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Query: UMLS:C0038379 (
strabismus
)
9,317
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Intramuscular injections of botulinum toxin type A (Oculinum) is used to treat
strabismus
and focal dystonias affecting orofacial muscles. However, the toxin-induced morphological changes that underlie the therapeutic alterations of tone in the muscles of mastication have not been described. In this study, paired intramuscular injections of botulinum toxin (10 units) were made in three adult monkeys (Macaca fascicularis) allowed to survive 14, 28 and 63 days. Another monkey received multiple injection-pairs over 84 days. Animals were killed by deep pentobarbital anaesthesia before transcardiac perfusion-fixation. Tissue sampled from comparable regions of the injected masseter, the uninjected masseter and an uninjected animal was processed for ultrastructural analysis. Few changes were found 14 days post-injection. However, muscle fibres showed myofibrillar dissolution, aberrations in the Z-line, and enlarged mitochondria in the region of the I-band by 28 days. In the 63-day and 84-day animals, the injected muscle was considerably smaller than the uninjected, contralateral muscle. Regions of the injected muscle contained fibres with markedly reduced cross-sectional area. Internalization of myonuclei, loss of myofibrillar organization, and helical complexes were common. Toxin-induced changes, though similar to those that follow denervation by axotomy, were not accompanied by degeneration of neuromuscular junctions. Instead, morphological evidence for
axonal
sprouting in the region of the neuromuscular junction, possibly contributing to functional recovery, was seen as early as 14 days in toxin-treated muscles.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural changes in the masseter muscle of Macaca fascicularis resulting from intramuscular injections of botulinum toxin type A. 176 79
In six kittens reared with surgically induced
strabismus
, three each of convergent and divergent types, we studied 208 striate cortex cells. Of these, 22 were identified as projecting to the dorsal lateral geniculate nucleus (LGN) on the basis of antidromic activation from LGN and of histological localization within cortical layer VI. We classified these cortico-geniculate cells according to their
axonal
conduction velocities which in normal cats, are generally grouped into slow, intermediate, or fast categories. Proportions and mean conduction velocities of slow and fast groups were approximately the same as in the normal cat, but the intermediate group was almost entirely missing with only one cell classified as such. Our results suggest that development of the intermediate group, which has previously been implicated in functional binocular vision, may be impaired selectively by
strabismus
.
...
PMID:Effects of strabismus on development of cortico-geniculate projections in the kitten. 730 47
Children with the fetal alcohol syndrome often have ocular anomalies. These include abnormalities of the eyes and adnexa (
strabismus
, blepharoptosis, epicanthus), as well as intraocular defects (cataract, glaucoma, persistent hyperplastic primary vitreous, retinal and optic nerve anomalies). Based on the clinical results in an ophthalmological study of a group of Swedish children with the fetal alcohol syndrome, in which optic nerve hypoplasia was found in up to one-half of the group, an experimental study was designed in rats pre- and perinatally exposed to alcohol by means of a liquid diet. The optic nerve was seriously affected. Macroglial cells and optic axons were ultrastructurally damaged. The diameter of the optic nerve cross section, glial cell nuclear area,
axonal
diameter, and the total number of optic axons showed significantly lower values in the alcohol-exposed group than in the controls. In addition, the retina from the alcohol-exposed animals displayed significantly lower values of the retinal thickness and ganglion cell nuclear volume, as compared to the controls. Thus, rats exposed to alcohol in utero developed hypoplasia of the optic nerve similar to the findings in children born to alcoholic mothers. This strongly supports the hypothesis that prenatal alcohol exposure may adversely affect the development of the optic nerve.
...
PMID:Optic nerve hypoplasia: comparative effects in children and rats exposed to alcohol during pregnancy. 780 Dec 97
The objective of this article was to evaluate the etiologies, findings, and treatment of ocular neuromyotonia (ONM) in three case reports. The etiologies of ONM were determined by the histories, neuroradiologic tests, or biopsies. Clinical observations, videotaping, and electronic eye movement recordings documented the eye movement abnormalities. Intermittent diplopia developed several years after myelography with thorium dioxide (Thorotrast), radiation treatment for a pituitary tumor, and radiotherapy for medulloblastoma of the posterior fossa. All of the patients had intermittent, variable tropias that occurred spontaneously or were induced by eccentric gaze. One patient had a partial third nerve palsy, and another had a unilateral internuclear ophthalmoplegia (INO). ONM involved the paretic third nerve, extraocular muscles, and ipsilateral lateral rectus muscle in one patient, the paretic medial rectus muscle (INO) in one patient, a lateral rectus muscle (INO) in one patient, and a lateral rectus muscle in the last patient. Eye movement recordings were consistent with spasms of the involved muscles. Carbamazepine (Tegretol) abolished the ONM in two patients. The other patient had been taking carbamazepine for seizures and developed ONM when the dose was decreased. Increasing the dose abolished the ONM. ONM is an unusual cause of intermittent diplopia and
strabismus
, but its distinctive history and signs identify it easily. Damage to the peripheral cranial nerves might produce segmental demyelination,
axonal
hyperexcitability, and a self-perpetuating, reverberating circuit that causes spasms of the extraocular muscles.
...
PMID:Ocular neuromyotonia: three case reports with eye movement recordings. 953 30
Duane's syndrome is an unusual congenital form of
strabismus
where there is paradoxical anomalous lateral rectus innervation of the affected eye due to misdirection of axons destined for the medial rectus. Three types of Duane's syndrome are recognized. Most cases of Duane's syndrome are sporadic but up to 10% are familial, usually with autosomal dominant inheritance. Several autosomal dominant syndromes with dysmorphic features are associated with Duane's syndrome. Chromosomal loci for genes contributing to Duane's syndrome have been suggested at 4q, 8q and 22q. Duane's syndrome is heterogeneous at multiple levels with variations in its ocular manifestations, accompanying systemic manifestations and in the chromosomal loci with which it may be associated. The definition clinically and genetically of the various subgroups of Duane's syndrome will provide a valuable insight into brainstem
axonal
guidance to the extraocular muscles during human development.
...
PMID:Duane's syndrome. 1080 34
To describe the structural basis for lack of binocular fusion in strabismic primates, we investigated intrinsic horizontal connections within striate cortex (area V1) of normal and strabismic, adult macaque monkeys. The strabismic animals had early-onset natural esotropia (the visual axes deviated nasally), normal visual acuity in each eye, and the constellation of ocular motor deficits that typify human infantile
strabismus
. Horizontal patchy connections and synaptic boutons were labeled by injections of the neuronal tracer biotinylated dextran amine. Ocular dominance columns (ODCs), and blob vs. interblob compartments, were revealed by using cytochrome oxidase (CO). In layers 2/3 and 4B of the strabismic monkeys, patchy projections and boutons terminated much more frequently in same-eye (73%) as opposed to opposite-eye (27%) ODCs (normal monkeys 58% and 42%, respectively). The deficiency of binocular connections in the strabismic cortex was evident qualitatively as a "skip" pattern, in which every other row of ODCs had labeled patches. Analysis of V1 in normal monkeys revealed that the deficits in strabismic V1 were due mainly to a loss of binocular connections between neurons in CO-interblob compartments. In both normal and strabismic monkeys: (1) CO-blob compartment neurons showed a more pronounced bias for monocular connectivity, and (2) commitment of connections to the same CO-compartment as the injection site (blob-to-blob, or interblob-to-interblob) was moderately strong (64%) but far from absolute. These findings help elucidate the relative roles of visual experience vs. innate mechanisms in the development of
axonal
connections between ocular dominance domains and compartments within macaque V1. They also provide the first detailed description of the V1 maldevelopments associated with unrepaired natural, infantile-onset
strabismus
in primates.
...
PMID:Paucity of horizontal connections for binocular vision in V1 of naturally strabismic macaques: Cytochrome oxidase compartment specificity. 1516 26
To verify the postoperative ultrastructural changes of the myotendinous nerve endings of feline extraocular muscles, which are known as proprioceptors. Sixteen recti of four cats were used and divided into three groups. In group A, eight lateral recti were recessed. In group B, four medial recti were resected by 10 mm from insertion to include the myotendinous junction. In group C, four medial recti were resected by 4 mm of muscle bellies only, without disturbing the myotendinous junction. Four weeks after surgery, specimens were examined with electron microscopy. In group A, overall neural structures were well maintained with slight
axonal
degeneration. In group B, only muscle fibers were observed without any regeneration of neural sprouts. In group C,
axonal
disintegration and shrinkage were evident. These results indicate that myotendinous nerve endings can be damaged in
strabismus
surgery, and that resection was more invasive than recession in disrupting myotendinous nerve endings.
...
PMID:Ultrastructural changes of myotendinous nerve endings following recession or resection procedures of extraocular muscle surgeries in cats. 1592 87
In the mouse, Frizzled3 (Fz3) and Frizzled6 (Fz6) have been shown previously to control
axonal
growth and guidance in the CNS and hair patterning in the skin, respectively. Here, we report that Fz3 and Fz6 redundantly control neural tube closure and the planar orientation of hair bundles on a subset of auditory and vestibular sensory cells. In the inner ear, Fz3 and Fz6 proteins are localized to the lateral faces of sensory and supporting cells in all sensory epithelia in a pattern that correlates with the axis of planar polarity. Interestingly, the polarity of Fz6 localization with respect to the asymmetric position of the kinocilium is reversed between vestibular hair cells in the cristae of the semicircular canals and auditory hair cells in the organ of Corti. Vangl2, one of two mammalian homologs of the Drosophila planar cell polarity (PCP) gene van Gogh/
Strabismus
, is also required for correct hair bundle orientation on a subset of auditory sensory cells and on all vestibular sensory cells. In the inner ear of a Vangl2 mutant (Looptail; Lp), Fz3 and Fz6 proteins accumulate to normal levels but do not localize correctly at the cell surface. These results support the view that vertebrates and invertebrates use similar molecular mechanisms to control a wide variety of PCP-dependent developmental processes. This study also establishes the vestibular sensory epithelium as a tractable tissue for analyzing PCP, and it introduces the use of genetic mosaics for determining the absolute orientation of PCP proteins in mammals.
...
PMID:The role of Frizzled3 and Frizzled6 in neural tube closure and in the planar polarity of inner-ear sensory hair cells. 1649 41
Congenital syndromes of altered nervous system connectivity are reviewed along with recent findings on
axonal
growth: achiasma, congenital nystagmus, congenital horizontal gaze palsy, mirror movements and the syndromes of Kallmann, Wildervanck, Duane and Marcus Gunn. Identical guidance molecules are most likely involved in making
axonal
connections after injury and during development. Thus, investigations into variants of connectivity may help develop strategies to treat disconnections of axons in the adult.
Strabismus
2006 Jun
PMID:The challenge of axonal path-finding. 1676 Jan 15
Ataxia with oculo-motor apraxia type 2 (AOA2) is a recently described autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxia (ARCA) caused by mutations in the senataxin gene (SETX). We analysed the phenotypic spectrum of 19 AOA2 patients with mutations in SETX, which seems to be the third most frequent form of ARCA in Algeria after Freidreich ataxia and Ataxia with vitamin E deficiency. In AOA2 patients, the mean age at onset for all families was in the second decade. Cerebellar ataxia was progressive, slowly leading to disability which was aggravated by
axonal
polyneuropathy present in almost all the patients. Mean disease duration until wheelchair was around 20 years. Oculo-motor apraxia (OMA) was present in 32% of the patients while convergent
strabismus
was present in 37%.
Strabismus
is therefore also very suggestive of AOA2 when associated with ataxia and polyneuropathy even in the absence of OMA. Cerebellar atrophy was more severe in the eldest patients; however it may also be an early sign since it was present in the youngest and paucisymptomatic patients. The initial sign was gait ataxia in all but two patients who presented with head tremor and writer cramp, respectively. Serum alpha-fetoprotein, which was elevated in all tested patients, was a good marker to suggest molecular studies of the SETX gene.
...
PMID:Ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 2: a clinical and genetic study of 19 patients. 1914 56
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