Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
Pivot Concepts:   Target Concepts:
Query: UMLS:C1762617 (weakness)
37,932 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

A girl with congenital limb weakness, mental retardation, and corneal ulceration died with respiratory insufficiency at age 4 years. Histochemistry of muscle biopsy showed only nonspecific myopathy, but electronmicroscopy revealed subsarcolemmal and intramyofibrillar accumulation of glycogen. Biochemical studies showed increased glycogen content of muscle with lack of phosphofructokinase. Phosphorylase b kinase activity was about 30% of normal. The relationship of the double enzyme deficiency to this unusual clinical picture is unclear.
...
PMID:Fatal infantile glycogen storage disease: deficiency of phosphofructokinase and phosphorylase b kinase. 621 81

Two Dutch siblings are described suffering from muscular weakness, hypotonia, severe joint contractures, mental retardation and epileptic fits. E.M.G. showed a characteristic myopathic pattern. Muscle biopsy revealed changes consistent with congenital muscular dystrophy. On CT marked hypodensities of the cerebral white matter were noticed. These findings are consistent with congenital muscular dystrophy of the Fukuyama type, a peculiar form of congenital muscular dystrophy, extremely rare outside Japan.
...
PMID:Two Dutch siblings with congenital muscular dystrophy (Fukuyama type). 631 92

EMG and nerve conduction studies have limitations and require particular consideration in children. The indications and the main results are considered from the study of 1624 EMGs in 1385 children under 15 years old seen over a period of 3 years. Classification of cases was based on clinical criteria. The diagnostic yield of EMG is emphasized in the evaluation of 122 children with hypotonia and weakness (all under 3 years old); abnormalities were demonstrated in 48% leading to the diagnosis of spinal muscular atrophy in 16%, of congenital myopathies in 11%, and of peripheral neuropathies in 8%. In 103 children with hypotonia associated with mental deficiency and/or seizures, evidence of a peripheral neuropathy was shown in 20%. EMG abnormalities allowing the diagnosis of hereditary motor and sensory neuropathies or myopathies were demonstrated in a wide range of clinical conditions. EMG appears to be useful for the early detection of hereditary myopathies or neuropathies in asymptomatic children. It may have also a prognostic value as in adults, especially in nerve traumas.
...
PMID:[Value of electromyography in the child. Apropos of 1,624 examinations performed over a 3 year period]. 632 4

Two autopsy cases of congenital muscular dystrophy of Fukuyama type (F-CMD) were described. The first case was diagnosed clinically and pathologically as its typical case. Neither his family history nor the history of his prenatal period were contributory. He had suffered from muscle weakness and atrophy since his birth. Serum CPK was markedly elevated. EMG and muscle biopsy proved dystrophic changes of the skeletal muscles. In addition, he manifested mental retardation and attacks of convulsion. EEG failed to elicit remarkable changes, but PEG represented ventricular dilatation. He died of respiratory insufficiency at age 12. His postmortem examination showed variegated anomalies in the nervous system. Extensive micropolygyria was present in the cerebrum and cerebellum accompanied by adhesions between the bilateral cerebral hemispheres. Assymmetry of the longitudinal fibers was pointed out in the pontine base. Anterior horn cells were atrophic and moderately depopulated. On the other hand, the second patient was an atypical F-CMD case in symptoms, signs and pathology. His grand-mothers on both father's and mother's sides wee first cousins. His three siblings showed no similar disorders. His mother developed slight gestational toxicosis in the sixth and seventh months of pregnancy. His muscle weakness, contracture of the bilateral hip-joints and clubfoot had been observed since his birth. Physical and neurological examinations at age 6 showed deformity of the skull, myopathic face, macroglossia, high-arched palate, pigeon chest, scoliosis of the thoracic spine. In addition, generalized muscular atrophy, hypotonia and areflexia were recognized. Pseudohypertrophy of the muscles was absent. Sensation was intact to all modalities. Serum CPK and LDH were moderately increased.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
...
PMID:[2 autopsy cases of congenital muscular dystrophy of Fukuyama type--a typical and an atypical cases]. 652 23

Ocular manifestations in two cases of congenital muscular dystrophy of Fukuyama type were reported. This disease is characterized by early onset of hypotonia, generalized muscle weakness and atrophy, mental retardation, and elevated serum creatine-phosphokinase activity. The symptoms include entropion of lower lids, pathological myopia with astigmatism, optic nerve pallor, and irregular grayish subretinal mottling. Case 1 showed additional features of posterior staphyloma, dragged papillomacular vessels, peripheral grayish-white discoloration of the retina, and rete mirabile as well as abnormal vascular anastomosis.
...
PMID:Ocular manifestations of congenital muscular dystrophy (Fukuyama type). 665 Nov 32

Two spanish male brothers with weakness and muscular dystrophy and affection of the CNS are presented. Muscular disturbances were noticeable from birth and, although generalized, they affected more severely proximal muscles. Both children presented joint contractures from an early stage. None of the patients got to walk and to stand. Muscular serum enzymes were slightly elevated. EMG and muscular histology were compatible with conventional pathology of PMD. Other features of severe alteration of CNS were observed in both patients, being the most significant lack of sphincter control at 13 and 7 years old, mental retardation with an IQ about 70, generalized seizures at 10 years in the older boy and presence of brain alterations at computerized tomography (CT), consisting in low density on subcortical brain parenchima in both cerebral hemispheres and the cerebellum in the older brother and in both cerebral hemispheres in the younger. Clinical course is stationary in both brothers. It seems that in our patients there is an autosomal recessive heredity. All clinical, genetic, EMG, CT and histological features are compatible with congenital progressive muscular dystrophy of Fukuyama type.
...
PMID:[Muscular dystrophy with central nervous system involvement. Apropos of 2 Spanish cases]. 666 Jun 39

We studied a 3 year old girl with mental retardation and limb muscle weakness. The muscle glycogen content was 17.4 mg/g tissue, which was approximately three times higher than normal. There were no other known abnormalities noted in this child that could explain the cause of glycogen storage disease. Our in vitro glycolysis study showed marked increase of pyruvate, but no increase in lactate levels. The observed results suggested to us that an abnormal lactate dehydrogenase might account for the abnormal accumulation of glycogen in the muscle.
...
PMID:Glycogen storage myopathy with abnormal lactate dehydrogenase. 695 32

In a study of 35 index patients who developed myotonic dystrophy between birth and 30 years (neonatal cases aware excluded), 30 could be categorised into two clinical types. The 13 type 1 patients had a more severe limb weakness, of patchy distribution, associated with proportional facial weakness. The 17 type 2 patients had a milder and more diffuse limb weakness; their facial weakness, however, was very pronounced and preceded the limb weakness by several years. All but one of the 25 affected relatives who were examined belonged to the same category as their index relative, providing evidence that the cause of the clinical heterogeneity was genetic. Subsequent observations showed that mental retardation, male infertility, and neonatally affected offspring were commoner in type 2 patients. Congenital myotonic dystrophy could occur among the offspring of either affected males or affected females, but neonatal symptoms were confined to the offspring of affected women. The overall risk for having neonatally affected offspring for this prospective study of young adult patients was 7 in 38, and for the offspring of affected females 7 in 27. The risk for having a surviving child whose mental or physical handicap or both required special schooling was 1 in 12 for males and 4 in 27 for females.
...
PMID:Clinical evidence for heterogeneity in myotonic dystrophy. 714 87

Recent psychological testing and neuropathologic studies support the occurrence of relative retardation, an in some cases severe retardation, in patients with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. Muscle deterioration and wasting are associated with the natural progression of the disease. Progressive physical weakness can be described in the following stages: early, walking, wheelchair, and late. The more emotionally mature the family, the more effective they are in coping at each stage of the disease. Nevertheless, a constant stress is present in all families. This stress can increase or plateau at the various stages and as new problems are encountered. When mental retardation is significant, the stress on the family become even more marked.
...
PMID:Challenges in the care of the retarded child with Duchenne muscular dystrophy. 720 93

A 7 1/2-year-old girl with hypermethioninemia, myopathy, and mental deficiency (IQ = 65) is described. The increased methionine was not associated with deficiency of methionine adenosyltransferase, which was normal or increased in liver, muscle, erythrocytes, and cultured fibroblasts. Methionyl-tRNA synthetase in fibroblasts was normal. The hypermethioninemia and a concurrently increased blood S-adenosylmethionine declined on a diet low in methionine. There was a diffuse, symmetrical, moderate proximal muscle weakness, but muscle atrophy was not discernible, and the deep tendon reflexes were hypoactive but obtainable. Electromyographic abnormalities were not detected. Electron microscopy of muscle revealed 3 to 6 small myelin figures in the region of the I band in nearly every fiber, with occasional myelin figures at other sites also. These myelin figures were more numerous and smaller than those seen accompanying nonspecific myopathies and may reflect a more specific pathological change. Electron microscopy of liver revealed three nonspecific lesions in all hepatocytes: (1) numerous megamitochondria with crystalloid deposit in the matrix; (2) increased numbers of small vesicles of smooth endoplasmic reticulum; and (3) loss of plasma membrane microvilli, with extensive bleb formation and shedding of cytoplasm into Disse's space.
...
PMID:Methioninemia and myopathy: a new disorder. 727 Dec 38


<< Previous 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Next >>