Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0036572 (seizures)
80,221 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Thirty-four nonambulatory patients with progressive neuromuscular spinal deformity were surgically managed using a 1/4" U-shaped double rod construct with segmental instrumentation from T2 to the pelvis accompanied by posterior spinal fusion. Diagnoses included 17 patients with cerebral palsy, six with spinal bifida, and 11 with other diseases (spinal muscular atrophy, Friedreich's ataxia, polyneuropathy, nemaline myopathy, and polio). Twenty-three patients had single uncompensated thoracolumbar curves, and 11 had a double curve pattern. The mean preoperative major curve was 66 degrees (range, 22-132 degrees), the secondary curve 58 degrees (range, 23-84 degrees). No postoperative spinal support was used. Mean curve correction was 36 degrees or 54.6%. There were four major complications, including two implant failures requiring revision and two patients sustaining excessive intraoperative blood loss necessitating completion of the procedure in a second stage. There were two neurologic complications including one case of postoperative seizures and an L4 monoradicular neuropathy in a spina bifida patient. Four patients had temporary postoperative ileus, one gastroesophageal reflex, and four had urinary tract infections. There were no significant postoperative pulmonary complications. Excluding the patients with rod failure, mean loss of correction at mean follow-up of 21.3 months was 6.5%. The stability and curve correction obtained using this system supports its continued use in patients with progressive neuromuscular scoliosis.
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PMID:Unit rod segmental spinal instrumentation in the management of patients with progressive neuromuscular spinal deformity. 261 59

We present two children with seizures and other signs of cerebral involvement at the outset of acute inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy, consistent with a diagnosis of encephalomyeloradiculoneuropathy. One child had a recurrence associated with mild central dysfunction and improved during therapy with corticosteroids. Both children recovered completely. Both acute and relapsing inflammatory demyelinating neuropathy may be accompanied by cerebral dysfunction, expanding the clinical spectrum of encephalomyeloradiculoneuropathy.
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PMID:Cerebral involvement in children with acute and relapsing inflammatory polyneuropathy. 285 Mar 16

Clinical and biochemical findings in a male subject with progressive encephalopathy and peripheral neuropathy are presented. Early development was normal. At age 3.5 years, he had seizures associated with fever. Subsequently, there was progressive neurologic deterioration. A CT brain scan at age 4 years, 2 months demonstrated multiple areas of variable density in the white matter. There was mild slowing of nerve conduction velocities and a sural nerve biopsy revealed segmental demyelinative neuropathy. Metachromatic leukodystrophy was suspected, but arylsulfatase A activity in leukocytes and fibroblasts was in the normal range. The cerebroside sulfate loading test on intact cultured fibroblasts showed attenuated hydrolysis leading to a tentative diagnosis of cerebroside sulfatase activator deficiency. However, the attenuated response of proband fibroblasts was not normalized by supplementation with activator in a reproducible manner, and urine showed hyperexcretion rather than deficiency of activator. Ultimately, an assay for galactosylceramide beta-galactosidase activity established a deficiency of this enzyme leading to the diagnosis of late-onset Krabbe disease.
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PMID:Late-onset Krabbe disease initially diagnosed as cerebroside sulfatase activator deficiency. 290 3

A review of 15 cases of pancreas transplantation at the Presbyterian University Hospital in Pittsburgh showed that all of the neurologic complications occurred outside of the pancreas transplantation surgery itself. Major CNS complications included hypoxic encephalopathy (20 per cent), cerebral and spinal-cord infarction (7 per cent), and seizures (13 per cent). These appeared to be closely associated with cardiovascular collapse or cardiac arrest that often occurred following septic, hemorrhagic, or additional surgical-anesthetic stresses, removed in time from the transplantation. When patients who died of sudden cardiorespiratory arrest were included, the overall frequency of global cerebral ischemia was 33 per cent. The occurrence of herpes zoster neuritis (13 per cent) was contrasted with the lack of CNS infections. The possible associations of visual hallucinations with cyclosporine therapy (7 per cent), CSF pleocytosis with OKT3 therapy (7 per cent), and compressive neuropathy with operative-anesthetic monitoring (7 per cent) were discussed in relation to previous reports in the literature. Randomized controlled clinical studies were suggested to distinguish more clearly the complications due to pancreas transplantation from those due to the natural history of the underlying diabetes and to distinguish the beneficial and adverse effects of pancreas transplants from those of coexisting renal transplants.
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PMID:Neurologic complications of pancreas transplants. 304 46

The effects of pregnancy on acute metabolic complications of diabetes may have important consequences for both mother and fetus. The consequences of pregnancy for chronic complications of diabetes, including retinopathy, nephropathy, neuropathy, and hypertension, are not clear. Recent data are reviewed so that health care providers will be able to provide reasonable advice to insulin-dependent diabetic women contemplating pregnancy both for problems that may potentially arise during gestation and those that may affect long-term health and survival. Diabetic ketoacidosis is an uncommon problem that arises during gestation. Acute alterations in pH and electrolyte concentrations as well as hyperglycemia, however, may have important consequences for mother and fetus, including perinatal asphyxia and reduced fetal oxygen delivery. Hypoglycemia, on the other hand, may result in maternal coma or seizures and, when frequent, has been associated with infant respiratory distress syndrome. Background retinopathy often worsens during gestation, with regression common postpartum. Data suggest that progression of background disease is related to both glycemic control and the acute institution of intensive insulin therapy with those patients with poor control requiring more aggressive therapeutic intervention most adversely affected. The course of proliferative retinopathy is more variable, with both progression and regression reported. Preconception photocoagulation may prevent progression. Preconceptional ophthalmologic evaluation with frequent assessments during pregnancy is advised. Increases in 24-hour protein excretion are common during gestation in patients with preexisting renal disease and resolve in many patients postpartum. Serum creatinine and creatinine clearance increase during the first trimester and generally do not change during the remainder of pregnancy.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:Impact of pregnancy on complications of insulin-dependent diabetes mellitus. 313 6

There are several clinically distinct forms of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis whose presentation and pathology are usually homogeneous within families. Several atypical variants have also been reported. We have studied an inbred sibship in which neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis appeared to present in two completely different ways. In the proband, the course was compatible with a somewhat atypical juvenile variant. Ataxia and spasticity started at 4.5 years, followed by blindness with optic atrophy, intractable seizures, dementia, and death at 14 years. Atypical features included areflexia, hypotonia, and ataxia. Electron microscopic studies of her skin and her rectal ganglion cells showed lucent, dense, and fingerprint inclusions that were also found in the central nervous system at autopsy. Her brother and sister developed difficulty walking at ages 8.5 and 10.5 years and are alive at 24 and 18 years. They presented with slowly progressive spinocerebellar degeneration with sensorimotor neuropathy without dementia, seizures, or visual impairment. Lysosomal enzymes and lipoprotein analysis were normal in all three siblings and their parents. Elevated dolichol in the urine and lucent, dense, and fingerprint inclusions in skin, cutaneous nerve, buffy coat lymphocytes in both siblings and in the sural nerve of the brother suggest that their disease may represent a novel phenotype of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis. While it is possible that two different recessive genes may be segregating in this consanguineous family, we cannot dismiss the possibility that variability of gene expression may account for the divergent phenotypes.
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PMID:Spino-cerebellar degeneration with polyneuropathy associated with ceroid lipofuscinosis in one family. 342 77

A 3-year-old horse presented with intermittent generalized seizures of 2-month duration. During interictal periods, the horse appeared normal and a cause for the seizures could not be identified. Necropsy revealed opacity of the leptomeninges, covering most of one cerebral hemisphere along with thinning and collapse of the cortex in the ipsilateral pyriform lobe. Histopathology demonstrated leptomeningeal vascular proliferation and meningothelial hyperplasia. Prominent tortuous vessels of the gyri and sulci extended into some regions of the subjacent cortex, where there was neuronal loss, ectopia, and disorganization. Clusters of prominent arterioles were found in the sclerotic choroid plexus of the lateral and fourth ventricles. Milder vascular lesions were present in the leptomeninges of the ventral brain stem, right cerebrum, spinal cord, and in the eye. The left trigeminal nerve was distorted by swollen fasicles containing onion bulb-like structures. Most bulbs contained central axons surrounded by myelin sheaths of variable thickness. Electron microscopy demonstrated concentrically arranged cells with continuous basal laminae and rare pinocytotic vesicles. S-100 immunohistochemistry showed strong positive staining in these cells. This is an unusual combination of lesions to which analogies can be drawn with the human neuroectodermal dysplasias, specifically Sturge-Weber disease. The relationship of the neuropathy to the leptomeningeal hemangiomatosis is unclear, but a compound anomaly in embryological development resulting in dysplasia and neoplasia may be involved.
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PMID:Meningocerebral hemangiomatosis resembling Sturge-Weber disease in a horse. 368 94

A 55-year-old man is presented who developed severe multifocal myoclonus and tonic clonic seizures in his early thirties, and progressive limb weakness in his mid forties, when a ragged red fibre myopathy was diagnosed. He went on to develop a distal motor neuropathy and respiratory failure. Respiratory function tests indicated respiratory failure secondary to respiratory muscle weakness and a central hypoventilation syndrome. CT scan revealed brain stem atrophy and brain stem evoked responses were abnormal. A sural nerve biopsy showed severe axonal degeneration. Cytochrome difference spectra and polarographic studies on isolated intact muscle mitochondria were normal. This study reports the association of respiratory failure and sleep apnoea with Fukuhara's syndrome and presents biochemical data suggesting that the mitochondrial respiratory chain may be intact in some patients with this syndrome.
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PMID:Mitochondrial myoneuropathy with respiratory failure and myoclonic epilepsy. A case report with biochemical studies. 393 3

Neurotoxicity is a well-recognized and commonly observed side effect associated with the use of vincristine sulfate in cancer chemotherapy. The clinical manifestations of vincristine neuropathy cover a wide spectrum of peripheral neurologic dysfunctions that have been described to be reversible and cumulative in most instances (1, 2). Paresthesias, loss of tendon reflexes, and progressive weakness are the most common clinical features (3, 4). Sensory impairment, cranial nerve palsies, gastrointestinal disturbances, and autonomic dysfunctions including atonic bladder, impotence, and orthostatic hypotension may occur (5). Acute CNS complications, usually presenting as generalized seizures, are extremely rare and only a few cases have been reported which were without underlying biochemical or structural abnormalities (1, 5-9). We describe the case of a woman with multiple myeloma, who developed fulminant encephalopathy following 4 days of continuous vincristine, adriamycin, and day 1-4 pulse dexamethasone (VAD) combination therapy.
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PMID:Acute encephalopathy associated with continuous vincristine sulfate combination therapy: case report. 406 27

A baby with congenital sensoric neuropathy showed, due to missing sensitivity to pain, repeated injury of the tongue resulting from bites after the front teeth had erupted. The defect formed at the tip of the tongue and showed excessive granulation resembling at first sight a tumorous process. Such alterations of the tongue usually are the first symptom of this rare disease and therefore are most important for diagnosis. With another infant presenting with Joubert's syndrome, i.e. cerebellar malformation, macroglossy, increased motility of the tongue and severe dyspnoic attacks combined with seizures, also tumorous granulomatous alterations of the tongue were found, due to chronic injury of the tongue by bites.
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PMID:[Unusual traumatic alterations of the tongue (author's transl)]. 617 69


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