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Target Concepts:
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (
asymmetrical
)
12,197
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A 50-year-old man was admitted, because of motor weakness of the lower limbs, dysesthesia of the left lower extremity, and anuresis. He had an episode of pain in his gluteal region 17 years ago, and then, no abnormalities were detected including myelography in a hospital, followed by slowly progressive muscular atrophy of his lower legs. At 50 years of age,
dysuria
appeared. He was diagnosed as having neurogenic bladder by urologists, and was admitted to our hospital. On admission, abnormal neurologic findings included: severe muscular atrophy in his lower legs, pes cavus, dysesthesia at the left S1 level, and autonomic bladder. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) showed mass lesion involving lower conus and cauda equina. After resection, pathological study revealed the mass was a neurenteric cyst. It is said that the neurenteric cyst causes an
asymmetrical
and sequential loss of specific neurological functions, with a subsequent return of these functions in the reverse order. That mechanism is not clear. However, in our case, the course of the illness was slowly progressive. We speculate that, because of the cyst's adhesion to cauda equina and perforation through the cyst by a nerve root, the cyst was fixed and caused slowly progressive neurological deficits in proportion to increase of the cyst's size. Our report suggests that a neurenteric cyst, involving the lower conus and cauda equina, can produce severe muscular atrophy in the lower legs.
...
PMID:[A case of adult-onset neurenteric cyst presenting as chronic progressive muscular atrophy in lower legs]. 936 87
Erectile dysfunction,
dysuria
, photophobia, and chronic cough developed insidiously in a 49-year-old man from his third decade. Severe difficulty of urination resulted in intermittent catheterization. He had six family members who had suffered similar autonomic symptoms with or without motor deficits. He presented
asymmetrical
tonic pupils, a neurogenic bladder, and mild sensory impairment in the distal parts of the bilateral lower limbs without orthostatic hypotension and motor deficits. Nerve conduction studies revealed mild axonal changes with slightly reduced conduction velocities in the lower limbs. His left pupil over-responded to instillation with 0.125% pilocarpine. Functional bladder tests showed an atonic bladder, suggesting postganglionic parasympathetic involvement. Autonomic evaluation for sympathetic components including head-up tilt, beat to beat responses to Valsalva's maneuver, cardiac MIBG imaging, plasma catecholamine levels and sweat tests were all normal. A genetic test disclosed a heterozygous mutation of myelin protein zero (MPZ); p.Thr124Met. Selectively distributed dysautonomia in this pedigree may indicate parasympathetic postganglionic components including the ganglion as the primary target of this mutated MPZ in the autonomic nervous system.
...
PMID:[Predominant parasympathetic involvement in a patient with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease caused by the MPZ Thr124Met mutation]. 1992 89