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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A study of 7 cases of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease associated with a dyskinesia resembling benign essential tremor is presented. In 4 patients, the family history strongly suggested an autosomal mode of transmission, 2 cases were sporadic without an established genetic pattern and 1 was probably recessive. The distal parts of the upper and lower limbs showed imparied muscle strength with slight or no atrophy in 4 patients and conspicuous weakness and
wasting
in another 2. One patient was a chairbound. Although essential
tremor
and the
tremor
seen in these patients are clinically (phenotypically) similar it seems possible that they result from two different genotypes. Further, it seems that cases with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease and "essential tremor" are not the result of the association of two separate dominant characteristics which are generally inherited as mendelian dominant traits. In spite of the diversity of the clinical manifestations of the peripheral neuropathy, the semiologically different types of essential
tremor
and the electrophysiological data, it is concluded that patients who develop a peripheral neuropathy on a familial basis and who exhibit clinical features of similar character, suffer from a common type of pathological disorder. Stress is laid upon the fact that Friedreich's ataxia and Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease share many clinical features. It is suggested that when Friedreich's ataxia and Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease seem to be present in the same individual and/or alternate in different members of the same family, the process is likely to be one of Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. The value of the type of inheritance, natural history, clinical examination and electrophysiological data in differentiating Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (with or without essential
tremor
) from other degenerative disorders is analyzed.
...
PMID:Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease associated with "essential tremor": Report of 7 cases and a review of the literature. 93 72
The patients belonged to three different families and were products of consanguineous marriage. The neurological symptoms and signs in these patients began in infancy or childhood and included gait disturbance, horizontal nystagmus, distention
tremor
of the hands, muscular
wasting
and sensory impairment of the hands and legs. CT-scan and/or MRI showed atrophy of the cerebellum. Serum biochemical analyses revealed hypoalbuminemia with hyperlipidemia. There were no abnormalities in the heart, liver, kidney, gastrointestinal tract, or endocrine systems. The autopsy revealed degenerative changes in the spinal cord including posterior column and lateral pyramidal tract, as well as in the peripheral nerves and cerebellar cortex. Although we have speculated that the disease presented here would be a clinical variants of Friedreich's disease, it would make a new clinical entity because there was no report about the association to hypoalbuminemia and hyperlipidemia with spinocerebellar degeneration.
...
PMID:[A hereditary ataxia associated with hypoalbuminemia and hyperlipidemia--a variant form of Friedreich's disease or a new clinical entity?]. 129 49
We studied several affected and one nonaffected individuals belonging to three unrelated pedigrees. The pathological trait was an autosomal dominant mitochondrial myopathy due to large-scale multiple deletions of the mitochondrial genome. Clinically, symptomatic patients had progressive external ophthalmoplegia, muscle weakness and
wasting
, sensorineural hypoacusia, and, in some cases, vestibular areflexia and
tremor
. The muscle biopsies of all patients examined showed ragged-red fibers, neurogenic changes, and a partially decreased histochemical reaction to cytochrome c oxidase. Multiple mtDNA heteroplasmy was detected in the patients by both Southern blot analysis and PCR amplification, whereas the unaffected individual had the normal homoplasmic hybridization pattern. These findings confirm and add further details to the existence of a new human disease--defined clinically as a mitochondrial myopathy, genetically as a Mendelian autosomal dominant trait, and molecularly by the accumulation of multiple, large-scale deletions of the mitochondrial genome--that is due to impaired nuclear control during mtDNA replication.
...
PMID:Nucleus-driven multiple large-scale deletions of the human mitochondrial genome: a new autosomal dominant disease. 197 58
Two patients are reported presenting with incoordination mimicking cerebellar disease in the upper and lower limbs, ataxia of gait, absent tendon reflexes and little or no clinically detectable
wasting
. Motor conduction velocity in the upper limbs was substantially reduced in one patient whereas it was normal and slightly reduced in the other. It is concluded that in Charcot-Marie Tooth disease incoordination may mimic cerebellar disease and when this is so it is due to the association of varying degrees of proprioceptive deafferentation and a dyskinesia similar to that produced by familial (essential)
tremor
.
...
PMID:Unusual presentation of Charcot Marie-Tooth disease-incoordination with absent of minimal wasting-Report of 2 cases. 722 62
A new inherited neurological disease in the mouse (the mutant twitcher) has been studied. Transmission is by an autosomal recessive gene (twi). Affected animals are apparently normal at birth but develop a generalized
tremor
at about 3 weeks of age followed by progressive weakness and
wasting
. The disease is fatal by 3 months. The principal pathological changes affect the myelin of both central and peripheral nervous systems. Degeneration of myelin sheaths and the presence of multinucleated macrophages with PAS-positive cytoplasm are characteristic findings. Peripheral nerves show remyelination following demyelination. Electron microscopically the macrophages contain a variety of inclusions in which there are crystalline and multi-angular structures and twisted tubules. The abnormalities closely resemble those found in globoid cell leucodystrophy (Krabbe's disease) in man.
...
PMID:Hereditary leucodystrophy in the mouse: the new mutant twitcher. 741 82
A case of familial juvenile parkinsonism with dementia, orthostatic hypotension, neurogenic bladder and constipation was reported. He had been in a good health until the age of 28 when a finger
tremor
occurred on effort to hold hands in a definite position, and disturbances in gait and speech were noted. These symptoms were relieved by levodopa treatment followed by dyskinesia and motor fluctuations. Three years later, he complained of faintness, constipation and urinary frequency. The neurological examination revealed mentally sound male with masked face,
tremor
and rigidity in his extremities, and short step gait with lateropulsion. Urodynamic study showed uninhibited bladder. In the following years, orthostatic hypotension, dysuria and urinary retention developed gradually. He became mentally loose and was unable to take medicines appropriately. When in the Nishiojiya Byoin National Sanatorium, he tried to snake out the hospital many times. His parents and a brother suffered from Parkinson's disease and juvenile parkinsonism, respectively, suggesting an autosomal dominant inheritance. On admission to our hospital, he was apathetic. He had masked face, bilateral postural
tremor
, frozen gait and dyskinesia in the right lower extremity. Little bradykinesia or rigidity was noted. His muscle tone and deep tendon reflexes were decreased but neither muscular
wasting
, weakness, ataxia nor sensory disturbance was observed. Laboratory data including ceruloplasmin, copper, dopamine-beta-hydroxylase and lysosomal enzyme activities were normal except for mild anemia. A cranial CT scan revealed mild cortical atrophy in the frontal and temporal lobes, but nerve conduction study and cortical evoked potentials showed no abnormality. While in the hospital, his mental functions deteriorated to the state of dementia and orthostatic hypotension became apparent.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[Familial juvenile parkinsonism with dementia and autonomic failure--a case report]. 833 79
Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease is the commonest inherited peripheral neuropathy. The clinical study of 45 patients with CMT is presented. They were derived from Antonio Pedro Hospital of Universidade Federal Fluminense in Niteroi, RJ, Brazil. Such patients could be divided by the motor conduction velocity in two types: a demyelinating form or type I (11 cases) and an axonal form or type II (34 cases). The disease was inherited as an autosomal dominant trait in 23 patients and as an autosomal recessive trait in 7 cases. In 15 patients the disorder was sporadic. The age of onset was in most of our cases before the 20 years. All of them had distal weakness in lower limbs. 38.2% had also distal weakness in upper limbs. 80% had distal
wasting
of the lower limbs and 50% had distal
wasting
of upper limbs. The tendon reflexes were absent in 64% in lower limbs and in 28% in upper limbs. The sensitive impairment in the distal regions of the extremities was mild in most patients. We found enlargement of peripheral nerves in 7 patients of type I. Pes cavus was present in 21 cases and scoliosis in 7. We found postural
tremor
of hands in 6 patients. In 9 cases there were rare features as mental retardation, trigeminal nevralgia, optic atrophy, deafness and calf enlargement. In most of our cases the clinical course was very slow progressive. A greater severity was seen in our sporadic cases.
...
PMID:[Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease. Clinical study in 45 patients]. 858 9
Kennedy-Alter-Sung (KAS) disease in a hereditary lower motor neuron disease. In this study, we investigate 2 KAS patients presenting with progressive muscle weakness and
wasting
, action
tremor
, perioral fasciculation and gynecomastia. Three carriers and 5 healthy members from this 3-generation KAS Chinese family and 60 normal Chinese controls were included in this study. Hormone studies revealed normal serum level in thyrotropin, prolactin, testosterone, leuteinizing hormone, follicle stimulating hormone, and estradiol. Lipid study disclosed type IV hyperlipoproteinemia in 2 KAS patients and 3 healthy members. Molecular studies revealed that the number of CAG triplet repeats in the first exon of androgen receptor gene of the normal allele is in the range of 15-19 and 12-25 in this family and normal controls, respectively. However, the number of CAG repeat of androgen receptor gene were unstable in the mutant alleles with a range of 41-45 and increased from generation to generation (genomic anticipation) in the 2 KAS patients and 3 female carriers. We conclude that the CAG triplet repeats in mutant allele were unstable in the family with the KAS disease. Furthermore, type IV hyperlipoproteinemia may be a co-transmitted syndrome in the family with KAS disease.
...
PMID:Type IV hyperlipoproteinemia and moderate instability of CAG triplet expansion in the androgen-receptor gene. Lipid, sex hormone and molecular study in a Chinese family with Kennedy-Alter-Sung disease. 861 Apr 94
A 42-year-old man without family history of neurologic disease developed muscle weakness, and
wasting
associated with
tremor
and choreiform movement. He died at age 75 with 33 years of total duration of illness. Autopsy revealed neuronal loss and gliosis in the anterior horns of the spinal cord, hypoglossal nuclei, caudate nuclei, putamen, globus pallidus, and substantia nigra. Bunina bodies or Lewy bodies were not seen. Several similar cases with motor neuron disease, dementia and parkinsonism have been reported in the literature. However, this pattern of chronic spinal neostriato-pallido-nigral degeneration has not been reported.
...
PMID:[An autopsied case of progressive spinal muscular atrophy showing tremor and choreiform movement]. 1121
This is a critique of a study by Howlett, Nkya, Mmuni, Missalek, published in AIDS (1989), which reports on clinical findings in 200 AIDS patients at the Kilimanjaro Christian Medical Center in Tanzania between 1985-88. For 135 of these patients, the study concentrates on the clinical neurological symptoms of AIDS. General symptoms included weakness (98%);
wasting
(92%); fever (79%); diarrhea (75%); maculo-papulor rash (71%); and candidiasis (57%). Neurological symptoms included AIDS dementia complex (54%); retinal abnormalities (23%); areflexia (21%); pyramidal tract signs (19%) and
tremor
and incoordination (19%). This study is the most detailed published examination to date of the clinical neurological symptoms associated with AIDS in African patients. In spite of the weaknesses of the study the paucity of laboratory investigations and the lack of autopsy information and the frequency of different infections affecting the nervous system in African AIDS patients, the study will be referenced in all future works on the neurology of AIDS in Africa. (Author's modified).
...
PMID:Neurological disorders in AIDS and HIV disease in the northern zone of Tanzania. 1228 84
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