Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0042571 (vertigo)
7,148 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A female patient started to develop deafness and vertigo at the age of 29. In the following years she became atactic and retinitis pigmentosa was discovered. The diagnosis of Refsum's disease was reached on the grounds of the high concentration of phytanic acid in plasma. The patient died 23 years after onset of the first symptoms. Liver, spleen and kidney showed lipofuscinosis and pigment-laden macrophages. The retina was atrophic and its pigment discontinuous. The meninges contained lipid-laden macrophages. The nerve cells in brain and spinal cord as well as the astrocytes and perivascular macrophages stored substances weakly PAS-positive and sudanophilic. The nerve cells accumulated lysosomes and residual bodies. In the astrocytes, the residual bodies were extremely polymorphous and contained inclusions with bilamellar ribbon-like structures. In the oligodendroglia the residual bodies displayed high electron density and finger print-like pattern. Peroxisomes were found in glial cells and microperoximes in neurons. The ultrastructural findings in the present case demonstrate that in terminal stages phytanic acid can reach the brain parenchyma passing through the BBB. Further autopsy studies will be necessary to determine whether these changes are consistent findings in Refsum's disease.
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PMID:Heredopathia atactica polyneuritiformis (Refsum's disease). 172 32

The case of a 56-year-old female patient is presented; she was hospitalized for decreased vision of both eyes, discrete hemeralopia, vertigo, right hypoacusis and occipital headache. The eye fundus examination showed lesions of retinitis pigmentosa in the inferotemporal sector and decreased arterial calibre. The patient was diagnosed neurologically as a right acoustic neurinoma with pontocerebellar syndrome. No other cases with the same symptomatology were noticed in the patient's family.
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PMID:[Sectorial retinitis pigmentosa and acoustic neurinoma]. 828 22

The present authors studied a 55-year-old-patient homozygous for the SCA6 gene who experienced frequent attacks of positional vertigo at 37 years of age with subsequent staggering gait and night blindness. Retinitis pigmentosa (RP), as well as cerebellar ataxia and vertical antidirectional nystagmus, were detected. The subject's parents were first cousins, and two of his three male cousins, whose parents were also first cousins, had RP without ataxia or nystagmus. The numbers of CAG repeats in the expanded alleles of the SCA6 gene found by molecular analysis were 21 and 21. The genetic results were negative for SCA1, SCA2, SCA3, SCA7 and dentatorubral pallidoluysian atrophy. The retinal degeneration in this patient is most likely to be secondary to a genetic disorder of autosomal or X-linked recessive inheritance rather than SCA6. Other reported cases of patients homozygous for the SCA6 gene are also reviewed.
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PMID:A patient homozygous for the SCA6 gene with retinitis pigmentosa. 1208 23