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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A case of mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes, in which a pituitary growth hormone (GH) secretion deficiency of hypothalamic origin was revealed through neuro-endocrinological examinations, was described. The case was a 10-year-old girl, who had been suffering from generalized tonic seizures since age 5, four episodes of alternating hemiplegia since age 6, stunted growth since age 7, and simple partial motor seizures as well as gelastic seizures since age 8. Marked elevation of lactate and pyruvate in both serum and CSF, abundant ragged red fibers in biopsied muscle, and low density areas in the left occipital lobe and bilateral globus pallidus in addition to diffuse brain atrophy on CT scan and MRI of the head were demonstrated, although the activities of muscle enzymes complex I-IV were within normal ranges. Pituitary GH secretion was deficient under the loadings with insulin, L-DOPA, sleep, and a single growth hormone releasing factor (GRF) administration, but normal GH response was registered under the repetitive stimulation with GRF. Activities of other hormonal axes were normal. It is likely that short stature commonly observed in MELAS patients is due to hypothalamic dysfunction, which might be brought out by chronic ischemia and energy deficiency of the diencephalon based upon mitochondrial abnormality of that region. It is likely that gelastic seizure in this case is due to hypothalamic dysfunction.
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PMID:[Hypothalamic GH Deficiency and gelastic seizures in a 10-year-old girl with MELAS]. 187 57

A 24-year-old male had a deficiency of the complex I (NADH coenzyme-Q-reductase) of the mitochondrial respiratory chain, which clinically presented as a mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, with lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS syndrome). The encephalopathic episodes were preceded by migraine and were characterized by focal deficit signs, motor partial seizures and hypodense areas in the CT scan. An echocardiographic diagnosis of hypertrophic cardiomyopathy without intracavitary thrombi was made. It is suggested that hypertrophic cardiomyopathy is caused by the mitochondrial abnormalities that have been reported in the myocardium, and that migraine and cerebral infarctions are associated with abnormalities in the mitochondria from the endothelium and smooth muscle fibres of the cerebral small arteries and arterioles.
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PMID:[Complex I (NADH coenzyme-Q-reductase) deficiency, MELAS syndrome and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy]. 190 55

A 32 year-old diabetic woman presented with an acute coma followed by epileptic seizures, aphasia and constructive apraxia. No ischemic lesion was demonstrated by CT scan and carotid angiograms. The other investigations showed sensorineural hearing loss, retinal degeneration, calcifications of the basal ganglia and lactic acidosis. The follow-up was marked by pseudo-dementia with personality disorders, memory deficits, behavioural changes, migrainous and epileptic features. Although there was no sign of muscular deficiency, a muscular biopsy showed characteristic ragged-red fibers and mitochondrial abnormalities at electron microscopy. The muscular biopsy enables us to classify this case as a mitochondrial encephalopathy similar to the MELAS syndrome. The stroke-like episodes are probably caused by a specific angiopathy involving the mitochondria of brain vessels.
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PMID:[Mitochondrial encephalopathy affecting only the central nervous system]. 196 61

This study reports a case of MELAS with epileptic seizure, and reviews the characteristics of seizures in patients with this syndrome. They are characterized by: (1) generalized and/or partial seizures, (2) frequent association with visual symptoms and hemiparesis, and (3) posteriorly predominant EEG abnormalities.
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PMID:Epileptic seizures in a patient with mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and strokelike episodes (MELAS). 251 71

The case of 12 years-old boy with seizures, headache, severe vomit and focal neurological signs is reported. These episodes had several recurrences and regression with little neurologic deficits. In the investigation it was found: lactic acidosis; stroke like episodes and calcification in the basal ganglia on computerized axial tomography; ragged red fibers on muscle biopsy and decreased of cytochrome C oxidase in the muscle tissue. A revision about mitochondrial disorders with involvement of the central nervous system and muscle is made, with emphasis on diagnosis and recognition of MELAS.
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PMID:[MELAS (mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes): report of a case]. 283 Aug 68

MELAS is a distinctive syndrome manifested by mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and recurrent stroke-like episodes such as seizures, alternating hemiparesis, hemianopsia, or cortical blindness. Pathologically the disorder is characterized by multiple, solitary or continuous foci of necrosis (infarct or softening), varying in size and stage, predominantly involving the bilateral cerebral cortices and to a lesser degree cerebral white matter, basal ganglia, brainstem and cereblum. The distribution of the lesions does not correspond to vascular territories, suggesting that they are not due to usual thrombotic or embolic process. The exact nature and pathogenesis of these lesions with characteristic distribution pattern remain to be elucidated. We studied systematically cerebral blood vessels from two autopsied patients with MELAS by electron microscopy. All the main cerebral arteries including anterior, middle and posterior cerebral, basilar and vertebral arteries were examined at their proximal portions at the cerebral base and at their peripheral portions at the cortical surface as well as within brain parenchyma. We found marked accumulation of mitochondria in the cell bodies of smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells and numerous smooth muscle cells showing degeneration or necrosis, sporadically or in clusters in the tunica media. These abnormalities were most prominent in the walls of pial arterioles and small arteries up to 250 mu in diameter, and less frequent and severe in the larger pial arteries and intracerebral arterioles and small arteries. These vascular changes are different from any of those described in various disorders known to involve the cerebral blood vessels and are thus characteristic to the cerebral blood vessels of MELAS. We think that these peculiar vascular changes called mitochondrial angiopathy are caused by primary mitochondrial dysfunction in the vascular smooth muscle cells and endothelial cells themselves, as is the same in the skeletal and cardiac muscles in this disease, and that they constitute the pathogenic base of the brain lesions with unusual distribution pattern and nature in MELAS.
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PMID:[Mitochondrial angiopathy in the cerebral blood vessels of MELAS (mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and strokelike episodes)]. 337 Jan 63

A 19-year-old woman with long-standing sensorineural deafness, bilateral cataracts and mild clumsiness, presented with acute focal edema in the left temperoparieto-occipital area which required surgical decompression as a life-saving measure. Investigation revealed a persistent lactic acidemia and evidence of many ragged red fibres in a skeletal muscle biopsy specimen, suggesting a diagnosis of mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) syndrome. The patient developed two further stroke-like episodes over a short period. One sibling died at the age of 14 years with a progressive neurological illness characterised by seizures, bilateral optic atrophy, ataxia, myoclonus and progressive dementia. The diagnosis of MELAS syndrome should be considered in young people presenting with stroke-like episodes that fail to conform to a given vascular territory, particularly if they have long-standing minor neurological abnormalities or a family history of obscure early onset neurological disease. The different clinical pictures in the two affected siblings in this family suggest that MELAS syndrome is part of a spectrum of inherited mitochondrial cytopathies rather than a discrete disease entity.
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PMID:Mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS): adolescent onset with severe cerebral edema. 339 2

MELAS syndrome is a form of mitochondrial myopathy with manifestations of seizure, stroke-like syndrome, lactic acidosis, ragged red muscle fibres and mitochondrial encephalopathy. The syndrome has been reported in association with a variety of endocrine and metabolic disorders including diabetes mellitus (DM), hypothalamo-pituitary hypofunction, hypothalamic growth hormone deficiency and delayed puberty. Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) point mutation may be the major pathological defect. However, association of MELAS syndrome with hyperthyroidism has not previously been reported. A case is reported from Taiwan of a 32-year-old woman suffering from MELAS syndrome with associated DM and hyperthyroidism. When the latter was diagnosed in April 1988, the patient underwent subtotal thyroidectomy. There was no family history of thyroid disease. Because of repeated seizures, she had computed tomography (CT) and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain which showed focal, low-density lesions over the cerebral hemispheres. Both serum and cerebral spinal fluid lactic acid levels were elevated. Mild elevations of serum T4 and T3 and a high titre of TSH receptor antibody were still present. Hyperglycaemia was noted during hospitalization and DM confirmed by oral glucose tolerance test. Muscle biopsy showed ragged red fibres. DNA analysis showed an A-to-G transition at the 3243rd nucleotide position of the tRNA(Leu(UUR)) gene of the mtDNA from the patient. Quantitative polymerase chain reaction (PCR) and restriction analysis revealed that about 60% of the blood mtDNA was of mutant type. The patient received antithyroid drugs for hyperthyroidism, diet control for DM and anti-epileptic drugs for seizure.
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PMID:MELAS syndrome associated with diabetes mellitus and hyperthyroidism: a case report from Taiwan. 755 21

An A to G transition at nucleotide 3,243 in the tRNA(Leu(UUR)) gene of mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) has been suggested to be the disease-related mutation for MELAS (mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes). Recently, the same mutation has also been found in several pedigrees with maternally inherited diabetes mellitus and sensorineural deafness. We report here a family showing the association of deafness and diabetes mellitus, as the predominant clinical features, with this mutation. The mutation was detected by restriction-enzyme analysis of the relevant PCR-amplified segment of the mtDNA, in two generations. In this family, it is noteworthy that two members with the mutation had some symptoms of MELAS such as short stature, seizures and mental retardation and that one had no clinical symptoms though the mtDNA mutation was identified in his blood. The findings in this family demonstrate the diversity of clinical expression of the mtDNA mutation and suggest that a combination of sensorineural deafness and diabetes mellitus is only one typical presentation of the various phenotypic features caused by the 3,243 mutation.
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PMID:[Detection of a mutation in mitochondrial DNA in a family with sensorineural deafness and diabetes mellitus as the predominant clinical features]. 756 31

This study examines the relationship of genotype to phenotype in 14 unselected patients who were found to harbour the A3243G transition in the mitochondrial transfer RNALeu(UUR) gene commonly associated with the syndrome of mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and strokes (MELAS). Only 6 of the 14 cases (43%) had seizures and recurrent strokes, the core clinical features of the MELAS phenotype. Of the remaining cases, four had an encephalomyopathy with deafness, ataxia and dementia, two had syndromes with progressive external ophthalmoplegia and two had limb weakness alone. Even within the MELAS subgroup, the majority of patients had one or more clinical manifestations considered to be atypical of the MELAS syndrome. They included developmental delay, ophthalmoparesis, pigmentary retinopathy and intestinal pseudo-obstruction. The proportion of mutant mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) in muscle was generally higher in patients with recurrent strokes than in those without strokes, the highest levels being observed in MELAS cases with early onset disease. Studies of isolated muscle mitochondria identified a range of respiratory chain abnormalities mostly involving Complex I; immunoblots of Complex I in 3 of 10 cases showed selective loss of specific subunits encoded by nuclear genes. In the group as a whole, however, no clear correlations were observed between the severity or extent of the respiratory chain abnormality and clinical phenotype or the proportion of mutant mtDNA in biopsied skeletal muscle. These discrepancies suggest that, in patients harbouring the common MELAS3243 mutation, differences in heteroplasmy and the proportions of mutant mtDNA may not be the sole determinants of disease expression and that additional genetic mechanisms are involved in defining the range of clinical and biochemical phenotypes associated with this aberrant mitochondrial genome.
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PMID:Mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA) diseases: correlation of genotype to phenotype. 759 99


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