Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0233565 (bradykinesia)
2,352 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 40-year-old woman developed high fever and headache. Five days later, she was admitted because of consciousness disturbance and tremulous movements in upper extremities. The paired sera showed more than fourfold elevation in complement fixation titer to Japanese encephalitis virus. She was diagnosed as Japanese encephalitis from the clinical features and serological tests. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), which was performed about seven months after the onset, revealed abnormal intensity areas bilaterally in the thalamus, hippocampus, substantia nigra, globus pallidus and white matter around the lateral ventricle. Eight months after the onset, she was left with bradykinesia, disturbance of rightening reflex, emotional lability and impairment of recent memory with a long period of amnesia, including not only her illness and subsequent events but also about several years before her illness. The characteristic memory dysfunction seems to be due to disorder of bilateral hippocampus, where MRI revealed abnormal intensity areas. And disorder of medial thalamic nucleus would be related to emotional liability. The relation between the clinical features and MRI findings is also discussed.
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PMID:[A case of Japanese encephalitis demonstrating characteristic changes in MRI]. 166 72

We report a 73-year-old Japanese woman with familial Parkinson's disease. The patient was well until her 67 years of the age, when she noted rest tremor in her right hand. Soon after her gait became short stepped. She visited our clinic on October 6, 1992 when she was 68 years old. She was alert and well oriented without dementia. She showed masked face, small voice, small stepped gait, retropulsion, resting tremor in her right hand, rigidity in the neck, and bradykinesia. She was treated with 400 mg/day of levodopa-carbidopa, which improved her symptoms, however, she developed wearing off phenomenon 3 years after the initiation of levodopa treatment. On August 26, 1998, she developed abdominal pain, diarrhea, and vomiting. She was admitted to another hospital, where abdominal plain x-ray revealed an evidence of intestinal obstruction (ileus). She was treated with nasogastric suction and intravenous fluid. Her condition did not improve and she was transferred to our hospital on August 29, 1998. Her family history revealed no consanguineous marriage. She had two elder brothers and three elder sisters. One of her brothers had been diagnosed as Parkinson's disease. Her husband also suffered from Parkinson's disease, however, her parents apparently did not have Parkinson's disease. On admission, she appeared to be drowsy. Her blood pressure was 102/70 mmHg, body temperature 36.2 degrees C. The lungs were clear and no cardiac murmur was present. Abdomen was flat and bowel sound was audible. No abnormal mass was palpable. Neurologic examination revealed mild consciousness disturbance, masked face, and small voice. No motor paralysis was noted. Muscle tone was hypotonic. No abnormal involuntary movement was noted. Abnormal laboratory findings on admission were as follows; WBC 11,300/microliter, amylase 1,373 IU/l, CK 446 IU/l, BUN 50 mg/dl, creatinine 1.17 mg/dl, CRP 22.7 mg/ dl, Na 134 mEq/l, K 3.1 mEq/l, and Cl 81 mEq/l. A chest x-ray film revealed pneumonic shadows in both lower lung fields. She was treated by nasointestinal suction, intravenous fluids, and chemotherapy for her infection. Her BP started to drop on September 2 and she developed cardiac arrest on the same day. She was discussed in a neurological CPC. The chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had a form of autosomal dominant familial Parkinson's disease. As parents did not have Parkinson's disease, some of the participants raised the possibility of autosomal recessive inheritance. But the age of onset was too late for autosomal recessive inheritance. Majority thought that the mode of inheritance was autosomal dominant with low penetrance. alpha-Synuclein mutation causes an autosomal dominant familial Parkinson's disease, but this type is very rare in non-Greek populations and the penetrance is high. Chromosome 2-linked autosomal dominant familial Parkinson's disease shows low penetrance. There are many other autosomal dominant forms of familial Parkinson's disease linked to yet unknown chromosome loci. Majority thought that this patient also had a form of Lewy-body positive autosomal dominant familial Parkinson's disease of unknown chromosome locus. Post mortem examination revealed ischemic intestinal lesion with strangulation. This was thought to be the cause of her death. In the central nervous system, the brain appeared to be normal by inspection. In the coronal sections, the substantia nigra and the locus coeruleus showed marked depigmentation. Histologic examination revealed marked neuronal loss and Lewy body formation in the remaining neurons. Pathologic examination was consistent with Parkinson's disease. Mutational analysis for the parkin gene was negative.
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PMID:[A 73-year-old woman with familial Parkinson's disease]. 1065 9

A 60-year-old male was admitted because he had developed tremulous movement in both upper and lower limbs and gait disturbance over the course of 3 months. He had been on continuous ambulatory peritoneal dialysis almost 1 year earlier due to end-stage diabetic nephropathy. A neurological examination revealed a mild disturbance of his consciousness, asterixis in the upper limbs, bilateral extensor plantar responses and parkinsonism, which were characterized by bradykinesia, akinesia, rigidity, and bilaterally tremors at rest. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed swollen bilateral basal ganglia legions, which appeared hyperintense on T2-weighted images. The patient was treated for metabolic acidosis and continued hemodialysis three times a week; however, the parkinsonism remained 1 year later. Follow-up MRI revealed decreased swelling of the basal ganglia, and the pattern of diffusion-weighted images and the apparent diffusion coefficient (ADC) map indicated vasogenic and cytotoxic edema in bilateral globus pallidus. The case was diagnosed as encephalopathy due to diabetic uremic syndrome, initially characterized by Wang et al. (2003). Only 17 cases with parkinsonism have been reported. Diabetic uremic syndrome is characterized by acute or subacute onset consciousness disturbance and movement disorders such as parkinsonism, chorea and the other extrapyramidal signs to various degrees related to bilateral lesions of the basal ganglia.
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PMID:[A case of subacute parkinsonism presenting as bilateral basal ganglia legions by MRI in diabetic uremic syndrome]. 2352 2