microscopic level.
...
PMID:GM2D gangliosidosis B1 variant in a boy of German/Hungarian descent. 840 28
The inborn errors of GM2 ganglioside metabolism cause GM2 ganglioside to accumulate within the lysosomes of the nerve cells. The majority of the patients are infants with the
Tay-Sachs
form of the disease associated with a severe deficiency of beta-N-Acetylhexosaminidase A (hexosaminidase A). Both Hexosaminidase A and B are deficient in Sandhoff disease. The serum total hexosaminidase and the percentage of hexosaminidase A and B were estimated in 449 patients who presented with progressive mental-motor retardation. Three cases of
Tay-Sachs disease
and two cases of Sandhoff disease were detected. They presented with exaggerated startle response to acoustic stimuli,
seizures
, optic atrophy and retinal cherry red spots in addition to psychomotor retardation. One case of Sandhoff disease had hepatosplenomegaly and skeletal deformities.
...
PMID:GM2 gangliosidoses: a review of cases confirmed by beta-N-acetylhexosaminidase assay. 1082 9
Identical female twins (age 11 years) with congenital ocular motor apraxia and generalized idiopathic epilepsy are reported. Their presenting symptoms were a long history of abnormal head and eye movements. One twin developed partial sensory
seizures
. The patients underwent 16-channel EEG, electro-oculographic recordings, MRI of the brain, and genetic and metabolic investigations. EEG findings were consistent with idiopathic generalized epilepsy. Electrooculographic recordings of the saccades confirmed an inability to elicit horizontal saccades without preceding head movement; saccades to the left were better than saccades to the right. MR scans for one twin showed normal findings, however, for the twin who had meningitis they revealed asymmetry between the right and left temporal lobes but no specific abnormality. DNA analysis using a series of autosomal polymorphic markers confirmed the monozygocity of the twins. White blood cell enzyme analysis excluded Sandhoff disease,
Tay-Sachs disease
, GM1 gangliosidosis, metacromatic leucodystrophy, Gaucher disease, Niemann-Pick disease (A and B), and Krabbe leucodystrophy. Albumin and immunoglobulin (IgA, IgG, and IgM) levels were normal. It is concluded that autosomal recessive inheritance seems the most likely explanation here, as recent studies have found insertion and missense mutations of the aprataxin gene which have been related to an early onset form of ataxia with ocular motor apraxia and hypoalbuminaemia.
...
PMID:Congenital ocular motor apraxia associated with idiopathic generalized epilepsy in monozygotic twins. 1517 36
A retrospective clinical and biochemical analysis of 41 pediatric patients with cerebral lipidoses seen between 1995 to 2003 was performed at a tertiary referral center for neurologic disorders in southern India. Enzyme assays in serum and leukocytes, including histopathology, neuroimaging, and neurophysiology studies, were performed. There were 20 cases of metachromatic leukodystrophy (infantile,14; juvenile, 6), 12 cases of
Tay-Sachs disease
(infantile, 9; late G(M2-M3) gangliosidoses, 3), 8 cases of Sandhoff's disease, and 1 male case with multiple sulfatase deficiency. Consanguinity was present in 51.2% of cases. The male-to-female ratio was 23:17. Similar illness in the families was noted in 24.4%. The prominent clinical features in sulfatide lipidoses were regression of motor and mental milestones,
seizures
, and speech impairment, and in G(M2) gangliosidoses, the features were delayed milestones, startle myoclonus,
seizures
, and the presence of cherry-red spots. The case with multiple sulfatase deficiency had low levels of arylsulfatase A and B. This study indicates that these autosomal recessive inherited disorders are indeed prevalent in India.
...
PMID:Cerebral glycolipidoses: clinical characteristics of 41 pediatric patients. 1544 95
We present the case of a patient who sustained simultaneous bilateral posterior dislocation of the shoulder after a possible epileptic fit. The confirmation of the diagnosis was reached only by a computed tomography (CT) scan, after the clinical suspicion. Under general anesthesia, close reduction of both shoulder dislocations was done. Posterior dislocation of the shoulder-especially the bilateral one-is very rare. When the history describes an electric shock or convulsive
seizure
, any shoulder injury demands a careful clinical and radiological evaluation. It is usually associated with reverse Hill-
Sachs
lesion (an impression defect of the anteromedial aspect of the humeral head), in which the size determines the treatment options.
...
PMID:Simultaneous bilateral posterior dislocation of the shoulder: diagnostic problems and management. A case report. 1650 51
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