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Query: UMLS:C1762617 (
weakness
)
37,932
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
We describe the unusual case of a 63-year-old woman with a history of arterial hypertension who presented a sudden
weakness
of the lower limbs followed by mutism,
akinesia
and dyspraxia. Magnetic resonance images showed a bilateral medial frontal infarction. Digital subtraction angiography documented a right azygous anterior cerebral artery with severe stenosis in its sub-callosal tract; the left anterior cerebral artery showed mild hypoplasia with only sub-frontal and fronto-polar branches. No embolic source was documented. Afterwards the patient presented a gradual and partial recovery of both motor and cognitive functions.
...
PMID:Bilateral medial frontal infarction in a case of azygous anterior cerebral artery stenosis. 1093 47
We report a 56-year-old woman with progressive gait disturbance. Her mother had Parkinson's disease with onset at age 70. She died at age 74 and the post-mortem examination confirmed the diagnosis of Lewy body positive Parkinson's disease. The patient was well until the age of 50(1995) when she noted an onset of resting tremor and difficulty of gait. She also developed delusional ideation and was admitted to a psychiatric service of another hospital, where a major tranquilizer was given. The delusion disappeared but she developed marked rigidity. The major tranquilizer was discontinued and an anticholinergic and amantadine HCl were given. She showed marked improvement to Hoehn and Yahr stage II and was discharged. In 1995, when she was 52 years of the age, she developed delusion again and a major tranquilizer was given. She developed marked parkinsonism again and became Hoehn and Yahr stage V. The major tranquilizer was discontinued and she was treated with levodopa/carbidopa, trihexyphenidyl, bromocriptine, and dops. She improved remarkably to stage II. She was admitted to our service on October 8, 1996 for drug adjustment. She was alert and not demented. She was anxious but delusion or hallucination was noted. Higher cerebral functions were intact. Cranial nerve functions were also intact except for masked face and small voice. Her posture was stooped and steps were small. She showed retropulsion and moderate bradykinesia. Resting tremor was noted in her left hand. Rigidity was noted in both legs. No cerebellar ataxia or
weakness
was noted. Deep tendon reflexes were within normal range and sensation was intact. Her cranial MRI revealed some atrophic changes in the putamen, in which a T 2-high signal linear lesion was seen along the lateral border of the putamen bilaterally. In addition, posterior part of the putamen showed T 2-low signal intensity change. She was treated with 1.6 mg of talipexole, 6 mg of trihexyphenidyl, and 100 mg of L-dops. She was in stage III of Hoehn and Yahr. She developed neurogenic bladder with a large amount of residual urine for which she required catheterization. She was transferred to another hospital. Despite drug adjustment, she lost response to levodopa and her parkinsonism deteriorated gradually. She also developed syncope orthostatic hypotension. In April of 1998, she developed intracerebral hemorrhage and was admitted again on April 19, 1998. She was unable to stand and showed marked
akinesia
and rigidity. She was in stage V of Hoehn and Yahr. Her cranial CT scan revealed bilateral high-density lesions in the posterior parietal lobes. She developed dysphagia for which she required gastrostomy. She was transferred to another hospital but her clinical condition deteriorated further. On December 22, 1999, she developed fever and dyspnea and was admitted to our service again. She developed cardial arrest at the emergency room from hypoxia. She was resuscitated; however, she was comatose with loss of brain stem reflexes. Later on she developed generalized myoclonus. She developed cardiac arrest and pronounced dead on December 28, 1999. The patient was discussed in a neurological CPC. The chief discussant arrived at the conclusion that the patient had striatonigral degeneration because of poor response to levodopa in the later course, autonomic failures, and MRI changes. Some other participants thought that the patient had a form of familial Parkinson's disease. Opinions were divided into these two possibilities. Post-mortem examination revealed that the substantia nigra showed intense neuronal loss and gliosis, however, no Lewy bodies were seen. In addition, intracytoplasmic inclusions were seen in oligodendrocytes. The putamen was markedly atrophic in its posterior part with marked gliosis and neuronal loss. The ventromedial part of the pontine nucleus also showed neuronal loss and intracytoplasmic glial inclusions. Pathologic diagnosis was multiple system atrophy. In the parietal lobe, an arteriovenous malformation with bleeding was noted. This is very unique case. Although her mother had Lewy body-positive Parkinson's disease, the patient had Lewy body-negative multiple system atrophy with a-synuclein-positive glial inclusions. Whether this is just a coincidental occurrence or the presence of a genetic load for Parkinson's disease might triggered her multiple system atrophy is an interesting question to be answered in future.
...
PMID:[A-56-year-old woman with parkinsonism, whose mother had Parkinson's disease]. 1142 77
We present the case of a floppy neonate with marked and
generalized weakness
, respiratory insufficiency and fetal
akinesia
deformation sequence. The infant showed multiple joint contractures, two bone fractures and needed mechanical ventilation from birth to death at 16 days of age. Electrophysiological assessment showed electrically unexcitable motor and sensory nerves. Muscle biopsy showed diffuse atrophy of type I and type II fibers. Necropsy confirmed the diagnosis of infantile spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) with severe loss of motor neurons in anterior horns and motor nuclei of brainstem. There were also neuronal loss, gliosis, chromatolysis, ballooned cells, empty cell beds and neuronophagia figures in other brainstem and brain nuclei. Genetic analysis of the patient revealed homozygous deletions of survival motor neuron gene 1 (SMN1) and a single copy of SMN2 in region 5q13. This case confirms that the loss of spinal motor neurons underlies the muscular atrophy in severe cases of 5q SMA. This case also shows that the presence of multiple joint contractures, bone fractures and respiratory insufficiency in SMA in the neonatal period does not necessarily exclude the occurrence of classical deletions in the SMA 5q13 region. Rather, these atypical clinical findings show the extreme severity and prenatal onset of the disease in these SMA cases, which may be related with the occurrence of a single copy of SMN2 gene. More reports of clinically, pathologically and genetically well-documented cases are essential to define the different types of this disease.
...
PMID:Neonatal spinal muscular atrophy with multiple contractures, bone fractures, respiratory insufficiency and 5q13 deletion. 1496 68
In acute myocardial infarct (AIM) incomes to a local disturbances in contractility: hypokinesia,
akinesia
, diskinesia, asynchronia. With repeated AIM esspecially in high oclussive coronary disease incomes to diffuse disturbance in contractility of myocard, with disorder in systolic and diasystolic function of heart. The aim is to point on significance of clinical and haemodynamic parameters in revealing heart
weakness
in AIM. By retrograded analysis in our study was embraced 86 patients deseased from AIM, average age of 58.42 years. Front wall infarct had 60,46%, backwall infarct had 39.54% of deseased patients. Patients were monitored clinically, electrocardiographically and haemodynamically with microcatetherisation of the right heart by Schwan-Ganz threeluminal thermodilutional catether with regulation of heart minute volumen. By haemodynamic values they were splitted in four groups. In clinical study, silent heart tones had 33%, systolic murmurs on ictus 19%, gallop rhythm 26% and lung failure 22% of patients. The most reliable clinical sign for heart
weakness
were low heart tones and gallop rhythm as well as lung failure. By haemodynamic values aquired by microcatetherisation of right heart with regulation of minute heart volumen, deseased with AIM were 15% in first group, 28% in second group, 3% in third group and 54% in fourth group of patients.
...
PMID:[Clinical aspects and haemodynamic parameters for monitoring patients with acute myocardial infarct (AIM)]. 1552 90
Pena-Shokeir syndrome is a rare lethal disorder which clinical phenotype is the result of a deformation sequence caused by fetal
akinesia
/hypokinesia. In approximately 50 % cases an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance were documented. Main clinical characteristics of Pena-Shokeir syndrome are: multiple ankylosis, pulmonary hypoplasia and facial dysmorphism. We have described female newborn with pulmonary hypoplasia, distal joint contractures and facial characteristics of Pena Shokeir syndrome. Our patient had hip and knee ankyloses, ulnar deviation of the hands, aberrant hand position--similar to that of trisomy 18, absent dermal ridges on the palms, talipes valgus and facial dysmorphism (prominent eyes, micrognathia, poorly folded and posteriorly rotated ears). During pregnancy polyhidramnion was documented. Among CNS abnormalities, agenesis of corpus callosum was found. Because of eventration of right hemidiaphragm,
weakness
of intercostal muskles and pulmonary hypoplasia, child was artificially ventilated from the birth, and died due to pulmonary complication in the second month of the life. Although the majority of those live-borne with Pena Shokeir syndrome die within the first month of life, postnatal recognition requires genetic counseling of parents and obtaining early prenatal diagnosis in next pregnancy.
...
PMID:[Pena-Shokeir phenotype (fetal akinesia/hypokinesia sequence)]. 1729 55
Primary lateral sclerosis (PLS), the upper motor neurone variant of motor neurone disease, is characterized by progressive spinal or bulbar spasticity with minimal motor
weakness
. Rarely, PLS may present with clinical features resembling parkinsonism resulting in occasional misdiagnosis as one of the atypical parkinsonian syndromes. Here we describe five patients initially referred with a diagnosis of levodopa-unresponsive atypical parkinsonism (n = 4) or primary progressive multiple sclerosis (n = 1), but subsequently found to have features consistent with PLS instead. Onset age varied from 49 to 67 years. Unilateral limb slowness or clumsiness was the initial complaint in four, and bulbar symptoms in one. Repeated finger/foot tapping was slow in all five, but without fatiguing or decrement. Spasticity with hyperreflexia, exaggerated jaw jerk and extensor plantar responses were eventually seen in all patients. Anterior horn cell involvement developed in three cases. Early gait disturbances resulting in falls were seen in all patients and none of them responded to dopaminergic medications. Two patients underwent dopamine transporter (DaT) SPECT scanning with normal results. Other features included emotional lability (n = 5) and cognitive impairment involving frontal subcortical systems (n = 1). In conclusion, these cases represent a subgroup of PLS patients in whom pyramidal slowness may be mistaken for
akinesia
, and spasticity misconstrued as rigidity, leading to an erroneous diagnosis of atypical parkinsonism. However, the absence of fatiguing and decrement on repeated finger/foot tapping should help to distinguish these patients from the true atypical parkinsonian syndromes.
...
PMID:Primary lateral sclerosis mimicking atypical parkinsonism. 1770 34
Takotsubo syndrome may be associated with neuromuscular disorders, but has never been described in a patient with mitochondrial disorder. A 75-year-old woman developed muscle cramps, ptosis, fasciculations and slowly progressive
weakness
and wasting of all four limbs, starting 2.5 years earlier. After exclusion of various differential diagnoses, including non-specific granulomatous myositis, inclusion body myositis, and motor neuron disease, mitochondrial disorder was assumed. Muscle
weakness
progressed to respiratory insufficiency, requiring mechanical ventilation. Five days after intubation, she developed hypotension, torsades de pointes, ST-segment elevation, and negative T waves. Echocardiography revealed apical ballooning with
akinesia
of the left ventricular anteroseptal, apical, apicolateral and inferior segments. Coronary angiography was normal, and ventriculography confirmed apical hypokinesia and ballooning. Takotsubo syndrome was diagnosed, resolving completely within 7 weeks under bisoprolol. This case shows that Takotsubo syndrome occurs also in mitochondrial disorder and under mechanical ventilation, and may be triggered by stress from respiratory insufficiency, intubation, pain from tracheostomy, stress from mechanical ventilation, medication, or from the uncertain prognosis.
...
PMID:Apical ballooning (Takotsubo syndrome) in mitochondrial disorder during mechanical ventilation. 1788 29
We have previously reported a group of patients with congenital onset
weakness
associated with a deficiency of members of the syntrophin-alpha-dystrobrevin subcomplex and have demonstrated that loss of syntrophin and dystrobrevin from the sarcolemma of skeletal muscle can also be associated with denervation. Here, we have further studied four individuals from a consanguineous Egyptian family with a lethal congenital myopathy inherited in an autosomal-recessive fashion and characterized by a secondary loss of beta2-syntrophin and alpha-dystrobrevin from the muscle sarcolemma, central nervous system involvement, and fetal
akinesia
. We performed homozygosity mapping and candidate gene analysis and identified a mutation that segregates with disease within CNTN1, the gene encoding for the neural immunoglobulin family adhesion molecule, contactin-1. Contactin-1 transcripts were markedly decreased on gene-expression arrays of muscle from affected family members compared to controls. We demonstrate that contactin-1 is expressed at the neuromuscular junction (NMJ) in mice and man in addition to the previously documented expression in the central and peripheral nervous system. In patients with secondary dystroglycanopathies, we show that contactin-1 is abnormally localized to the sarcolemma instead of exclusively at the NMJ. The cntn1 null mouse presents with ataxia, progressive muscle
weakness
, and postnatal lethality, similar to the affected members in this family. We propose that loss of contactin-1 from the NMJ impairs communication or adhesion between nerve and muscle resulting in the severe myopathic phenotype. This disorder is part of the continuum in the clinical spectrum of congenital myopathies and congenital myasthenic syndromes.
...
PMID:Mutations in contactin-1, a neural adhesion and neuromuscular junction protein, cause a familial form of lethal congenital myopathy. 1902 98
Camptocormia, also referred to as bent spine syndrome (BSS) is defined as an abnormal flexion of the trunk, appearing in standing position, increasing during walking and abating in supine position. BSS was initially considered, especially in wartime, as a psychogenic disorder. It is now recognized that in addition to psychiatric syndromes, many cases of reducible BSS have a somatic origin related to a number of musculo-skeletal or neurological disorders. The majority of BSS of muscular origin is related to a primary idiopathic axial myopathy of late onset, appearing progressively in elderly patients. Diagnosis of axial myopathy first described by Laroche et al. is based upon CT/MRI examination demonstrating massive fatty infiltration of paravertebral muscles. The non-specific histological aspect includes an extensive endomysial fibrosis and fat tissue with irregular degenerated fibers.
Weakness
of the paravertebral muscles can be secondary to a wide variety of diseases generating diffuse pathologic changes in the muscular tissue. BSS can be the predominant and sometimes revealing symptom of a more generalized muscular disorder. Causes of secondary BSS are numerous. They must be carefully assessed and ruled out before considering the diagnosis of primary axial myopathy. The principal etiologies include on the one hand inflammatory myopathies, muscular dystrophies of late onset, myotonic myopathies, endocrine and metabolic myopathies, and on the other hand neurological disorders, principally Parkinson's disease. Camptocormia in Parkinsonism is caused by axial dystonia, which is the hallmark of Parkinson's disease. There is no specific pharmacologic treatment for primary axial myopathy. General activity, walking with a cane, physiotherapy, and exercises should be encouraged. Treatment of secondary forms of BSS is dependent upon the variety of the disorder generating the muscular pathology. Pharmacologic and general management of camptocormia in Parkinson's disease merge with that of Parkinsonism. Levodopa treatment, usually active on tumor rigidity and
akinesia
, has poor or negative effect on BSS.
...
PMID:Camptocormia: the bent spine syndrome, an update. 2030 Jul 81
Tetrabenazine (TBZ) is widely used to treat hyperkinetic movement disorders in adults; however, published experience with the drug in children is limited. Common side effects of TBZ include drowsiness, sedation,
weakness
, Parkinsonism, depression, and acute akathisia, all of which are reversible with decreased doses. We report here a 7-year-old girl with rheumatic chorea who developed acute
akinesia
of all four limbs and dysarthria due to TBZ therapy. Withdrawal of the drug led to rapid improvement within 18 hours.
...
PMID:Quadriparesis and dysarthria due to tetrabenazine therapy in a child with rheumatic chorea. 2202 10
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