Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0264733 (ventricular dilatation)
2,163 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Myotonic dystrophy seems to have a hypometabolism of non-thyroid origin. The hypometabolism could hypothetically be caused by : 1) reduction in muscle mass, 2) hydrocephalus ex vacuo, an integral part of the disorder, or 3) the basic disease process itself. Possibility 2) was explored by determining basal metabolic rate (BMR) in 41 patients with dilatation. A BMR of less than -10 per cent was found in eight cases. The ventricles were categorized in three groups according to width. No decrease in mean BMR was found in cases with a marked ventricular enlargement. Thus, ventricular dilatation per se does not seem to lead to hypometabolism.
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PMID:Basal metabolic rate in patients with hydrocephalus. On the cause of lowered basal metabolic rate in myotonic dystrophy. 126 70

We studied seven children with congenital myotonic dystrophy, aged 2.1-8.3 years, and the results of computed tomography and magnetic resonance imaging of the brain were analyzed and neurological development was assessed from the neonatal period. We found that ventricular dilatation that had been seen on the first day of life in two of three infants had not progressed in sequential follow-up computed tomography scans taken at intervals of one to six years. Also, in T2-weighted magnetic resonance imagings, areas of periventricular hyperintensity were identified in all children, as well as areas of subcortical hyperintensity in one child. Further, an asphyxial episode had occurred at birth in five patients and the extent of the periventricular hyperintensity was found to correlate significantly with Apgar scores, indicating that the degree of perinatal asphyxia that had occurred was responsible for the abnormalities uncovered by the magnetic resonance imagings. However, there was no correlation between the neurodevelopment outcome and the extent of the periventricular hyperintensity or ventriculomegaly. Therefore, in patients with congenital myotonic dystrophy, a neonatal episode of asphyxia can be responsible for a finding of periventricular hyperintensity, but it is unlikely that an integral part of the mental retardation is attributable to brain damage due to perinatal asphyxia.
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PMID:Neuroradiological findings in children with congenital myotonic dystrophy. 139 86

An 11-year-old girl with congenital myotonic dystrophy and infantile autism was reported. Her mother also suffered from typical myotonic dystrophy. Since her birth, the patient had been floppy, and showed bilateral talipes equinus at 1 year of age. Her subsequent psychomotor and speech development has been retarded. She showed autistic behavior and persistence to the sameness before 2 years old. She was admitted to Sawarabien at the age of 10 years. She could not talk anything but could understand simple, oral messages. Although she had severe degree of mental retardation, her ability for matching figures was relatively well reserved. Her autism was so manifest that it could not be explained by the degree of mental retardation. Neurological examinations revealed that she had facial diplegia, inverted V-shaped mouth, high-arched palate, talipes equinus, percussion myotonia of the tongue, generalized muscular atrophy and weakness, lordosis, areflexia, and congenital cataracta. The serum CPK was slightly elevated. EMG showed a myopathic pattern but did not show any myotonic discharge yet. The brachioradial muscle was biopsied and examined by light- and electron-microscopy. It mainly showed mild varieties of muscle fiber diameter and internal nuclei. Ultrastructurally, irregularly indented central nuclei and perinuclear degeneration of myofibrils associated with secondary lysosomes, lipid droplets and glycogen granules were revealed. Ventricular dilatation and some dysfunction of the brain were also revealed by CT scan and EEG respectively. The present case suggests that congenital myotonic dystrophy can be added into the disease group associated with infantile autism.
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PMID:[A case of congenital myotonic dystrophy with infantile autism]. 278 60

CT scan is able to show cerebral atrophy more safely and more easily than pneumo-encephalography or cerebral angiography. Then, various methods have been reported for quantitative analysis of cerebral atrophy on CT scan. Generally, cerebral atrophy might be judged from the ventricular dilatation with some indices, calculated from various ventricular width. But, there is no general agreement on what index is the most reliable. In this paper, we attempted to establish the index, easy to measure and most reliable. Our method is as follow. Method. We carried out the CT scan (EMI 1010) on 89 neurologically intact patients. Scans were parallel to orbito-meatal line (OML), and were 10 mm in thickness. On CT scan films, various width, area of anterior horns and area of bodies of lateral ventricles were measured (Fig. 1). Measurement about the anterior horns of lateral ventricles were carried out on image the most clearly showed the foramen of Monro. And measurements about the bodies of lateral ventricles were on image, 20 mm above the image of anterior horn. Correlations of various width and areas were calculated (Table 1). Then we proposed new indices with high correlations (over 0.9) with ventricular area; Anterior horn CVI (Cerebro-Ventricular Index) and Body CVI (Fig. 2, 3). Patients with myotonic dystrophy show cerebral atrophy. We carried out the CT scan (GE-CT/T 8800) on 17 myotonic dystrophy patients and 30 controls. Between the two groups, age and sex were almost matched (Fig. 4).(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Quantitative measurement of ventricular dilatation on CT scan--a proposal of new index and review of literature]. 387 58

To investigate the etiological factors responsible for intellectual impairment and mood changes in patients with myotonic dystrophy (DM), we evaluated 14 patients with DM by means of neuropsychological evaluation and magnetic resonance images (MRI). There were significant differences between patients and controls in regard to the Barthel index, Zung's depression scale, attention, verbal fluency and digit span. All patients had ventricular enlargement and white matter abnormalities on MRI. However, the severity was variable and there was no difference in neuropsychological testing between patients with mild ventricular dilatation and those with severe dilatation. On the other hand, significant differences were present between patients with mild white matter lesions and those with severe white matter abnormalities in regard to verbal fluency and attention. Neuropathologic examination of an autopsied brain showed an increase in the interfascicular space of the white matter which produced pallor on myelin staining. The present findings suggested that the white matter abnormalities were the cause of cognitive impairment among patients with DM.
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PMID:Involvement of the central nervous system in myotonic dystrophy. 770 77

We performed a correlative study between intellectual impairment, CTG repeat expansion and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) abnormalities, including hippocampal atrophy, white matter lesions and ventricular dilatation in 15 patients with myotonic dystrophy (MD). They included 4 males and 11 females aged from 20 to 66 years, averaging 43 years of age and 15 years of duration of illness. Nine patients had intellectual impairment (WAIS-R<80). Negative correlations were found between full scale IQ (FSIQ), duration of illness (p<0.05) and CTG repeat expansion (p<0.05). Compared with normal controls, the patients with MD showed a significant reduction in size of the hippocampal head (p<0.01), which was positively correlated to FSIQ, verbal IQ and performance IQ levels (p<0.05). Ten patients had white matter lesions. Severer white matter lesions tended to be recognized in patients with longer duration of illness and with decreased FSIQ level. These results suggest that hippocampal atrophy and white matter lesions are related to intellectual impairment in patients with MD.
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PMID:[Intellectual impairment and brain MRI findings in myotonic dystrophy: with a special reference to hippocampal atrophy and white matter lesions]. 866 27

We present the clinical and neuroimaging findings of five patients (four males, one female; mean age 12 years) affected by congenital myotonic dystrophy and the correlation with their molecular genetic analysis. At birth all five presented severe muscular weakness and hypotonia, associated with feeding difficulties and respiratory distress. In the same patients, congenital clubfoot or more generalized arthrogryposis was also evident. Lymphocyte DNA was characterized in each by a CTG repeat longer than 1300 in the region of the myotonic dystrophy gene in chromosome 19. The patients' neurological condition was evaluated by clinical examination, intelligence tests, electroencephalography, and brain magnetic resonance imaging. All five suffered from some impairment of intellectual function (IQ ranged from 52 to 79). In three a longitudinal evaluation of the cognitive deficit detected no deterioration. In all patients magnetic resonance imaging showed some degree of ventricular dilatation, loosely correlated to the cognitive impairment; in three there was hypoplasia of the corpus callosum and in two mild abnormalities of supratentorial white matter. The relationship between the size of the CTG repeat expansion found in lymphocyte DNA and the cerebral abnormalities appeared inconsistent in this unusual myoencephalopathy of the newborn.
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PMID:Clinical and neuroimaging study of central nervous system in congenital myotonic dystrophy. 1032 16

We present the clinical manifestations, brain magnetic resonance images (MRI), and genetic analysis of a family with 2 siblings with congenital myotonic dystrophy type 1 (DM1) and 4 patients with classic DM1. These 2 patients with congenital DM1 had severe mental retardation and a characteristic feature of hyperintensity of white matter at the posterior-superior trigone (HWMPST), in addition to ventricular dilatation in T2-weighted images (T2WI) of brain MRI. In 2 of the 4 classic DM1 patients, brain T2WI MRI showed hyperintensity lesions in the bilateral frontal and/or temporal regions, which were absent in congenital DM1. In conclusion, we suggest that the HWMPST in brain MRI is a characteristic finding in congenital DM1, and that the severe cognitive impairments are not only attributable to the subcortical white matter lesions. In congenital DM1, the cognitive function is a diffuse impairment, which is different from that in classic DM1.
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PMID:Brain magnetic resonance image changes in a family with congenital and classic myotonic dystrophy. 1586 93

Ventricular tachycardia due to branch to branch re-entry constitutes a rare clinical entity. This circuit is remarkable by the fact that it is made up of the branches or hemi-branches of the bundle of His bifurcation. They occur under specific conditions, with a combination of left ventricular dilatation and atrioventricular or intraventricular conduction defects. They are also very often found in Steinert's disease. A positive diagnosis can sometimes be difficult and relies on a variety of factors. Recording of the His potential shows His activity preceding each ventriculogram, and variations in spontaneous cycles between 2 ventriculograms preceded by variations between the 2 His potentials. Atrial capture without modification of the QRS is possible, but fusion excludes the diagnosis. Drug therapy is only slightly effective, and the best treatment is ablation of the right branch of the bundle of His, which stops the tachycardia definitively.
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PMID:[Ventricular tachycardia due to branch to branch re-entry]. 1643 38

Three neonates, all girls, were presented immediately after birth with severe hypotonia. Two of them needed artificial ventilation because of respiratory insufficiency. All three pregnancies had been complicated by reduced fetal movements and moderate cerebral ventricular dilatation and in two of the three there was also polyhydramnios and congenital talipes. In all three infants congenital myotonic dystrophy was suspected after diagnosing myotonia in the mother. This was done by observing that none of the mothers were unable to release their grip immediately on command after shaking hands. Ophthalmological examination of the women revealed polychromatic lens crystals characteristic of myotonic dystrophy. Congenital myotonic dystrophy was confirmed by DNA analysis, as well as myotonic dystrophy in the mothers. All had an expansion of the number of cytosine-thymine-guanine(CTG)-trinucleotides in a part of the myotonic dystrophy protein-kinase gene. The first two infants died after 2 days and 15 months respectively.
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PMID:[Congenital myotonic dystrophy--the significance of a handshake]. 1644 May 58


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