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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The authors describe 7 new cases of Angelman syndrome (AS: 3 males and 4 females) diagnosed on the basis of clinical features (dysmorphic facial features, severe mental retardation with absent speech, peculiar jerky movements, ataxic gait and paroxysms of inappropriate laughter) and neurophysiological findings. Failure to detect deletion of the long arm of chromosome 15 or the absence of epileptic seizure were not considered sufficient to exclude a diagnosis of AS. Feeding problems,
developmental delay
and early signs of ataxia, especially
tremor
on handling objects and unstable posture when seated, proved effective as clinical markers for early diagnosis of AS. The EEG patterns characteristic of AS were found within the first 2 years of life (under 18 months in the majority of cases). The authors conclude that AS should be included in differential diagnosis in a child aged under 12 months having cryptogenic psychomotor retardation with prevalent language compromise. Repeat EEG recordings are needed to check for the typical trace, and cytogenetic investigations are mandatory.
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PMID:Electroclinical diagnosis of Angelman syndrome: a study of 7 cases. 776 67
We report six patients with glutaric aciduria type 1 in four families. The patients had marked clinical variability, even within families. Three of the patients studied were normal until the onset of neurologic abnormalities, that presented as an encephalitis-like illness in the first year of age. One patient had an early and important
developmental delay
, but never suffered an encephalopathic crisis. Two patients have intellectual preservation; one of them has a mild
tremor
and choreoathetosis since the first year of age, and the other had only two afebrile seizures in infancy and no other neurologic signs. Three patients are severely handicapped, with a severe dystonic-dyskinetic disorder and unable to even sit. All the six patients have macrocephaly and in all the computed tomography showed enlarged CSF spaces and sulcal separation over the frontal and temporal lobes. Urine organic acids study of all patients showed large quantities of glutaric acid.
...
PMID:[Glutaric aciduria type 1: phenotypic variability. Report of 6 patients]. 985 Jul 48
Gliomatosis cerebri is the unifying term used when diffuse glial infiltration occurs throughout the cerebral hemispheres. The very few cases reported in children have presented with intractable epilepsy, corticospinal tract deficits, unilateral
tremor
, headaches, and
developmental delay
. Antemortem diagnosis is difficult because of the vagueness of the physical, radiological and pathological findings. Adult cases may simulate an acute diffuse encephalomyelitis and show postmortem evidence of a marked swelling of the spinal cord. Apparently benign intracranial hypertension with papilloedema has also been recorded. We report a 10-year-old girl who presented with a history and physical signs suggestive of benign intracranial hypertension. A diffuse encephalomyelopathy occurred, which was complicated by spinal cord swelling, followed by deterioration and death. Gliomatosis cerebri affecting the brain and spinal cord was found at postmortem examination.
...
PMID:Gliomatosis cerebri in a 10-year-old girl masquerading as diffuse encephalomyelitis and spinal cord tumour. 1157 Jun 37
We reviewed 45 children with cerebellar hypoplasia on magnetic resonance imaging to identify clinical features associated with cerebellar hypoplasia. We then studied children presenting with any likely associated clinical feature of cerebellar hypoplasia previously observed or reported. Two hundred fifty-one children, with one or more of these features, exhibited no cerebellar hypoplasia on imaging. We compared the children with cerebellar hypoplasia with those without cerebellar hypoplasia. Logistic regression and Pearson's chi(2) test were used. Of the 45 children with cerebellar hypoplasia, 39 exhibited
developmental delay
; 24, speech delay; 25, seizures; nine, microcephaly; 22, hypotonia; 22, ataxia and impaired coordination; four, abnormal movements (
tremor
or titubation); 13, hypertonia; eight, autistic features; and 18, ocular signs (nystagmus, strabismus, and abnormal ocular movements). Statistically significant clinical features of children with cerebellar hypoplasia compared with those without were development and speech delay, microcephaly, abnormal movements, ataxia and impaired coordination, autistic features, hypotonia, and ocular signs. The regression combination of speech delay, ataxia, hypotonia, autistic features, and ocular signs correctly predicted 86% of those with cerebellar hypoplasia. Main clinical features of cerebellar hypoplasia are developmental or speech delay, autistic features, ataxia, hypotonia, and ocular signs.
...
PMID:Clinical spectrum associated with cerebellar hypoplasia. 1287 95
An 11-year-old boy was evaluated for progressive ataxia, cognitive deterioration, and ophthalmoplegia. The child initially presented with abnormal eye movements at the age of 2 months and was noted to have
developmental delay
at 6 months. At the age of 7 years, he developed ataxia and cognitive impairment, and subsequently manifested dysphagia and incontinence. The pertinent family history included gait difficulty in the paternal grandmother. At the age of 11, his general physical examination was normal. On neurological examination, he had bilateral external ophthalmoplegia, ataxic dysarthria, dysmetria and
tremor
in the upper extremities, and marked gait ataxia. An ophthalmological evaluation showed no evidence of pigmentary retinopathy. Brain MRI demonstrated cerebellar, brainstem, and cerebral atrophy. An ataxia panel showed 62 repeats in one allele of the SCA2 gene. Most cases of spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) present between 20 years and 40 years, and affected individuals typically have between 34 and 57 CAG repeats. Neonatal cases of SCA2 have been reported in individuals with over 200 CAG repeats. Childhood SCA2 has been reported previously in two patients but not described clinically. This case broadens the spectrum of the clinical features of infantile-onset SCA2 and highlights the importance of considering this diagnosis in infants and children.
...
PMID:Spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) presenting with ophthalmoplegia and developmental delay in infancy. 1473 88
L-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria (L2HGA) is a chronic slowly progressive neurodegenerative disease characterized mainly by psychomotor
developmental delay
and cerebellar dysfunction. We report the clinical, biochemical, and neuroimaging features of 29 patients from 22 families. The mean age at the time of diagnosis was 13.4 years (2.5-32 years). The mean follow-up period of patients was four years (1.5-16 years). The main clinical findings were mental retardation and cerebellar involvement with ataxic gait and intentional
tremor
. Additional findings were mental retardation, macrocephaly and seizures. Diagnosis was confirmed by increased urinary excretion of L-2-hydroxyglutaric acid in all patients and highly specific magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) pattern showing subcortical leukoencephalopathy with bilateral high signal intensity in dentate nuclei and putamens. During the follow-up period, all patients had a static encephalopathy course. The underlying metabolic defect and the possible role of L-2-hydroxyglutaric acid are studied in a subgroup of these families and under evaluation for publication.
...
PMID:L-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria: a report of 29 patients. 1588 21
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.
...
PMID:Nephronophthisis type 1 deletion syndrome with neurological symptoms: prevalence and significance of the association. 1690 87
Angelman syndrome (AS) is a childhood-onset neurogenetic disorder characterized by functionally severe
developmental delay
with mental retardation, deficits in expressive language, ataxia, appendicular action tremors and unique behaviors such as inappropriate laughter and stimulus-sensitive hyperexcitibility. Most cases of AS are caused by mutations which disrupt expression of maternal UBE3A. Although some progress has been made in understanding hippocampal-related memory and learning aspects of the disorder using Ube3a deficient mice, the numerous motoric abnormalities associated with AS (ataxia, action
tremor
, dysarthria, dysphagia, sialorrhea and excessive chewing/mouthing behaviors) have not been fully explored with mouse models. Here we use a novel quantifiable analysis of fluid consumption and licking behavior along with a battery of motor tests to examine cerebellar and other motor system defects in Ube3a deficient mice. Mice with a maternally inherited Ube3a deficiency (Ube3a(m-/p+)) show defects in fluid consumption behavior which are different from Ube3a(m-/p-) mice. The rhythm of fluid licking and number of licks per visit were significantly different among the three groups (m-/p-, m-/p+, m+/p+) and indicate that not only was fluid consumption dependent on Ube3a expression in the cerebellum, but may also depend on low levels of Ube3a expression in other brain regions. Additional neurological testing revealed defects in both Ube3a(m-/p+) and Ube3a(m-/p-) mice in rope climbing, grip strength, gait and a raised-beam task. Long-term observation of fluid consumption behavior is the first phenotype reported that differentiates between mice with a maternal loss of function versus complete loss of Ube3a in the brain. The neuronal and molecular mechanisms underlying mouse fluid consumption defects specifically associated with maternally inherited Ube3a deficiency may reveal important new insights into the pathobiology of AS in humans.
...
PMID:Analysis of cerebellar function in Ube3a-deficient mice reveals novel genotype-specific behaviors. 1841 22
Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease (PMD) is a rare X-linked recessive disorder with a prototype of a dysmyelinating leukodystrophy that is caused by a mutation in the proteolipid protein 1 (PLP1) gene on the long arm of the X chromosome in band Xq22. This mutation results in abnormal expression or production of PLP. We here present a Korean boy with spastic quadriplegia, horizontal nystagmus, saccadic gaze, intentional
tremor
, head titubation, ataxia, and
developmental delay
. The brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed abnormally high signal intensities in the white matter tract, including a subcortical U fiber on the T2-weighted and fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR) image. The chromosomal analysis was normal; however, duplication of the PLP1 gene in chromosome Xq22 was detected when the multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification (MLPA) method was used. We also investigated the pedigree for a genetic study related to PMD. This case suggests that the duplication mutation of the PLP1 gene in patients with PMD results in a mild clinical form of the disorder that mimics the spastic quadriplegia of cerebral palsy.
...
PMID:Identification of proteolipid protein 1 gene duplication by multiplex ligation-dependent probe amplification: first report of genetically confirmed family of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease in Korea. 1843 21
Premutation carriers of repeat expansions in the fragile X mental retardation (FMR1) gene develop kinetic
tremor
and ataxia or the 'fragile X associated
tremor
/ataxia syndrome' (FXTAS). Affected FMR1 premutation carriers also have parkinsonism, but have not been reported to meet criteria for Parkinson disease. This case series illustrates that some patients who are FMR1 premutation carriers may appear by history and examination to have idiopathic Parkinson disease. Based on previous studies, it is likely that the genetic mutation and parkinsonism are associated. Although screening all PD patients is likely to be low yield, genetic testing of FMR1 in individuals with PD and a family history of fragile X syndrome, autism or
developmental delay
, or other related FMR1 phenotypes is warranted.
...
PMID:Parkinsonism in FMR1 premutation carriers may be indistinguishable from Parkinson disease. 1856 83
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