Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0848771 (neurological disability)
928 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A painful dystonia of rapid onset and associated parkinsonian features is described in a girl aged 14 years. The condition is refractory to treatment and has led to severe neurological disability. Her father had presented with a similar picture.
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PMID:Rapid onset dystonia-parkinsonism in a 14-year-old girl. 1047 66

In this paper, we provide a brief update of diagnostic considerations and biochemical phenotype in L-amino acid decarboxylase deficiency. We review clinical features and outcome data in 11 affected patients, including 7 previously unreported cases. All had onset of the characteristic movement disorder by 6 months of age. The phenomenology of the movement disorder is identical to that previously reported, and includes intermittent oculogyric crises and limb dystonia, generalized athetosis, and impaired voluntary movement in all patients. Autonomic dysfunction is characterized by a significant impairment of sympathetic regulation of heart rate and blood pressure, as documented via detailed studies with spectral analysis techniques in two patients. Functional clinical outcomes as a group remain poor, in spite of a variety of attempted treatment interventions, with marked impairment in motor abilities as well as in speech and communication; however, outcome was quite variable from patient to patient and covered a broad spectrum of neurological disability. Much further work remains to identify and refine the best treatment options for patients with L-amino acid decarboxylase deficiency.
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PMID:Aromatic L-amino acid decarboxylase deficiency: overview of clinical features and outcomes. 1289 54

Wilson disease is an autosomal recessive disease that produces a copper accumulation in many organs, initially in the liver, progressing to liver cirrhosis, and in the brain, with different neurologic symptoms. Diagnosis is based on clinical, biochemical, and genetic tests. Different treatments based on chelating agents may help reduce the disease's spontaneous morbidity and mortality. We describe three patients who presented Wilson disease before 18 years of age, with initial neurologic symptoms between 1998 and 2010. After comparison with literature reports, their clinical symptoms, progression, and care allowed us to propose a treatment algorithm. Neurologic symptoms are present in 35% of the patients with Wilson disease such as dystonia, extrapyramidal syndrome, dysarthria, dysphagia, and psychiatric symptoms. The time to diagnosis remains too long and may account for the increased severity of the illness encountered and problems treating these patients. The first treatment choice must be triethylenetetramine, which causes fewer side effects of initial worsening of symptoms compared to D-penicillamine. Zinc therapy is the first treatment for asymptomatic patients or those on maintenance treatment. Finally, liver transplantation is a potential treatment even if the patient presents severe neurological disability because it may improve clinical symptoms. However, further research is warranted on this matter.
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PMID:[Diagnosis and care of Wilson disease with neurological revelation]. 2226 Dec 59

Patients with hyperphenylalaninemia (HPA) are detected through newborn screening for phenylketonuria (PKU). HPA is known to be caused by deficiencies of the enzyme phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) or its cofactor tetrahydrobiopterin (BH4). Current guidelines for the differential diagnosis of HPA would, however, miss a recently described DNAJC12 deficiency. The co-chaperone DNAJC12 is, together with the 70kDa heat shock protein (HSP70), responsible for the proper folding of PAH. All DNAJC12-deficient patients investigated to date responded to a challenge with BH4 by lowering their blood phenylalanine levels. In addition, the patients presented with low levels of biogenic amine in CSF and responded to supplementation with BH4, L-dopa/carbidopa and 5-hydroxytryptophan. The phenotypic spectrum ranged from mild autistic features or hyperactivity to severe intellectual disability, dystonia and parkinsonism. Late diagnosis result in permanent neurological disability, while early diagnosed and treated patients develop normally. Molecular diagnostics for DNAJC12 variants are thus mandatory in all patients in which deficiencies of PAH and BH4 are genetically excluded.
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PMID:DNAJC12 deficiency: A new strategy in the diagnosis of hyperphenylalaninemias. 2917 66

Toxoplasmosis encephalitis in patients with human immunodeficiency virus may progress rapidly with a potentially fatal outcome. Less common neurological symptoms associated with this are Parkinsonism, focal dystonia, rubral tremor and hemichorea-hemiballismus syndrome. A 58 year old woman suddenly lost consciousness and was admitted to the emergency service. Her medical history was unremarkable, except for frequent headaches in the last year, recurrent herpes simplex skin lesions and an episode of urticaria. A computer tomography scan showed supra and infra-tentorial lesions on suggestive of cerebral toxoplasmosis. Both Toxoplasma gondii and HIV tests were positive. In the intensive care unit, antiparasitic and antiretroviral drugs were administered, and she recovered from the coma after six weeks but presented with tetraparesis, diplopia, and depression. The LCD4 count increased from 7 to 128/mm3. The neurological lesions slowly resolved over the next two months, although postural instability, rigidity, bradykinesia and predominantly left side tremor persisted. Mild improvement was achieved after the administration of levodopa. Associated Parkinsonian syndrome in HIV patients is a rare condition, explained by the location of the brain and basal ganglia lesions, and by the observed effect of Toxoplasma gondii which increases dopamine metabolism in neural cells. Early HIV diagnostic and treatment are necessary to prevent neurological disability.
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PMID:Parkinsonian Syndrome and Toxoplasmic Encephalitis. 2996 44