Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0038379 (strabismus)
9,317 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 21-year-old man with a longstanding history of impaired visual acuity, strabismus, broad-based gait, and below-average intellectual capacity developed respiratory difficulties and intermittent generalized weakness at age 19. He subsequently showed signs of massive brainstem dysfunction and died. Postmortem examination demonstrated changes compatible with subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy of Leigh involving portions of the diencephalon, midbrain, pons, and medulla as well as portions of the spinal cord and optic nerves. Evaluation of family members for presence of the urinary inhibitor factor for thiamine diphosphate phosphoryl transferase revealed abnormal levels in a brother, a maternal uncle, and the maternal grandfather of the patient.
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PMID:Leigh's disease in an adult with evidence of "inhibitor factor" in family members. 20 25

Subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy (SNE), or Leigh's disease, is an unusual neurologic disorder that is associated with nystagmus, strabismus, and optic atrophy in the majority of cases, and is most often described in infants. The defect currently thought to account for SNE is the presence of an inhibitor factor in the thiamine pathway. We saw a patient whose eye findings initially were believed to represent spasmus nutans, but whose clinical course, computed tomographic findings, and autopsy findings were typical of SNE.
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PMID:Leigh's subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy manifesting as spasmus nutans. 674 83

Thirty-four children with lactic acidosis and Leigh encephalopathy due to cytochrome C oxidase (COX) deficiency distributed in 28 families have recently been identified in northeastern Quebec, particularly in the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean (SLSJ) region. The segregation analysis was consistent with an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. The incidence was estimated at 1/2,063 live births between 1979 and 1990, and the carrier rate was estimated at 1/23 inhabitants in SLSJ. In SLSJ, the places of origin of the COX-deficient children and their parents did not show a clustered nonuniform distribution. The genealogical reconstruction of 54 obligate carriers identified 26 ancestors common to all of them. Twenty-two were 17th-century Europeans, suggesting that the COX-deficient gene was introduced in the French-Canadian population by early settlers. These results support the hypothesis of a founder effect for COX deficiency in northeastern Quebec. Clinical findings are reported for 15 of these COX-deficient patients, age 6 mo to 11 years. Moderate developmental delay, hypotonia, ataxia, strabismus, and mild facial dysmorphism were frequent. Eleven children died in episodes of fulminant metabolic acidosis. The patients had elevated blood and cerebrospinal fluid lactate levels, decreased blood bicarbonate levels, and normal blood pH. Leigh disease and microvesicular steatosis of the liver were present in all affected patients for whom postmortem examination was performed. This biochemically uniform group of patients showed a wide range of clinical severity.
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PMID:Clinical, metabolic, and genetic aspects of cytochrome C oxidase deficiency in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean. 839 91

Leigh disease is a subacute neurodegenerative disorder characterized by symmetric necrotic lesions in the basal ganglia, cerebellum, thalamus, brain stem, and optical nerves and caused by altered oxidative phosphorylation. We describe the clinical, biochemical, neuroimaging, and molecular studies of a 19-year-old boy with early-onset Leigh disease manifesting as severe extrapyramidal disorder with generalized dystonia and choreoathetosis. He was born of healthy parents after an uneventful pregnancy and delivery. At the age of 2 1/2 years, after a minor respiratory infection, he developed unstable, broad-based gait and tremor of the hands. These symptoms persisted for the next several years, when ataxia became more prominent. Difficulty in swallowing, dysarthria, trunk dystonia, and marked dyskinesia of the arms and hands gradually developed. Nystagmus, transient ptosis, and strabismus also appeared. Abnormal laboratory findings included elevated plasma and cerebrospinal fluid lactate and pyruvate, with an abnormal lactate/pyruvate ratio. Cranial computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated signs of cerebellar atrophy, bilateral and symmetric hypodensities in the lentiform nucleus and thalamus, and transient hyperintensities of cerebral peduncles in T2-weighted sequences suggestive of Leigh disease. Muscle biopsy revealed isolated fiber atrophy, necrotic fibers undergoing phagocytosis, and no ragged-red fibers. The measured catalytic activity of cytochrome c oxidase in skeletal muscle homogenates demonstrated a partial cytochrome c oxidase deficiency No abnormalities in the mitochondrial genome and in the SURF-1 gene were found. The boy is currently receiving levodopa therapy, creatine monohydrate, and a high dosage of thiamine and lipoic acid, his condition is stabilized, and extrapyramidal symptoms are less pronounced.
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PMID:Cytochrome c oxidase partial deficiency-associated Leigh disease presenting as an extrapyramidal syndrome. 1151 Sep 39

The male proband reported here was born with appropriate anthropometric parameters at term as the second child of healthy nonconsanguineous parents. His only clinical symptom was bilateral congenital cataracts with strabismus at birth, and both lenses were removed surgically at the age of 8 months. The perinatal and infantile period thereafter was clinically uneventful and his psychomotor development appeared almost normal. At the age of 6 years he was hospitalized for slight muscle weakness, minor ptosis, nystagmus and decreased physical activity. Soon after, his general condition worsened, gait ataxia presented, dysphagia and difficulty of speech followed by rapidly progressive generalized ataxia, and myopathy developed. Typical progressive gray matter degeneration with focal necrosis in the basal ganglia characteristic of the Leigh type of neuropathology could be detected by cranial MRI, the muscle histology showed ragged-red fibers. At the age of 7.5 years, unexpected left side hemiparesis with speech disability resembling that seen in MELAS syndrome developed, from which he recovered within 1.5 days. The mtDNA of the patient showed single 6.7 kb large-scale deletion harboring between 7817 and 14 536 bp. This case represents the first report of a verified mtDNA mutation associated with congenital cataracts as the first clinical sign of a later developing progressive neuromuscular disease presented with a combination of Leigh neuropathology, ragged-red fiber histopathology and stroke-like attack.
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PMID:Congenital cataract as the first symptom of a neuromuscular disease caused by a novel single large-scale mitochondrial DNA deletion. 1273 42

To investigate ophthalmologic manifestations in children with definitive oxidative phosphorylation disorders, a retrospective review was conducted of clinical and laboratory records of all such pediatric patients (n = 103) diagnosed and treated at one center between 1983 and 2006. All were residents of Victoria, Australia. Nystagmus or roving eye movements were the most common ophthalmologic manifestations as a presenting symptom of disease (13/20) and were the sole manifestation at presentation in 10/13 patients. Divergent strabismus was a presenting symptom in 5/20 patients and was the sole manifestation at presentation in 3/20 patients. Abnormal eye movements were noted in 6 patients and strabismus was noted in 4 patients with Leigh's or Leigh-like disease; in 9 of these 10 patients, Leigh's disease was the result of complex I deficiency. Altogether, ophthalmologic manifestations were noted at presentation in 12/35 patients with complex I deficiency. External ophthalmoplegia in conjunction with ptosis was the presenting symptom in 3/20 patients, all with Kearns-Sayers syndrome. Patients suspected of having oxidative phosphorylation disorders should be referred for ophthalmologic examination. Prospective studies are needed for a comprehensive elucidation of the ophthalmologic findings in these disorders.
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PMID:Ophthalmologic presentation of oxidative phosphorylation diseases of childhood. 1848 20

Leigh's disease is a rare progressive neurodegenerative condition caused by a mitochondrial cytopathy. The authors present the case of a 9-year-old girl with dorsal midbrain syndrome causing convergence retraction nystagmus. Magnetic resonance imaging, skin biopsy, and genetic testing confirmed the cause to be Leigh's disease due to two SURF1 mutations. To the authors' knowledge, this is the first reported case of dorsal midbrain syndrome caused by a mitochondrial cytopathy.
J Pediatr Ophthalmol Strabismus
PMID:Leigh's disease associated with a dorsal midbrain syndrome. 1979 29

We experienced a case in which mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) was identified as complications following the onset of Leigh syndrome along with a 10191 T>C mutation of the mitochondrial gene. The case pertains to a 26-year-old woman. The disease appeared when she was 11 years old due to divergent strabismus, at which point a diagnosis of juvenile Leigh syndrome was made. Many infraction images not conforming to the vessel region were observed upon a brain MRI which was performed at 26 years of age, thus leading to her being diagnosed with MELAS as a complication. Upoon bibliographical consideration, it was speculated that the clinical features of MELAS/Leigh overlap syndrome clearly differ from Leigh syndrome in terms of age of onset, symptoms, and prognosis. Pleiotropic genetic factors including heteroplasmy were presumed to be involved in the diverse phenotype of overlap syndrome.
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PMID:[A case of mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episode/Leigh overlap syndrome]. 2540 68