Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0242339 (dyslipidemia)
13,927 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A 41-year-old woman with idiopathic thrombocytopenic purpura and dyslipidemia abruptly developed vertigo, truncal ataxia and divergence paralysis. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging demonstrated the presence of infarction in the left superior paramedian mesencephalic artery involving the vicinity of the periaqueductal gray matter. The symptoms rapidly resolved under the administration of anti-platelet agents. The precise location of the hypothetical divergence center of the ocular motor system remains unclear because the lesions responsible for divergence paralysis are rarely identified on neuroimaging. We emphasize that this is a first reported case of DP caused by acute midbrain infarction and speculate that the mesencephalic reticular formation may be partially involved.
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PMID:Divergence paralysis caused by acute midbrain infarction. 2315 26

The study aimed to evaluate the correlations between the clinical and paraclinical data in the lateral bulbar infarction, benefiting from the access to the semiologic characteristics of a group studied and the MRI angiography, without a contrast agent, through the 3D TOF technique combined with MIP, as an imaging technique for the evaluation of the arterial lesion. The study group included 20 patients with lateral bulbar infarction, 14 men, and 6 women aged between 21 and 80 years, the mean age being 56, 9 years, who were enrolled in the study in the period 2012 and 2014, following the admission in the National Institute of Neurology and Neurovascular Diseases. All the patients enrolled in this stage study, performed brain MRI - in the Medinst laboratory, which included the following sequences T1, T2, Flair, DWI, MRI angiography without contrast agent (3D TOF combined with MIP). The study was retrospective. Following the analysis of the 3D TOF sequences combined with MIP, it was found that in the group studied, 8 patients had damage at the level of the vertebral artery, 2 at the level of the posterior inferior cerebellar artery and 10 patients presented mixed lesions of both the vertebral artery and of the PICA artery. In terms of the mechanism involved, most of the lateral bulbar infarctions were generated by arterial dissection (9 cases) and 6 cases had atheroma as etiology. Regarding the risk factors, dyslipidemia and smoking predominated in the studied group and the most common signs and symptoms were gait abnormalities, the ataxia of the limbs, dysphonia, and Horner syndrome. Abbreviations: 3D TOF = 3D time of flight angiography, MIP = maximum intensity projection, MRI = magnetic resonance imaging, CT = computed tomography, FLAIR = fluid attenuated inversion recovery, DWI = diffusion weighted imaging, HTA = hypertension, DZ II = diabetes mellitus, VA = vertebral artery, PICA = posterior inferior cerebellar artery, VG = vertigo, NT = nystagmus, N/ E = nausea/ emesis, DP = dysphagia, PVP = pharyngeal/ vocal cord paresis, HS = Horner syndrome, PTH = pain/ temperature hypesthesia, LA = ipsilateral limb ataxia, GA = Gait ataxia, C-R-F = Cardiovascular risk factors, L = left, R = right.
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PMID:Correlations between the semiologic changes and the imaging aspects in the lateral bulbar infarction. 2797 32

Bardet-Biedl syndrome (BBS) is an autosomal recessive disease with a prevalence of about 1/125,000. The syndrome involves mixed rod-cone dystrophy (which becomes obvious by 6 years of age). About two thirds of patients have postaxial polydactyly, and sometimes syndactyly, brachydactyly, and/or clinodactyly may be present. Hypogonadism and renal involvement occur in about 40%, mental retardation in about 50%, and truncal obesity in about 70%; it is present early, along with insulin resistance, type 2 diabetes, dyslipidemia, and hypertension. Vision becomes markedly impaired by about age 30 years. The BBS is genetically heterogeneous entity with considerable phenotypic variability. Other associated problems include CNS-related ataxia, abnormal gait, and facial hypotonia, as well as anomalies such as high palate, hearing loss, and cardiac malformations. In males, there is oligospermia, leading to infertility. Around 50–80% of BBS patients have renal malformations (like cyst, agenesis or scarring) and renal dysfunction leading to end-stage renal disease. There are no pigmentary changes before the age of 1–2 years. Later, subtle pigmentary changes appear in the macula or peripapillary area. Several years later, pigments appear in the equatorial region, along with attenuation of retinal blood vessels and waxy pallor of the optic disc. Eventually, the macula may show atrophic changes (Figs. 33.1, 33.2 and 33.3). Electroretinography (ERG) shows involvement of rods and cones and is abnormal even before the fundus shows changes. A perimacular hyperfluorescent ring can be seen.
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PMID:Ciliopathy: Bardet-Biedl Syndrome. 3057 6