Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (encephalopathy)
18,178 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Three types of clinical features at the onset are well known to be characteristic of acute hemiplegia syndrome (AHS). Type 1 comprises status epilepticus of hemiconvulsions with fever. Representative diseases of this type are the infectious diseases of the central nervous system, acute encephalopathy and cerebral vascular diseases. Type 2 comprises status epilepticus of hemiconvulsions without fever. Cerebral vascular diseases and epilepsy are the major ones of this type. Type 3 comprises hemiplegia or hemiparesis of sudden onset without fever or convulsions. Most patients with this type had cerebral vascular diseases, about half of which were moyamoya disease in Japan. Recent progress in neuroimaging studies has allowed considerable elucidation of the etiology of AHS. Gadolinium-enhanced MRI showed minimal lesions such as capsular infarction more clearly than plain MRI. Acetazolamide test 99mTc-HMPAO SPECT imaging is one of the useful assisted diagnostic techniques for moyamoya disease, because it reveals the reserve capacity of the collaterals. [123I]IMP SPECT is useful for the diagnosis and follow-up of acute disseminated encephalomyelitis (ADEM), as the images of the lesions coincide well with the MRI ones. 99mTc-HMPAO SPECT in a case with alternating hemiplegia revealed normoperfusion in the ictal periods. Four cases of AHS are reported here.
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PMID:Acute hemiplegia syndrome in childhood. 805 23

Review of literature data concerning genetically determined blood vessel diseases is presented. These disorders are a cause of a process similar to Binswanger's disease but occurring familial. Recurrent TIA, ischemic strokes and other kind of blood supply disturbances lead to numerous and various intensity vasogenic brain tissue damage, particularly in the white matter. Progressive neurological symptoms and dementia form the picture of subcortical leukoencephalopathy in several members of family. Moyamoya disease, fibromuscular dysplasia, hereditary hemorrhagic telangiectasia, hereditary cerebral hemorrhage with amyloidosis, pseudoxanthoma elasticum, two types of subcortical encephalopathy in Japan, HERNS and CADASIL are described.
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PMID:Genetically determined vascular diseases. 1070 39

A review is presented of literature data concerning vascular disease occurring in families. They manifested clinically as recurrent TIA, ischaemic and haemorrhagic strokes and other blood supply disturbances and lead to numerous vasogenic brain tissue damage of various intensity. Particularly evident lesions are observed in hemispheric white matter. Progressive neurological symptoms and dementia form the picture of subcortical leucoencephalopathy in several members of a family. Moyamoya disease, fibromuscular dysplasia, hereditary haemorrhagic telangiectasia, hereditary cerebral haemorrhage with amyloidosis, pseudoxanthoma elasticum, two types of subcortical encephalopathy in Japan, HERNS and CADASIL are described.
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PMID:[Encephalopathy and other neurologic syndromes with familial occurrence]. 1146 8

Five cases of paediatric stroke are reported. Two patients presented with idiopathic stroke, another following vertebral artery dissection, one secondary to Moyamoya disease, and one patient with the syndrome of mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes. The presentation, investigation, and management of paediatric stroke are discussed.
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PMID:Paediatric stroke: case series. 1205 70

A previously healthy 24-day-old boy presented with a 2-day history of fever and had a convulsion on the day of admission. MRI showed abnormal signal in the thalami, caudate nuclei and central white matter. Acute necrotising encephalopathy was diagnosed, other causes having been excluded after biochemical and haematological analysis of blood, urine and CSF. He recovered, but with spastic quadriparesis. At the age of 28 months, he suffered sudden deterioration of consciousness and motor weakness of his right limbs. MRI was consistent with an acute cerebrovascular accident. Angiography showed bilateral middle cerebral artery stenosis or frank occlusion with numerous lenticulostriate collateral vessels consistent with moyamoya disease.
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PMID:Moyamoya disease in a child with previous acute necrotizing encephalopathy. 1280 40

Over a 5-year period, we investigated 77 consecutive patients (36 males, 41 females, mean age 40.9 years) referred to our hospital with the diagnosis of CNS vasculitis. Extensive workup including MRI, echocardiography, laboratory tests, angiography ( n=53), and biopsies at appropriate sites ( n=26) was performed based on individual history and symptoms. Prominent symptoms were stroke ( n=61), encephalopathy ( n=14), and headaches ( n=2). Vasculitis was finally diagnosed in 13 patients (17%) including isolated angiitis of the CNS ( n=3), giant cell arteritis ( n=4), and septic arteritis ( n=3). Thirty-two patients (42%) presented noninflammatory vasculopathies including moyamoya ( n=6), Sneddon's syndrome ( n=5), dissection ( n=4), CADASIL ( n=2), and collagen vascular disease ( n=9). Coagulopathy was found in 14 cases (18%) including antiphospholipid syndrome ( n=8) and APC resistance ( n=4). Other causes were cardiogenic embolism ( n=8), multiple sclerosis ( n=5), and migraine stroke ( n=3). Only a minority of patients referred for evaluation of suspected CNS vasculitis actually present with inflammatory vascular disease. Main differential diagnosis includes noninflammatory vasculopathies, coagulopathies, and cardiac disease. Since septic processes may be responsible for the symptoms, "blind" treatment with immunosuppressive agents should be strictly avoided.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and differential cerebral vasculitis diagnosis]. 1477 Feb 79

Moyamoya disease is a neurological disease rarely seen in children outside Japan. It is difficult to differentiate moyamoya disease in its early stage from mitochondrial disorders in children when nontraumatic ischemic stroke is considered. We present a 14-month-old Taiwanese female child who had suffered from sudden onset of nontraumatic seizure attack, after which progressive left limb weakness was noted. Initial brain imaging and a series of laboratory studies were performed which suggested mitochondrial disorders, especially mitochondrial encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike episodes (MELAS) syndrome. The patient underwent an oral glucose lactate stimulation test (OGLST), and mitochondrial disorders were not favored. MR angiography of the circle of Willis showed moyamoya disease. The patient then underwent an encephalo-duro-arterio-myo-synangiosis (EDAMS) operation. Evaluation of the neurodevelopmental and intelligence outcome required close long-term follow-up.
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PMID:Moyamoya disease initially mimicking MELAS syndrome in a 14-month-old child. 1533 22

A 45-year-old woman presented with subacute encephalopathy due to autoimmune Graves disease. MR angiography (MRA) demonstrated stenosis of the major intracerebral arteries. After high-dose methylprednisolone therapy and plasmapheresis, her neurologic status improved dramatically, and the MRA findings resolved after 3 months. The angiographic findings in Graves disease that resemble those in Moyamoya disease are temporary.
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PMID:Reversible MR angiographic findings in a patient with autoimmune Graves disease. 1550 34

We describe an unusual vasculopathy in two sisters of non-consanguineous parents. The first child developed an acute hemiparesis and focal seizures at the age of 6 months during a febrile illness. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) of the brain showed bilateral cortical-subcortical infarction not confined to a vascular territory. Subsequently, the child had a persistent stable neurological deficit. Her younger sister had a similar encephalitis-like episode at the age of 4 months, with left-sided cortical-subcortical ischaemic lesions. Two months later she had left-sided focal seizures. MRI showed a right-sided cortical enhancement, magnetic resonance angiography (MRA) was normal. The neurological deficit was stable and she was seizure free. These episodes were initially interpreted as metabolic strokes, but work-up was normal and mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes (MELAS) was excluded. In their teens both sisters were diagnosed with pulmonary and systemic hypertension and, due to the arterial hypertension, myocardial hypertrophy. Renal artery stenosis, pathological pulmonary arteries, and stenosis and rarefication of coronary arteries were found; the aorta and retinal vessels were normal. Repeat cranial MRI and MRA showed multiple collaterals, while the carotid and basilar arteries were extremely narrowed (moyamoya appearance). We suggest the diagnosis is a hereditary systemic vasculopathy of unknown origin.
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PMID:Siblings with infantile cerebral stroke and delayed multivessel involvement--a new hereditary vasculopathy? 1742 10

MELAS (mitochondrial encephalopathy with lactic acidosis and stroke-like episodes) is a maternally inherited disorder characterized by recurrent cerebral infarctions that do not conform to discreet vascular territories. Here we report on a patient who presented at 7 years of age with loss of consciousness and severe metabolic acidosis following vomiting and dehydration. She developed progressive sensorineural hearing loss, myopathy, ptosis, short stature, and mild developmental delays after normal early development. Biochemical testing identified metabolites characteristic of medium-chain acyl-CoA dehydrogenase (MCAD) deficiency (hexanoylglycine and suberylglycine), but also severe lactic acidemia (10-25 mM) and, in urine, excess of lactic acid, intermediates of the citric cycle, and marked ketonuria, suggesting mitochondrial dysfunction. She progressed rapidly to develop temporary cortical blindness. Brain imaging indicated generalized atrophy, more marked on the left side, in addition to white matter alterations consistent with a mitochondrial disorder. Magnetic resonance angiography indicated occlusion of the left cerebral artery with development of collateral circulation (Moyamoya syndrome). This process worsened over time to involve the other side of the brain. A muscle biopsy indicated the presence of numerous ragged red fibers. Molecular testing confirmed compound heterozygosity for the common mutation in the MCAD gene (985A>G) and a second pathogenic mutation (233T>C). MtDNA testing indicated that the muscle was almost homoplasmic for the 3243A>T mutation in tRNALeu, with a lower mutant load (about 50% heteroplasmy) in blood and skin fibroblasts. These results indicate that mitochondrial disorders may be associated with severe vascular disease resulting in Moyamoya syndrome. The contribution of the concomitant MCAD deficiency to the development of the phenotype in this case is unclear.
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PMID:Progressive cerebral vascular degeneration with mitochondrial encephalopathy. 1820 88


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