Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0851184 (thinning)
11,252 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Late-onset cerebellar degeneration can be induced transplacentally in mice by a single low-dose (1 mg/kg) injection of the direct-acting DNA alkylating agent N-methyl-N-nitrosourea (MNU) on day 16 of pregnancy. The offspring develop a mild ataxia that manifests by 12-16 weeks of age postnatally when the animals are challenged with a motor coordination task. Morphological evidence of degeneration includes pyknosis of Purkinje cells and abnormal foliation patterns. Additionally, these animals demonstrate a progressive retinopathy characterized by thinning of the nuclear and plexiform layers of the retina. Efforts to retard the cerebellar degeneration were undertaken in the present study. MNU-exposed and control animals were fed a standard mouse chow diet supplemented with 0.75% butylated hydroxytoluene (BHT), an antioxidant. This supplementation commenced 24 h following exposure to the teratogen and continued throughout the life of the offspring. A second group of MNU-exposed and control mice were fed a non-BHT-supplemented, standard Purina mouse chow diet. Quantitative histological evaluation of cerebellar coronal sections indicated that by 4 weeks of age BHT-fed, MNU-exposed mice had significantly fewer pyknotic Purkinje cells than non-BHT-fed, MNU-exposed animals. This was true for the vermal, paravermal, and lateral areas of the cerebellum. The findings suggest the usefulness of teratogenic models of degenerative diseases for the testing of potential intervention strategies.
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PMID:The antioxidant butylated hydroxytoluene can retard cerebellar degeneration induced transplacentally by a single low dosage of N-methyl-N-nitrosourea. 256 66

Aneurysm of the vein of Galen is a very rare disease. The authors present a case of secondary aneurysm of the vein of Galen which was confirmed by characteristic clinical symptoms, brain CT and angiographic findings. The patient was a 14-year-old right handed girl with intermittent headache, nausea, vomiting, dysphasia and gait disturbance. Neurologic examination revealed dysarthria, nasal voice, blurring of both margins of optic discs, truncal ataxia and dysdiadochokinesia. Sensory function was normal but right hemiparesis was seen. Roentgenogram of the skull revealed diffuse thinning of the calvarium, widening of sella turcica and erosion of clinoid processes. Computed tomogram of the brain showed dilatation of all ventricles and round hyperdense mass behind the third ventricle in the midline. The lesion was enhanced markedly and homogeneously. Left and right internal carotid angiograms showed arteriovenousmal-formation with drainage to the aneurysm of the vein of Galen.
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PMID:A case of aneurysm of the vein of Galen. 327 Oct 52

The effects of high toxic doses of the anticancer drugs, etoposide and its phosphate derivative, BMY-40481, on the nervous system of female CD-1 mice were examined by light microscopy (LM) and transmission electron microscopy. Mice were euthanatized 4 wk following a single iv injection of either 0, 50, 100, or 150 mg/kg of BMY-40481 or 44 or 88 mg/kg of etoposide. Mice treated with 100 or 150 mg/kg of BMY-40481 or 88 mg/kg of etoposide had clinical symptomology of progressive ataxia, impaired righting reflex, and splaying and paresis of fore- and hindlimbs at day 8. Similar, dose-related LM changes were observed with both drugs at all doses and consisted of degeneration of dorsal root ganglion cells and axonal degeneration of their distal and proximal processes in peripheral nerves, dorsal spinal roots, and dorsal funiculi of spinal cord. Axonal degeneration was characterized by LM as shrinkage, swelling, and fragmentation of axon cylinders accompanied by secondary demyelination. Degenerative changes in ganglion cell bodies included eccentric nuclei, cytoplasmic vacuolation, central chromatolysis, and peripheral clumping of Nissl's bodies. Ultrastructurally, ganglion cell bodies had focally extensive dilation of the rough endoplasmic reticulum, mitochondrial swelling, increased numbers of phagolysosomes and prominent aggregations of microfilaments (globular filamentous bodies). Ultrastructural axonal changes occurred primarily in large, myelinated fibers and consisted of axonal swelling or loss, thinning of myelin sheaths, and a decrease in the number of organelles. This is the first report of etoposide-related sensory neuropathy in laboratory rats, a model that my be useful for the study of etoposide-related peripheral neuropathy in humans.
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PMID:Etoposide- and BMY-40481-induced sensory neuropathy in mice. 789 82

Autosomal dominant hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) is genetically classified into three types, all of which are characterized by insidiously progressive spasticity of the lower extremities. Patients with a complicated form of autosomal recessive HSP associated with hypoplasia of the corpus callosum have been reported by Iwabuchi et al. Here we report a 64-year-old patient with a pure form of autosomal dominant HSP with thinning of the corpus callosum. He had been well until 12 years of age, when spasticity and weakness of the lower extremities began to develop. His symptoms gradually worsened and he had difficulty in walking at the age of 44. When he was 56 years old, he visited our hospital. Eleven family members over five generations have been affected, and anticipation, i.e., an apparent decrease in age of onset, has been observed. On admission, he had mild cataracts, equinovarus and pes cavus, and neurological examination revealed spastic paraplegia. However, the intelligence test was normal, and nystagmus, ataxia of the extremities, involuntary movement, orthostatic hypotension or urinary disturbance was not observed. Trinucleotide repeat diseases, such as Huntington's disease, spinocerebellar ataxia type 1, spinocerebellar ataxia type 2, Machado-Joseph disease and dentatorubral-pallidoluysian atrophy, were excluded by DNA analysis. Brain MRI at the age of 64 revealed marked thinning of the corpus callosum. We considered this patient had a pure form of HSP. However, thinning of the corpus callosum has never been reported in autosomal dominant HSP.
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PMID:[A case of autosomal dominant, pure form spastic paraplegia with thinning of the corpus callosum]. 980 90

A 12-month-old American Miniature horse colt was presented to the Virginia Tech Veterinary Teaching Hospital with a 7-month history of progressive ataxia. Physical examination revealed a head intention tremor, base-wide stance, and ataxia. Necropsy findings were confined to the brain. There were bilateral areas of liquefactive necrosis and cavitation corresponding to the dorsal accessory olivary and lateral (accessory) cuneate nuclei. Cerebellar folia of the dorsal vermis were thin. Microscopically, the cerebellar cortex was characterized by patchy areas of Purkinje cell loss with associated variable thinning of the molecular and granule cell layers and astrogliosis. Dorsal accessory olivary and lateral cuneate nuclei were cavitated and had mild glial response around their periphery. Additionally, a focus of necrosis and neuropil vacuolization was found in the right putamen. These findings indicate the presence of a neurodegenerative disorder centered, but not confined to, the cerebellum and its connections in this American Miniature horse colt.
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PMID:Cerebello-olivary and lateral (accessory) cuneate degeneration in a juvenile American Miniature horse. 1081 Sep 93

The expansion of a polyglutamine tract in the ataxin-1 protein beyond a critical threshold causes spinocerebellar ataxia type 1 (SCA1). To investigate the mechanism of neuronal degeneration in SCA1, we analyzed the phenotype of an SCA1 transgenic mouse model in the absence of p53, an important regulator of cell death. p53 deficiency did not affect the early features of SCA1 mice such as impaired motor coordination and ataxin-1 nuclear inclusion formation but caused a notable reduction in later pathological features, including Purkinje cell heterotopia, dendritic thinning, and molecular layer shrinkage. To determine if this protective effect was mediated by an anti-apoptotic property of p53 deficiency, we looked for apoptosis in SCA1 mice but failed to detect any evidence of it even in the presence of p53. We propose that p53 acts after the initial pathogenic events in SCA1 to promote the progression of neuronal degeneration in SCA1 mice, but this activity may be unrelated to apoptosis.
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PMID:Reduction of Purkinje cell pathology in SCA1 transgenic mice by p53 deletion. 1174 93

A severe atrophy of the cerebellum was observed in a 7-month-old male Italian hound with a history of progressive ataxia and head tremor from the age of 3 months. On clinical examination, signs included severe hypermetric gait, head tremors and proprioception deficits in all limbs. At necropsy, a pronounced symmetrical reduction in size of the cerebellum was the only gross lesion observed. Histological examination of the cerebellum revealed marked thinning of the granular and molecular layers with almost complete loss of granule cells. Purkinje cells had normal morphology and distribution. These findings differ from those of previous reports of cerebellar cortical abiotrophy in dogs, which were mainly characterized by prominent Purkinje cell degeneration and loss.
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PMID:Cerebellar granuloprival degeneration in an Italian hound. 1254 31

Adult-onset cerebellar cortical degeneration recently has been reported in American Staffordshire Terriers. We describe the clinical and histopathologic features of this disease and examine its mode of inheritance in 63 affected dogs. The age at which neurologic deficits 1st were recognized varied from 18 months to 9 years, with the majority of dogs presented to veterinarians between 4 and 6 years of age. Time from onset of clinical signs to euthanasia varied from 6 months to 6.5 years, with the majority of affected dogs surviving from 2 to 4 years. Initial neurologic findings included stumbling, truncal sway, and ataxia exacerbated by lifting the head up and negotiating stairs. Signs progressed to obvious ataxia characterized by dysmetria, nystagmus, coarse intention tremor, variable loss of menace reaction, marked truncal sway, and falling with transient opisthotonus. With continued progression, dogs became unable to walk without falling repeatedly. Cerebellar atrophy was visible on magnetic resonance images and on gross pathology. Histopathologic findings included marked loss of Purkinje neurons with thinning of the molecular and granular layers and increased cellularity of the cerebellar nuclei. The closest common ancestor of the dogs was born in the 1950s and inheritance was most consistent with an autosomal recessive mode of transmission with a prevalence estimated at 1 in 400 dogs. This inherited disease is comparable to the group of diseases known as spinocerebellar ataxias in humans. Many spinocerebellar ataxias in humans are caused by nucleotide repeats, and this genetic aberration merits investigation as a potential cause of the disease in American Staffordshire Terriers.
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PMID:Cerebellar cortical degeneration in adult American Staffordshire Terriers. 1505 71

We report upon a Dutch autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia (ADCA) family, clinically characterized by a late-onset (>40 years), slowly progressive, isolated spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA). Neuropathological examination in one affected subject showed neuronal loss in the Purkinje cell layer, dentate nuclei and inferior olives, thinning of cerebellopontine tracts, demyelination of posterior and lateral columns in the spinal cord, as well as ubiquitin-positive intranuclear inclusions in nigral neurons that were considered to be Marinesco bodies. Data obtained from the genome-wide linkage analysis revealed a maximal lod score of 3.46 at = 0.00 for marker D20S199. This new SCA locus, on chromosome region 20p13-p12.3, was designated SCA23 after approval by the HUGO Nomenclature Committee. Currently, candidate genes are being screened for mutations within the SCA23 interval. In addition to the recently identified SCA14, SCA19 and FGF14 families, SCA23 is yet another novel SCA locus in the Dutch ADCA population, which further defines the genetic heterogeneity of ADCA families in the Netherlands.
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PMID:Mapping of the SCA23 locus involved in autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia to chromosome region 20p13-12.3. 1530 49

We report two siblings who presented with non-progressive marked sensory ataxia associated with arthrogryposis multiplex congenita (AMC). Deep tendon reflexes and H reflex were completely absent, but F waves were preserved. The sensory nerve conduction studies indicated the presence of relatively mild sensory polyneuropathy. The conventional somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) showed mildly prolonged latency for both the peripheral and cortical responses, suggesting a slowed conduction through the peripheral as well as central pathway. However, the 'proprioceptive SEPs' were absent, in conformity with complete loss of joint sense. Sural nerve biopsy revealed only mild thinning of myelin in the younger sister but was entirely normal in her brother. Taken together with the characteristic electrophysiological findings, the symptoms were considered to be due to predominant involvement of a selective population of somatosensory ganglions. The present cases showed no progression of the neurological deficit what-so-ever since birth, which strongly suggests a developmental anomaly or aplasia of a limited population of peripheral sensory neurons.
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PMID:A new form of congenital proprioceptive sensory neuropathy associated with arthrogryposis multiplex. 1559 29


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