Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0235394 (wasting)
8,040 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The patient described is a 14-year-old girl who suffered from an oculocutaneous albinism. The developmental milestones were reached with some delay. Gradually she experienced fatiques, and wasting of the pelvic girdle muscles and weakness appeared. In suralis nerve biopsy sections no abnormalities were found. In muscle biopsy sections the characteristic findings of a primary central neuronal muscular atrophy were seen. Based on clinical and histopathological findings it may be stated that the patient is suffering from a motor neuron disease. The chance of the combined occurrence of oculocutaneous albinism and motor neuron disease can be estimated to be one out of 750 X 10(6), unless an incestuous relation is supposed.
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PMID:Oculocutaneous albinism associated with motor neuron disease. 63 11

A diabetic woman developed mononeuropathy of the deep palmar branch of the ulnar nerve six months following repetitive palmar trauma. The illness was initially incorrectly diagnosed as motor neuron disease, emphasizing the importance of accurate diagnosis of diseases that cause wasting of intrinslc muscles in the hand.
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PMID:Mononeuropathy of the deep palmar branch of the ulnar nerve. A case occurring in a diabetic woman. 115 15

Thirteen patients suffering from motor neuron disease with dementia were studied to analyze the clinicopathological spectrum. The diagnosis of the disease was made on the basis of a clinical history of progressive dementia and motor neuron involvement. The mean age at onset of 11 sporadic cases was 54.9 years (range, 43 to 69 years), with a mean duration of disease of 25 months (range, 11 to 47 months). The initial symptoms were dementia in 7 cases, motor neuron involvement in 2 cases, and both dementia and motor neuron involvement in 2 cases. The clinical picture of motor neuron disturbance in sporadic cases represented bulbar-type of amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). Bulbar palsy was the initial symptom in 7 sporadic cases and all 11 patients developed bulbar palsy with advancing course of illness. Muscular wasting and fasciculation were more predominant in the upper limbs, shoulder girdle and anterior chest. Fasciculation was more extensively and frequently observed in those portions than that of classical ALS. In contrast, muscle strength in the lower limbs was well preserved so that all patients could walk even when respiratory failure developed. Hyperreflexia including jaw jerk was found in all cases and positive Babinski sign in 7 cases. Parkinsonism appeared in the initial stage in one sporadic case and in two familial cases. The type of dementia with uninhibited behavior and personality change closely mimicked that of Pick's disease. The degree of dementia was mild or moderate in 8 cases and severe in 3 cases. Language disorder was characterized by progressive reduction of speech output, leading finally to mutism in 5 cases. Perseveration was observed in 10 cases. Visuospatial disorder was absent even in the advanced stage. Mild memory disturbance was noted in the early stage in 10 cases. Pathological examination was performed in 7 cases including one familial case, revealing frontal atrophy in 3 cases, frontotemporal atrophy in 2 cases and temporal atrophy in 2 cases. On microscopic examination there were mild neuronal loss, gliosis, mild spongy state of the cortical superficial layers and fibrous gliosis in the frontotemporal white matter. The scattered senile plaques in one case did not justify a diagnosis of Alzheimer's type dementia. Neither circumscribed atrophy nor Pick body was found in any case. The nucleus basalis of Meynert showed no neuronal loss. The substantia nigra showed a mild to severe loss of nerve cells without Lewy bodies in all cases.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 400 WORDS)
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PMID:[A clinicopathological study on 13 cases of motor neuron disease with dementia]. 130 19

The authors report the case of a 32-year-old woman who developed symptoms and signs possible manifestations of a familial motor neuron disease with left sided pyramidal signs and marked wasting and weakness in the ipsilateral upper girdle, progressively extended to the contralateral upper limb. The CT-scan showed only frontal cortical atrophy. MRI disclosed a restricted area of increased signal intensity in the centrum semiovale of the subcortical white matter of the right prefrontal cortex. This young woman did not disclose any risk factors for cerebrovascular diseases nor other disorders of the CNS; therefore the authors are of the opinion that the white matter changes observed on MRI are not occasional findings, but are related to the pathologic process occurring in consequence of her neurodegenerative disorder (possible ALS).
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PMID:MRI findings in a patient with a familial form of motor neuron disease. 186 28

A spontaneous motor neuron disease or neuronopathy was identified in 10 horses from the northeastern United States. Signs of generalized weakness, muscle fasciculations, muscle atrophy and weight loss progressed over 1 to several months in young and old horses of various breeds. Pathologic studies revealed that degeneration and loss of motor neurons in the spinal cord and brain stem resulted in axonal degeneration in the ventral roots and peripheral and cranial nerves and denervation atrophy of skeletal muscle. Many spinal neurons were swollen, chromatolytic and contained neurofilamentous accumulations. Other cell bodies were shrunken and undergoing neuronophagia and some were lost and replaced by glia. This fatal equine motor neuron disease has not been reported previously and its cause has not been determined. The progressive weakness and wasting and the neuronal degenerative changes in these horses were similar to those described in people with sporadic amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS), also known as Lou Gehrig's disease.
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PMID:Equine motor neuron disease; a preliminary report. 220 16

A thirty-eight-year-old man presented with a six year history of symptoms resembling an anterior horn cell disorder. There was progressive upper extremity wasting and weakness in the absence of sensory complaints. Electrophysiologic abnormalities were confined to motor nerve conduction and indicated a demyelinating process involving the brachial plexus and major proximal upper extremity nerve trucks bilaterally. Biopsy of the proximal right ulnar nerve revealed changes suggesting a chronic demyelinating process, and onion-bulb formations were present. Immunohistochemical staining for S-100 protein was positive in the cells comprising the onion-bulbs, indicating a Schwann cell, not a perineurial origin of these cells. After 8 years, symptoms have failed to appear in the lower limbs. Recent reports in the literature have begun to delineate the syndrome, which appears to represent an unusual, localized or multifocal, sometimes inflammatory, clinically benign neuropathy that can mimic motor neuron disease in its earlier stages. We report the first such case with underlying pathology.
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PMID:Neuropathy with onion bulb formations and pure motor manifestations. 254 90

Two sisters presented with progressive muscle cramps, as well as wasting and weakness of the legs with onset after age 20. They also showed intention tremor of the upper extremities and dysarthria starting during the first decade. The older patient also had fasciculations; the younger, hyperreflexia. Total plasma beta-hexosaminidase (Hex) activity with 4-methylumbelliferyl-acetyl-glucosamine as substrate was reduced to 1.4% and 2.7% of the control in the 2 patients, respectively. Hex A activity measured by 4-methylumbelliferyl-N-acetylglucosamine-6-O-sulphate as substrate was 9.9% and 12.8% of the mean control value in the 2 patients, respectively. Hex B activity was undetectable in both patients. Leukocyte total Hex activity was 7-8% of normal; residual Hex A activity in the 2 patients was 17.8% and 16.3% of normal controls, respectively. Fibroblastic residual Hex A activity in the 2 patients was 9.6% and 22% of normal mean value, respectively. Appendiceal ganglion cells contained membranous cytoplasmic bodies in the younger patient. Thin layer chromatography of the appendiceal extract from one patient (III/2) showed a marked increase of GM2 ganglioside, and some increase of GM3 ganglioside. Northern blots performed on fibroblast cell lines from both patients for the demonstration of alpha and beta locus messenger RNA showed no difference between patients and control. These patients have a rare form of adult-onset progressive motor neuron disease presumably due to abnormal beta subunits, causing severe deficiency of both Hex A and Hex B. The phenotypic expression of this disease is similar to motor neuron disease due to alpha locus mutations, which suggests that the Hex A deficiency, even though only a partial one, may be the important pathogenic factor.
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PMID:Adult onset motor neuronopathy in the juvenile type of hexosaminidase A and B deficiency. 297 15

While the authors have often observed the hand presenting spastic dysfunction and deficient pain sensation in patients with cervical compression myelopathy, which has been termed "Myelopathy hand," they have occasionally seen a different type of myelopathy hand characterized by muscle wasting and motor dysfunction in patients with cervical spondylosis. This type of myelopathy hand they have termed "amyotrophic type of myelopathy hand." Because it is similar to the hand of a patient suffering from motor neuron disease, and yet is treatable, the authors thought it worthwhile to report this type of hand in detail. The main clinical features are localized wasting and weakness of the extrinsic and intrinsic hand muscles, but not accompanied by either sensory loss or spastic quadriparesis. For an accurate diagnosis, attention should be paid to the narrow anteroposterior (AP) canal diameter of the cervical spine (less than 13mm), multisegmental spondylosis in C5-6 and C6-7 disc levels and a reduced transectional area of the spinal cord at the C7, C8, or T1 spinal cord segments. To date the authors have seen 15 patients with this hand; seven underwent either spondylectomy or laminoplasty. In six patients who were satisfied with surgical results, recovery from muscle wasting and weakness was seen.
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PMID:Myelopathy hand characterized by muscle wasting. A different type of myelopathy hand in patients with cervical spondylosis. 319 87

Fasciculations and cramps may occur in motor neuron disease or as part of a more benign syndrome. A man with apparently benign fasciculations and cramps for 4 years developed progressive muscle weakness and wasting. Such a previously undocumented evolution of benign fasciculations and cramps to motor neuron disease may further implicate anterior horn cell dysfunction in the pathogenesis of muscle fasciculation-cramp syndromes.
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PMID:From benign fasciculations and cramps to motor neuron disease. 371 60

Forty patients with cervical myelopathy underwent high-resolution computed tomography (CT) with intrathecal administration of metrizamide for evaluation of cervical spinal cord atrophy. Thirty of them showed evidence of either focal atrophic distortion or generalized accentuation of the anatomic surface features of the spinal cord. Patients with a Chiari malformation or syringomyelia were excluded. The characteristic features in cervical spondylosis and canal deformity include flattening of the ventral surface of the cord, central infolding, beaking of the lateral funiculi, and wasting of the dorsal surface of the cord. Patients with motor neuron disease showed a combination of anterolateral and posterolateral atrophy reflecting underlying degeneration of the anterior horn cells and/or corticospinal tracts, respectively. Those with monomelic motor neuron disease had a striking ipsilateral hemiatrophy of the spinal cord. Among those presenting with spastic paraparesis, seven with clinically definite multiple sclerosis showed diffuse atrophy or focal degeneration due to a localized plaque of demyelination. Two cases of cord neoplasm showed atrophy secondary to ascending or descending degeneration of the long tracts.
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PMID:Patterns of spinal cord atrophy by metrizamide CT. 641 Aug 12


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