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

A 23-month-old boy with progressive muscle weakness and severe cardiomyopathy was found to have oil red O positive vacuoles predominantly in type 1 muscle fibers. Serum carnitine was normal, but muscle carnitine content was decreased. Both parents were clinically normal, but the muscle carnitine level was low in the father. Despite oral treatment with carnitine, the condition progressed and was fatal. At autopsy, cardiac muscle showed borderline low carnitine content and numerous mitochondria, but no lipid accumulation.
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PMID:Muscle carnitine deficiency and fatal cardiomyopathy. 56 97

The results are reported of cardiological examinations, including echocardiography, in nine members of a family suffering from hypokalaemic periodic paralysis, associated with permanent muscular weakness. The studies were performed in periods between attacks of paralysis. The slowly progressive permanent muscular weakness which is found in most of the patients with hypokalaemic periodic paralysis resembles a limb-girdle type dystrophy. Involvement of cardiac muscle is not uncommon in patients with limb-girdle dystrophy. Using a combination of echocardiography and ECG examination, nowadays the most sensitive screening method for the detection of cardiomyopathy, no evidence was obtained for cardiac involvement in hypokalaemic periodic paralysis patients with permanent muscular weakness.
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PMID:Hypokalaemic periodic paralysis and cardiomyopathy. 74 52

The presence of taurine, a non-essential amino acid, in nerve and muscle has been previously associated with inhibition of activity in the central nervous system, with the etiology of epileptogenic foci, and with the muscle weakness of muscular dystrophy. We present here data showing a small and probably insignificant effect of taurine on neuromuscular transmission per se, but significant hyperpolarization of the membrane potential in both taurine-incubated and taurine-loaded muscles. In addition, we found that taurine reduces the time course of the muscle action potential. The results are interpreted in terms of neuromuscular transmission and excitation-contraction coupling consequent to these phenomena. This interpretation is compatable with the hypothesis that taurine is involved in the genesis of muscular dystrophy where the membrane potential is depolarized. Our results and interpretation can also explain the anti-arrhythmic action of taurine on cardiac muscle.
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PMID:Excitability modulation by taurine. Transmembrane measurements of neuromuscular transmission. 107 44

The aim of this study was to determine whether some muscular pathology existed in fighting bulls, in relation or not to the weakness shown in these animals during the bullfight (corrida for males and tienta for females). Creatinine kinase (CK), lactate dehydrogenase (LDH) and aspartate transaminase (AST) serum enzyme activities were increased after the corrida or the tienta. Most of the fighting bulls (78%) had some histological lesions in the skeletal or cardiac muscle, with predominance of chronic lesions. Clinical signs of these chronic lesions could only be seen after some trigger-effect, such as physical, exercise or stress, as shown after the corrida or tienta.
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PMID:[Muscular lesions and enzymatic activities in fighting bulls]. 151 Mar 39

A 54-year-old man began to feel numbness in his hands at the age of 42 (1975). His condition became progressively worse accompanied by muscle weakness of the lower limbs and glove and stocking paresthesia of the extremities. The patient was admitted to our hospital on March 23, 1987. Neurological examination revealed distal dominant muscle weakness, sensory disturbance and areflexia. Electrocardiogram and ultrasound-cardiogram strongly suggested cardiomyopathy. A biopsy of the rectal wall and the cardiac muscle revealed amyloid deposits. The patient, his elder brother and one of his daughters had abnormal serum transthyretin (TTR, a protein referred as prealbumin). Therefore, the diagnosis of familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy (FAP) was confirmed. The patients's brother and daughter mentioned above, however, had no abnormal findings on physical examination and they were thus considered to be asymptomatic carriers. There may be more cases of asymptomatic carriers, if examination of abnormal TTR is more frequently analyzed.
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PMID:Familial amyloidotic polyneuropathy in Hokkaido: a case report. 221 48

In experimental informational neurosis, accompanied by the development of stable arterial hypertension, tachycardia and dystrophic alterations in myocardium, the contractile protein ability to generate force and produce work as well as the power of the contractile process are significantly decreased and so is the intensity of Ca2+ transport through membranes of sarcoplasmic reticulum and mitochondria. Ca2+ content in these structures and energetic supply to the cardiac muscle do not change as compared with the control. Noradrenaline content in myocardium increases 5-fold compared with the control and 2.5-fold compared with the norm, while blood content falls to zero (sympathetic neuro-muscular contact is 'locked up' for noradrenaline outflow into the blood); dopamine content increases. Adenylate cyclase sensitivity to the stimulating effect of noradrenaline and NaF diminishes. Basal activity of phosphodiesterase increases, and its sensitivity to the inhibitory action of high calcium concentrations decreases. The disturbance in these systems may, on the one hand, be due to neural effects, and pressure overload of the heart, on the other hand, to the sharp rise in noradrenaline content in the myocardium and the change in the activity of cyclic adenosine monophosphate enzymes. It is suggested that similar changes may take place in the human myocardium and may underlie the cardiac weakness.
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PMID:Subcellular bases of cardiac disturbance in experimental informational neurosis. 243 90

We report a 5-year-old boy with lysosomal glycogen storage disease and normal acid maltase activity. This patient, the fourth reported in the literature, was referred to our hospital for evaluation of elevated serum GOT, GPT, and CK activities. He had neither muscle weakness nor atrophy. Echocardiography demonstrated marked thickening of the intraventricular septum and left ventricular wall which indicated hypertrophic cardiomyopathy. Biopsied skeletal muscle disclosed massive accumulation of glycogen and autophagic vacuoles. Electron microscopy of biopsied cardiac muscle revealed severe myofibrillar disruption with marked accumulation of free and intralysosomal glycogen. Activities of all major glycolytic enzymes in skeletal muscle, including acid maltase, were normal. It is unknown why muscle lysosomes appeared to be unable to digest the trapped glycogen despite the presence of acid maltase. Our findings illustrate the importance of performing skeletal muscle investigation during childhood in patients with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy.
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PMID:Glycogen storage disease with normal acid maltase: skeletal and cardiac muscles. 249 94

A newborn male presented with severe respiratory insufficiency, generalized muscle weakness, and lactic acidemia. Immediately after admission, he was placed on a respirator because of respiratory arrest. He deteriorated rapidly and died 75 hours after birth. There was notable variation in fiber size and an increased number of type 2C fibers in the quadriceps femoris muscle obtained at autopsy; however, no ragged-red fibers were observed with modified Gomori trichrome staining. Markedly decreased cytochrome c oxidase activity was demonstrated in skeletal muscle by biochemical and histochemical studies, while cardiac muscle demonstrated normal cytochrome c oxidase activity. Mitochondrial myopathy should be considered in the differential diagnosis of patients with neonatal respiratory distress syndrome.
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PMID:Infantile cytochrome c oxidase deficiency with neonatal death. 254 15

Two patients with mitochondrial myopathy, encephalopathy, lactic acidosis and strokelike episodes (MELAS) in one family are reported. Pathological examination of case 1 showed ragged-red fibers, with 7% of the fibers being unstained by cytochrome c oxidase stain, peripheral nerve damage, multiple areas of softening in the cerebrum and midbrain, and spongy changes in the cerebrum, optic nerve and pons. Electron microscopic examination revealed abnormal accumulations of mitochondria in the skeletal muscle, smooth muscle and cardiac muscle. The activity of cytochrome c oxidase in the brain and liver showed a tendency to decrease. In case 2 (maternal aunt of case 1), muscular weakness and peripheral nerve damage improved by treatment with coenzyme Q10. By adding idebenone to the coenzyme Q10 therapy, the EEG and Wechsler's Adult Intelligence Scale (WAIS) improved. Furthermore, in the cerebral spinal fluid (CSF), the protein, lactate, and pyruvate decreased, and the monoamines and monoamine metabolites increased.
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PMID:Mitochondrial encephalomyopathy (MELAS): pathological study and successful therapy with coenzyme Q10 and idebenone. 273 8

The clinical signs and lesions of Nubian goats and Desert sheep orally dosed with fresh and dry leaves and stems of Ipomoea carnea at 2.5, 5 and 10 g/kg/day were studied. The signs of Ipomoea poisoning were inappetence, depression, weakness of the hind limbs, dyspnea, staggering, and pallor of the visible mucous membranes. The main lesions were focal necrosis and fatty vacuolation of centrilobular hepatocytes, accumulation of fibroblasts in hepatic portal tracts, degeneration or necrosis of the cells of the renal proximal convoluted tubules, hemorrhage in renal cortices, in renal medullas and in cardiac muscle fibers, focal pulmonary edema, and emphysema and straw-colored fluid in serous cavities. Increased serum aspartate amino transferase and ammonia concentrations, and decreased concentrations of total protein, calcium and magnesium in the serum of Ipomoea-poisoned animals were detected. Hematological changes indicated the development of normocytic normochromic anaemia.
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PMID:The effects of Ipomoea carnea on goats and sheep. 362 12


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