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Query: UMLS:C0038454 (
stroke
)
147,016
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Notch3 mutations cause
CADASIL
, an increasingly recognized cause of subcortical ischemic
stroke
and vascular dementia in human adults. In the absence of any specific diagnostic criteria,
CADASIL
diagnosis is based on mutational scanning of Notch3, which is a large gene composed of 33 exons with a high G-C content. In this study we examined the sensitivity of denaturing high performance liquid chromatography (DHPLC). First we established the theoretical optimal parameters, then we examined a large collection of amplicons in which we had previously identified distinct pathogenic mutations or polymorphisms. We further performed Notch3 mutational scanning in five patients suspected of
CADASIL
diagnosis in which previous scanning, including SSCP and heteroduplexes analysis, failed to detect any pathogenic mutation. DHPLC resolved 97% of mutations previously detected by sequencing and allowed identification of two novel pathogenic mutations: R607C and F984C. These data indicate that DHPLC is a sensitive screening method particularly suitable for epidemio-genetic screening of
CADASIL
.
...
PMID:Evaluation of DHPLC analysis in mutational scanning of Notch3, a gene with a high G-C content. 1110 81
CADASIL
, an autosomal dominant adult onset arteriopathy causing
stroke
and dementia in humans, is underlaid by a non atherosclerotic non amyloid angiopathy involving mainly the media of small cerebral arteries; it is characterized by major lesions of vascular smooth muscle cells. Using a positional cloning approach, we mapped
CADASIL
locus on chromosome 19 and identified the mutated gene as being Notch3. This gene, previously unknown in humans, encodes for a large transmembrane receptor belonging to the Notch/lin12 gene family which are known to be involved in cell fate specification during development. Genetic analysis of more than 120
CADASIL
unrelated families allowed us to show that these mutations are highly stereotyped and affect only the extra cellular domain of the protein. On the basis of these data, a molecular diagnostic test has been set up and is now widely required by clinicians involved in the diagnosis of vascular leukoencephalopathies. Using this test, we recently showed that
CADASIL
can also occur in patients who do not have any affected relative due to the existence of notch3 de novo mutations. As a first step to investigate the molecular and cellular mechanisms leading from Notch3 mutations to
CADASIL
phenotype, we analyzed by in-situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry the pattern of expression of this gene. Notch3 expression is highly restricted to the vascular smooth muscle cell in normal human adults. In
CADASIL
tissues there is a dramatic accumulation of the extracellular domain of the protein which suggests that one of the main mechanisms of
CADASIL
involves anomalies in the proteolytical cleavage and clearance of this protein. These data provide important clues to the mechanisms of this condition and current work should lead in the next future to a complete understanding of
CADASIL
and set up the basis of a rational therapeutical approach of this condition.
...
PMID:[CADASIL: genetics and physiopathology]. 1126 Dec 57
To clarify the characteristics of
CADASIL
in Japan, we performed clinical and genetic investigations for six patients from 5 Japanese families diagnosed as
CADASIL
. We identified that the onset of focal neurologic deficits ranged from 38 to 63 years old (mean 49 +/- 9.4 yrs) and the occurrence rates of main neurologic symptoms and signs were 1/6 for migraine, 3/6 for recurrent
stroke
episodes, 6/6 for dementia, and 4/6 for pseudobulbar palsy. The marked narrowing of retinal arteries were observed in 3/6. The notch 3 mutations were all found in exon 4. Although other several families shared similar phenotype of
CADASIL
, there were no deposition of granular osmiophilic materials within the basal lamina of smooth muscle cells in the arterioles of biopsied muscle and no mutations in the cording regions of notch 3 gene. We investigated prospectively the incidence of
CADASIL
and
CADASIL
-like disease in Kumamoto district from 1999 to 2000. One thousand and thirty four patients with
stroke
were hospitalized in 6 hospitals which have
stroke
care unit. Among them, 7 patients fulfilled the criteria that were less than 60 years old, lacunar strokes and/or TIA, presence of a family history, and no risk factors such as hypertension, diabetes mellitus, and hyperlipidemia. One of seven patients was diagnosed as
CADASIL
by DNA analysis. It was suspected the incidences of
CADASIL
and
CADASIL
-like disease were not so rare in Japan.
...
PMID:[CADASIL: clinical analysis of CADASIL and CADASIL-like disorders in Japan]. 1146 69
Cerebral amyloid angiopathy (CAA) is one of the two most common cerebral arteriopathies seen in the brains of elderly patients. The other is arteriosclerosis (AS), historically considered a consequence of chronic hypertension and also described as lipohyalinosis (LH), a clinicopathologic association that is increasingly questioned. These and other less frequently encountered degeneralions of the cerebral microvasculature (
CADASIL
, Binswanger subcortical leukoencephalopathy) share the common feature of degeneration of the medial smooth muscle layer within arteriolar walls. This can be dramatic in CAA, in the course of which complete replacement of medial smooth muscle by fibrillar amyloid may occur. It is a less prominent feature of
CADASIL
and BSLE: in the latter condition, medial smooth muscle hyperplasia, possibly a response to some kind of injury, is a more dramatic finding. In some of these "angiomyopathies", fibrinoid necrosis of the arterial wall and microaneurvsm formation may lead to
stroke
, manifest as cerebral hemorrhage. With
CADASIL
and BSLE, ischemic brain injury is more common. In the case of CAA, upregulation of the Abeta-amyloid precursor protein occurs when arteriolar smooth muscle cells in culture are exposed to prolonged hypoxia, especially with reoxygenation. Injury to arteriolar smooth muscle cells may be one mechanism by which angiomyopathies progress and become symptomatic.
...
PMID:Non-CAA angiopathies and their possible interactions with cerebral amyloid angiopathy. 1167 85
We report a 26-year-old woman who showed recurrent migrainous attacks and convulsions since her childhood. Neurological examination revealed no focal abnormality except mental retardation (MR). T2-and fluid-attenuated inversion-recovery (FLAIR)-weighted brain MRI revealed apparent high intensities in the deep subcotical white matter. Ultrastructual studies revealed an abnormal deposition of granular osmiophilic materials (GOM) on the surface of vascular smooth muscle cells in dermis. Her mother developed recurrent strokes without risk factor since age 41. A heterozygosis Arg133Cys mutation of Notch 3 gene has already presented in patient and her mother. This case might be an early stage in
CADASIL
before
stroke
onset and suggested that systemic vasculopathy was presented in this stage. The correlation between MR and phenotype of
CADASIL
were unclear.
...
PMID:[A case of CADASIL in early stage]. 1177 Nov 60
Mutations in the human Notch 3 gene cause the vascular
stroke
and dementia syndrome
CADASIL
(Cerebral Autosomal Dominant Arteriopathy with Subcortical Infarcts and Leukoencephalopathy) characterized by degeneration of vascular smooth muscle cells and multiple small infarcts in the white and deep gray matter of the brain. Here we have analyzed the expression pattern of the Notch 3 gene in the pre- and postnatal mouse brain. Prenatal Notch 3 expression is restricted to a scattered population of cells within the vessel wall of all major blood vessels in the developing embryo, including those that form the perineural vascular plexus. Expression in the postnatal brain is confined to a scattered cell population within the vessel wall of small to medium-sized penetrating arteries, which are the vessel type primarily affected in
CADASIL
patients. In contrast, no expression was observed in capillaries and veins. Notch 3 is most likely expressed in a subset of vascular smooth muscle cells, and the expression pattern of one of the Notch ligands, Serrate 1, was very similar to that observed for Notch 3. The Notch 3 expressing pattern was not significantly altered in platelet-derived growth factor B- (PDGF-B) deficient mouse embryos, demonstrating that Notch 3 expression is not under direct control of PDGF-B. These data show that Notch 3 expression is conserved between mouse and human and suggest that the mouse is a valid system for analysis of
CADASIL
.
...
PMID:Mouse Notch 3 expression in the pre- and postnatal brain: relationship to the stroke and dementia syndrome CADASIL. 1212 55
VaD is the second most common cause of dementia in the elderly after AD. VaD is defined as the loss of cognitive function resulting from ischemic, ischemic-hypoxic, or hemorrhagic brain lesions as a result of CVD and cardiovascular pathologic changes. Diagnosis requires (1) cognitive loss (often predominantly subcortical), (2) vascular brain lesions demonstrated by imaging, and (3) exclusion of other causes of dementia, such as AD. VaD is excluded by brain imaging showing no evidence of vascular lesions. VaD may be caused by multiple strokes (MID or poststroke dementia) but also by single strategic strokes, multiple lacunes, and hypoperfusive lesions such as border zone infarcts and ischemic periventricular leukoencephalopathy (Binswanger's disease). Primary and secondary prevention of
stroke
and cardiovascular disease decreases the burden of VaD. Genetic advice is needed in patients with familial forms, such as
CADASIL
. Treatment involves control of risk factors (i.e., hypertension, diabetes, smoking, hyperfibrinogenemia, hyperhomocystinemia, orthostatic hypotension, cardiac arrhythmias). Anticholinergic medications used for AD are also useful in VaD, and atypical antipsychotic agents and antidepressants (e.g., selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors) may be required in some patients.
...
PMID:Vascular dementia revisited: diagnosis, pathogenesis, treatment, and prevention. 1216 56
We reviewed 12 patients from 11 Japanese families diagnosed as having
CADASIL
from 1998 to 2001. The age of onset of focal neurologic deficits ranged from 38 to 71 years (mean: 50.4 +/- 9.8 years). Japanese
CADASIL
patients rarely had migraine and frequently presented with symptoms of dementia at diagnosis. Notch3 mutations were concentrated in exons 3, 4, and 5. Cysteine was replaced by another amino acid or vice versa in the majority of Japanese
CADASIL
patients. However, in 2 families, the mutations were not related to cysteine. In the prospective study, 2030 patients with
stroke
were hospitalized in 6 hospitals with
stroke
units in the Kumamoto district from 1999 to 2001. Among them, 14 patients fulfilled the criteria of being less than 60 years of age, showing lacunar strokes and/or TIA, presence of a family history, and no risk factors of
stroke
. One of these 14 patients was diagnosed as having
CADASIL
by DNA analysis. However, if hyperlipidemia was excluded from the list, 16 patients fulfilled the criteria and 2 patients were diagnosed as having
CADASIL
by DNA analysis. It was suspected that the incidence of
CADASIL
is not so rare in Japan. There were some families with
CADASIL
-like features, but without Notch3 mutations or GOM, suggesting the need for genetic analysis in the future.
...
PMID:Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) and CADASIL-like disorders in Japan. 1248 Jul 61
The main clinical features of
CADASIL
(cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leucoencephalopathy) are
stroke
, dementia, and migraine. A reversible acute encephalopathy was the principal presentation in six of 70 patients in a British prevalence study. The episodes lasted seven to 14 days, presenting with fever, acute confusion, coma, and fits; there was full recovery but in two cases identical episodes recurred some years later. All patients had a previous history of migraine with aura and were originally misdiagnosed as viral encephalitis.
CADASIL
should be considered in acute unexplained encephalopathies. MRI white matter changes, previous migraine with aura, and a family history of
stroke
and dementia may be useful pointers to the diagnosis.
...
PMID:"CADASIL coma": an underdiagnosed acute encephalopathy. 1253 61
Recent advances suggest the existence of several autosomal dominantly inherited forms of cerebrovascular disorders. Mutations in diverse genes may induce direct pathological changes in intracranial vessels to cause cerebral ischaemic or haemorrhagic strokes leading to cognitive impairment and dementia. Similar pathology may also be caused by systemic vascular disease resulting from mutations and polymorphisms in genes that regulate cardiovascular physiology, blood coagulation and metabolic functions. The most common form of familial
stroke
appears to be
CADASIL
or cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy.
CADASIL
is an arterial disease that has been linked to nucleotide substitutions and deletions in the Notch 3 gene. The pathogenesis of the disorder or how the mutations lead to cerebral infarcts and dementia is not known. However, elucidation of the microvascular pathology associated with such genetic disorders not associated with physiological risk factors for cardiovascular disease or
stroke
can bear much light on primary vascular mechanisms that lead to ischaemic blood flow and neuronal vulnerability.
...
PMID:CADASIL and genetics of cerebral ischaemia. 1259 10
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