Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (tremor)
18,428 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

We report a clinical survey of 82 patients with benign essential tremor (ET). Sixty five patients had a positive family history. Onset age showed two peaks before 20 years and in the sixth decade. Segregation analysis confirmed an autosomal dominant inheritance. Head tremor occurred mainly in aged women, mental symptoms occurred mainly in subjects with a low onset age and a disabling tremor. An early onset age was not related to paternal or maternal transmission. In one family ET was associated with retinitis pigmentosa and ichthyosis.
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PMID:Benign essential tremor. A clinical survey of 82 patients from Campania, a region of southern Italy. 280 Dec 57

A case of hereditary olivo-pontocerebellar atrophy is reported. The patient presented with intentional tremor and slurred speech, and physical examination disclosed a bi-hemispherical cerebellar syndrome, involvement of the IX and X cranial nerves, and retinitis pigmentosa. Computerized axial tomography demonstrated a supra and infratentorial atrophy, predominating in the brain stem and cerebellum. The literature on olivo-pontocerebellar atrophy is reviewed, verifying the ample clinical spectrum of this disorder amongst the spinocerebellar degeneration syndromes, and emphasizing the diagnostic value of computerized axial tomography.
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PMID:[Olivo-pontocerebellar atrophy. Report of a case (author's transl)]. 720 86

A rare case of motor neuron disease and involvement of the pallido-luysio-nigral system and brainstem tegmentum is presented. A 51-year-old man developed progressive muscle atrophy with fasciculation predominantly in the shoulder girdle, upper arms, upper back, and neck in addition to hyperreflexia and a positive Chaddock reflex. He also had retinitis pigmentosa, high arched palate, and mild hand tremor. He eventually developed bulbar palsy and died of paralysis of the respiratory muscles 11 years after the onset of his illness. Neuropathological examinations showed prominent neuronal loss and gliosis in the pallido-luysio-nigral system and the tegmentum of the brainstem in addition to the simultaneous involvement of the upper and lower motor neurons. This patient and 6 similar patients are discussed in relation to pallido-luysio-nigral atrophy and the topographic distribution of degeneration in amyotrophic lateral sclerosis.
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PMID:Motor neuron disease with involvement of the pallido-luysio-nigral system and mesencephalic tegmentum. 852 30

Leber's congenital amaurosis (LCA), a type of congenital blindness, is clinically and genetically heterogeneous and often associated with systemic anomalies. We report on two sisters who were born to a consanguineous couple and had retinitis pigmentosa-like pigmented retinal lesions, alternating exotropia, bilateral cataracts, and anomalous coarse facies characterized by deformed skull with narrow forehead, low anterior hairline, hypertelorism, short philtrum, thin upper lip, and prominent jaw; cerebellar vermis hypoplasia; dilatation of the fourth ventricle; severe mental retardation; tremor; brisk deep tendon reflexes and abnormal behavior; and skeletal abnormalities such as limited extension of elbow and/ or finger joints and talipes equinovalgus. Skin defect and renal anomalies were seen in only one patient. Our patients are the first familial LCA associated with cerebellar vermis hypoplasia, and the disease involving particular multiple systemic anomalies may represent a distinct clinical entity.
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PMID:Two sib cases of Leber congenital amaurosis with cerebellar vermis hypoplasia and multiple systemic anomalies. 971 9

We describe a 24-year-old Japanese woman with pantothenate kinase-associated neurodegeneration (PKAN) whose only early symptom was postural tremor in the right hand at around 18 years of age, leading to a diagnosis of essential tremor at age 21. Although she was treated with arotinolol hydrochloride and clonazepam, she gradually progressed to extrapyramidal and pyramidal signs several years later. T2-weighted magnetic resonance images (MRI) showed bilaterally marked hypointensity with a central region of hyperintensity in the globus pallidus, or the so-called "eye-of-the-tiger" sign. Six years have passed since the initial appearance of postural tremor, whereas she has not shown choreoathetosis, retinitis pigmentosa, optic atrophy, or seizure. Direct sequencing of the patient's genomic DNA revealed homozygous base substitutions in the pantothenate kinase gene (PANK2): the A764-->G substitution (N245S) due to consanguinity of her parents. Although the heterozygous form of this mutation has already been reported among several families, this is the first report of the homozygous mutation in a patient with atypical-type PKAN. This detailed description of the clinical features of a Japanese patient with PKAN arising from homozygous N245S mutations in PANK2 would be useful for elucidating the pathogenesis of PKAN.
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PMID:Pantothenate kinase-associated neurodegeneration initially presenting as postural tremor alone in a Japanese family with homozygous N245S substitutions in the pantothenate kinase gene. 1546 96

Type 1 nephronophthisis (NPHP) with homozygous deletions of nephrocystin [NPHP1, DEL] has been considered a pure renal disorder, but co-occurrence of extrarenal symptoms, mainly retinitis pigmentosa, is observed in a subset of patients. Recently, [NPHP1, DEL] has been detected in three patients with Joubert syndrome-related disorders (JSRDs), who associated neurological signs with a peculiar neuroradiological malformation known as the 'molar tooth sign' (MTS). To define the frequency of JSRD spectrum in NPHP1 patients, we re-examined 56 cases with [NPHP1, DEL] and found an overall incidence of 8.9% (five out 56 patients). All had small hyperechoic kidneys and had developed advanced renal failure within 15 years. Two patients presented the complete features of JSRD with cerebello-renal-retinal association and MTS. Two others showed, instead, severe intentional tremor and thick superior cerebellar peduncles on brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), and one of them had associated retinopathy. The fifth patient presented with hypotonia, developmental delay, central deafness, and ataxia associated with Leber congenital amaurosis and liver fibrosis but with normal brain MRI. Marked intrafamilial variability of associated extrarenal symptoms was observed in familial cases. Deletion extension did not differ in patients with isolated renal phenotype and in those with associated neurological symptoms. In conclusion, neurological defects varying from subtle involvement of cerebellum with thickened peduncle to both JSRD and diffuse central hypotonia are frequent in [NPHP1, DEL] patients. Prevalence of such association may justify systematic neurological and neuroradiological evaluation.
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PMID:Nephronophthisis type 1 deletion syndrome with neurological symptoms: prevalence and significance of the association. 1690 87

We report a 53-year-old woman with probable Bassen-Kornzweig syndrome. Her parents were a consanguineous marriage. At two years of age, she developed night blindness. During her childhood she had severe diarrhea that disappeared in adulthood. At 26 years of age, she was diagnosed as having retinitis pigmentosa and her visual acuity became worse thereafter. She noted tremor in the right hand at 37 years of age, gait ataxia at 42, and developed tremor in the bilateral lower extremities at 48. On admission, bilateral visual disturbance, resting and postural tremor, moderately poor coordination, mild distal dominant sensory impairment, an absence of tendon reflex in all four extremities, moderate to severe gait ataxia, and positive Romberg sign were found. Muscle rigidity and akinesia were not observed. Intelligence and muscle power were normal and pathological reflexes were absent. Acanthocytes were found in blood. Serum chemistry showed remarkable decreases in total cholesterol (54 mg/dl, normal 180-220), triglyceride (0 mg/dl, normal 30-150), beta-lipoprotein (3 mg/dl, normal 190-500), apoA-1 protein (66 mg/dl, normal 105-184), apoA-2 protein (11 mg/dl, normal 26-46), apoB protein (0 mg/dl, normal 38-104), apoC-2 protein (1.1 mg/dl, normal 1.2-6.4), vitamin A (297 ng/ml, normal 431-1,041), and vitamin E (0.19 ng/dl, normal 0.75-1.41). While, a marked increase in PIVKA II (703 mAU/ml, normal<40) due to a decrease in vitamin K was found. She was thus diagnosed as having Bassen-Kornzweig syndrome or hypo-betalipoproteinemia. Although brain MRI was normal, single-photon emission CT (SPECT) showed mildly decreased perfusion in the left parietal cortex and right striatum. Motor nerve conduction velocities were normal, but sensory nerve action potentials were not evoked in all four extremities. Surface EMG recorded on the right radial extensor and flexor carpi muscles at rest showed a 4.5 Hz tremor. Vitamin replacement therapy with vitamin A (10,000 IU/day), E (200 mg/day), and K (10 mg/day) was initiated. Several days after treatment, amplitude of resting tremor ameliorated mildly. Clonazepam was administered (0.5 mg/day) for further treatment. After one-month of treatment, vitamin A (656 ng/ml) and E (0.39 mg/dl) levels were elevated and PIVKA II level (29 mAU/ml) decreased. Only a mild right hand tremor remained, but sensory impairment and gait ataxia were not changed. The cause of Bassen-Kornzweig syndrome is a deletion of the microsomal triglyceride transfer protein (MTP) gene. While, familial hypo-betalipoproteinemia, due to a mutation of apolipoprotein B gene, is known to show the same phenotype. Because of the patient's refusal of genetic examination, which disease she has cannot be conclusively determined. Intention tremor was reported in Bassen-Kornzweig syndrome. However, her 4.5 Hz tremor was also present at rest, which resembled resting tremor in Parkinson's disease. Pathophysiology of Bassen-Kornzweig syndrome is known to be due to hypo-vitaminosis. Decreased [18F]-dopa uptake in striatum of patients with long-term hypo-vitamin E has been reported in PET study. Mild hypoperfusion was found in the striatum of the present cases: indicating that her tremor was associated with striatonigral damage. Thus, careful observation of extrapyramidal signs is necessary in abeta- or hypo-betalipoproteinemia.
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PMID:[An adult case of probable Bassen-Kornzweig syndrome, presenting resting tremor]. 1732 79