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Query: UMLS:C0085584 (
encephalopathy
)
18,178
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Continuous monitoring of the cerebral blood flow, oxyhemoglobin, deoxyhemoglobin, total hemoglobin, oxidized
cytochrome
a, a3, and tissue pH during prolonged CO2 or N2 loading in 2-week-old rabbits was performed by near-infrared spectroscopy, the thermocouple method, and a tissue pH meter. Near-infrared spectroscopy demonstrated decreases in oxyhemoglobin and oxidized
cytochrome
a, a3 and increases in deoxyhemoglobin and total hemoglobin in the early stage within 5 min, which gradually lessened with time on both 10% concentration of inspired O2 with CO2 and N2. CBF increased with venous retention in the early stage and then slowly decreased in parallel with blood pressure and oxidized
cytochrome
a, a3 on abolition of autoregulation. These changes were more remarkable during the 10% concentration of inspired O2 with CO2 than N2 which may be caused by marked acidosis and hypotension associated with hypercarbia. Oxidized
cytochrome
a, a3, however, demonstrated a gradual decrease in 10% concentration of inspired O2 with N2 rather than CO2; therefore, the continuous monitorings demonstrated hemodynamic and oxygenation changes despite the same extent of prolonged hypoxic loading. These changes in prolonged hypoxic conditions may occur in human intrapartum asphyxia which develops into postnatal hypoxic-ischemic
encephalopathy
.
...
PMID:Monitoring of immature rabbit brain during hypoxia with near-infrared spectroscopy. 155 75
Tissues and cultured fibroblasts from two patients with Leigh syndrome (subacute necrotizing
encephalopathy
) were examined. A systemic defect in cytochrome oxidase was identified by enzyme assay and estimation of
cytochrome
concentrations. Immunochemical analysis showed a reduction of most subunits of the cytochrome oxidase complex. The rate of synthesis of cytochrome oxidase subunits, determined by labelling experiments in cultured fibroblasts, was the same in the patients and normal controls. The reduced cytochrome oxidase content of the patients' tissues must therefore result from abnormal turnover of the protein subunits.
...
PMID:Cytochrome c oxidase deficiency in subacute necrotizing encephalopathy (Leigh syndrome). 255 45
A 4-year-old boy presented with developmental delay, aggressive behavior, and incoordination. His EEG showed a diffuse
encephalopathy
. At age 10 he developed convulsions and severe migraine-like headaches. Muscle wasting, arreflexia, and lactic acidemia following exercise were noted. Electromyography was myopathic and nerve conduction studies revealed a peripheral neuropathy. Muscle biopsy demonstrated variation in fiber size and an excess of lipid droplets. He than had several stroke-like episodes and periods of unconsciousness, associated with severe metabolic acidosis. Muscle
cytochrome
C oxidase was abnormally low. This boy displayed the classical clinical and biochemical features of MELAS syndrome, namely Mitochondrial myopathy,
Encephalopathy
, Lactic Acidosis, and Stroke-like episodes. Treatment included carnitine, vitamin C, vitamin K, riboflavin, coenzyme Q10, and corticosteroids. He died at the age of 14 years following an episode of seizures, coma, and gastrointestinal hemorrhage. This is the first reported case of MELAS syndrome in Israel.
...
PMID:MELAS syndrome: peripheral neuropathy and cytochrome C-oxidase deficiency: a case report and review of the literature. 772 60
Leigh syndrome (LS) is the clinical prototype of a genetically-determined mitochondrial
encephalopathy
. Twenty-two of 34 patients with LS had evidence of a movement disorder (MD). Dystonia, the most common MD, was present in 19 cases, rigidity in 4, tremor in 2, chorea in 2, hypokinesia in 2, myoclonus in 1, and tics in 1. Dystonia was most commonly multifocal at onset and showed progression in six patients. In half of the cases an enzymatic defect was detected, most commonly
cytochrome
C oxidase. The neuroradiologic findings showed prominent basal ganglia lesions in 20/21 patients. Putamen, caudate, substantia nigra and globus pallidus were involved in this order of frequency. This experience was reflected in a literature review encompassing 284 cases of LS. However, only 26.4% had MD. Eleven patients, including one of our cases, presented as the primary torsion dystonia phenotype. There are clinical and pathological similarities between LS and other metabolic diseases affecting the central nervous system. The enhanced vulnerability of the nervous system to metabolic stress and the resemblance in the distribution of the pathology of these diverse conditions suggests a common pathogenetic mechanism. An excitotoxin-mediated mechanism is favored, one which might account for the frequent involvement of the basal ganglia in LS.
...
PMID:Disorders of movement in Leigh syndrome. 839 42
Thirty-four children with lactic acidosis and Leigh
encephalopathy
due to
cytochrome
C oxidase (COX) deficiency distributed in 28 families have recently been identified in northeastern Quebec, particularly in the Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean (SLSJ) region. The segregation analysis was consistent with an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. The incidence was estimated at 1/2,063 live births between 1979 and 1990, and the carrier rate was estimated at 1/23 inhabitants in SLSJ. In SLSJ, the places of origin of the COX-deficient children and their parents did not show a clustered nonuniform distribution. The genealogical reconstruction of 54 obligate carriers identified 26 ancestors common to all of them. Twenty-two were 17th-century Europeans, suggesting that the COX-deficient gene was introduced in the French-Canadian population by early settlers. These results support the hypothesis of a founder effect for COX deficiency in northeastern Quebec. Clinical findings are reported for 15 of these COX-deficient patients, age 6 mo to 11 years. Moderate developmental delay, hypotonia, ataxia, strabismus, and mild facial dysmorphism were frequent. Eleven children died in episodes of fulminant metabolic acidosis. The patients had elevated blood and cerebrospinal fluid lactate levels, decreased blood bicarbonate levels, and normal blood pH. Leigh disease and microvesicular steatosis of the liver were present in all affected patients for whom postmortem examination was performed. This biochemically uniform group of patients showed a wide range of clinical severity.
...
PMID:Clinical, metabolic, and genetic aspects of cytochrome C oxidase deficiency in Saguenay-Lac-Saint-Jean. 839 91
A previously healthy and normally developed 17-year-old young female presented with a sudden onset of focal motor seizure status that proved to be refractory to anticonvulsive treatment. Severe
encephalopathy
with visual impairment leading to blindness, mental deterioration, and predominantly left spastic tetraparesis developed progressively. Hepatic disease evolved 4 months after onset of the first symptoms and led to death in hepatic failure 1 month later. Diagnostic studies revealed an elevated protein and lactate in the cerebrospinal fluid, slow-wave and intermittently continuous spike-wave activity in the EEG, and a complex i.v. (
cytochrome
-C oxidase) deficiency in the muscle biopsy. MRI scans revealed signal abnormalities in the occipital lobe, thalamus, and basal ganglia only after 3 months. Histopathological findings in liver biopsy and in postmortem brain examination displaying widespread predominantly right cortical spongiosis, neuronal loss and astrocytosis were consistent with the clinically suspected diagnosis of progressive neuronal degeneration of childhood with liver disease (PNDC) or Alpers Huttenlocher disease. This rare disorder of unknown origin is usually seen in infants and young children and is rarely reported in adolescence.
...
PMID:Progressive cerebral degeneration of childhood with liver disease (Alpers Huttenlocher disease) with cytochrome oxidase deficiency presenting with epilepsia partialis continua as the first clinical manifestation. 956 26
Autopsy reports of patients with mitochondrial
encephalopathy
with lactic acidosis and strokelike episode (MELAS) are rare. This report documents the clinical and autopsy findings of a 47-year-old woman with MELAS syndrome. The diagnosis was corroborated by documenting a mitochondrial DNA mutation tRNA-Leu (UUR) at position 3243. The patient's clinical history was marked by schizophrenia, peptic ulcer disease, constipation requiring hemicolectomy, migraine headaches, deafness, and a left temporal lobe infarct. At autopsy, a muscle biopsy demonstrated numerous ragged red fibers and a partial
cytochrome
C oxidase deficiency. By electron microscopy, increased numbers of slightly hypertrophic mitochondria were observed focally within myocytes and vessel walls; paracrystalline mitochondrial inclusions were not seen. The brain at autopsy showed mild cerebral atrophy and diffuse cortical gliosis. Prominent bilateral basal ganglia calcifications and vascular sclerosis were present, and a small remote left temporal lobe infarct was seen.
...
PMID:Mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis, and strokelike episodes (MELAS) syndrome: an autopsy report. 982 26
Ethylmalonic
encephalopathy
is a rare metabolic disease presenting in infancy with developmental delay, acrocyanosis, petechiae, chronic diarrhea and early death. The biochemical characteristics of this autosomal recessive disease are urinary organic acid abnormalities. Recently it has been found to be caused by mutations in the ETHE1 gene, located on Ch19q13. Only about 30 patients have been reported, and we describe two additional cases. The first patient showed a typical clinical picture and biochemical abnormalities, with additional atypical clinical features. Neuroimaging studies showed extensive changes. A new homozygous mutation in exon 3 of the ETHE1 gene was found. The second patient was not investigated genetically; however besides the typical clinical picture and biochemical profile he was found to have
cytochrome
C oxidase deficiency.
...
PMID:Ethylmalonic encephalopathy-report of two cases. 1637 14
The diagnosis of mitochondrial myopathy depends upon a constellation of findings, family history, type of muscle involvement, specific laboratory abnormalities, and the results of histological, pathobiochemical and genetic analysis. In the present paper, the authors describe the diagnostic approach to mitochondrial myopathies manifesting as extraocular muscle disease. The most common ocular manifestation of mitochondrial myopathy is progressive external ophthalmoplegia (PEO). To exclude myasthenia gravis, ocular myositis, thyroid associated orbitopathy, oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy, and congenital fibrosis of the extraocular muscles in patients with an early onset or long-lasting very slowly progressive ptosis and external ophthalmoplegia, almost without any diplopia, and normal to mildly elevated serum creatine kinase and lactate, electromyography, nerve conduction studies and MRI of the orbits should be performed. A PEO phenotype forces one to look comprehensively for other multisystemic mitochondrial features (e.g., exercise induced weakness,
encephalopathy
, polyneuropathy, diabetes, heart disease). Thereafter, and presently even in familiar PEO, a diagnostic muscle biopsy should be taken. Histological and ultrastructural hallmarks are mitochondrial proliferations and structural abnormalities, lipid storage, ragged-red fibers, or
cytochrome
-C negative myofibers. In addition, Southern blotting may reveal the common deletion, or molecular analysis may verify specific mutations of distinct mitochondrial or nuclear genes.
...
PMID:Extraocular mitochondrial myopathies and their differential diagnoses. 1676 Jan 17
Mitochondrial myopathies make up a group of rare disorders whose onset is in childhood or adolescence. Muscle and central nervous system involvement is variable. Mitochondrial respiratory chain complex III deficiency (coenzyme Q -
cytochrome
C reductase) can manifest as exercise intolerance, myopathy,
encephalopathy
, and myocardial disease. Approximately 38 patients with complex III deficiency have been described since 1966, yet only a single anesthetic experience (epidural analgesia for cesarean delivery) has been reported. We describe the case of an 11-year-old boy with mitochondrial respiratory chain complex III deficiency, severe myopathy, and moderate
encephalopathy
who underwent surgery to improve right ischiotibial muscle spasticity. Monitoring included electrocardiography, noninvasive blood pressure, oxygen saturation by pulse oximetry, end-tidal carbon dioxide pressure, esophageal temperature, spirometry, and neuromuscular block (Relaxograph Datex). Midazolam, fentanyl, and propofol were used for anesthetic induction; mivacurium was used during intubation. Anesthetic maintenance was with propofol in continuous infusion and fractionated doses of fentanyl and mivacurium on demand in a mixture of oxygen and air. The boy's response to mivacurium was abnormal but he could nevertheless be extubated in the operating room at a train-of-four ratio of 75% and with no need to reverse the neuromuscular blockade. There were no problems during the anesthetic procedure, so it could be a good technique for these patients, despite of considering individually every case and extension of syntomatology, due to the little experience in anesthesia with deficiency of Complex III.
...
PMID:[Anesthesia for a patient with mitochondrial respiratory chain complex III deficiency]. 1729 35
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