Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UNIPROT:P50583 (asymmetrical)
12,197 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Clinical and epidemiologic analyses of PPMA in Japan based on the nation-wide case survey were reported, and differences between PPMA and ALS were discussed. The present survey covering the years from 1984 through 1991 cited 42 PPMA cases (30 male:12 female). The absolute incidence of PPMA is estimated 0.12/10(5) of the Japanese population (about 150 cases in total), which indicates 0.5% of the polio survivors. In Japan an actual increase of patients is noticed in these 10 years, which reflects the big epidemic of polio around 1950-60. The antecedent poliomyelitis occurred at the mean age of 2.6, mostly between 1940 and 1960. Residual paralysis was generally absent or only minimal. Late muscular atrophy and weakness were noticed at age from 16 to 63 y (mean:41.5), with the mean latency of 40.1 years after polio. Both polio-affected and unaffected site of the limb were equally involved by PPMA, but the left leg tends to be predominantly involved. Neurological symptoms were summarized as an asymmetrical proximal muscular atrophy and flaccid motor paresis in one or two limbs with decreased tendon reflexes. Fasciculation in 45.2%, myalgia in 28.6%, and hypesthesia in 28.5% were noticed. Electromyography and muscle CT scan showed marked selective neurogenic changes. In most cases symptoms are stable or slowly progressive, with some recovery by rest or rehabilitation and deterioration by over work and/or trauma. On regarding these clinical features, PPMA is essentially different from classical ALS. Long-term hyperfunction of survived neurons with potential fragility by polio infection is suspected to mediate PPMA.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
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PMID:[Post-poliomyelitis late progressive muscular atrophy (PPMA)--clinical analyses of Japanese cases]. 181 99

Particular clinical pictures of ALS may occur during the course of some "benign gammapathies". We observed 12 patients (age range 57 to 74 years; 9 men-3 women) with initially benign gammapathy (9 IgG, 1 IgA, 2 IgM) associated to a clinical picture of progressive anterior horn and pyramidal tract involvement. These cases led us to recognize some particularities of gammapathy-associated ALS: Relative frequency of asymmetrical clinical manifestations, rarity of bulbar signs; Decrease of sensory nerve conduction velocities without evidence of sensory clinical symptoms (8 out 9); Increase CSF protein content including the monoclonal component, axonal degeneration and immunostaining evidence of the paraprotein fixation observed on nerve biopsies (5 out 7 cases). Association of ALS and gammapathy is not fortuitous as shown by epidemiology, experiments, pathology and effects of different immunological treatments as related in this study. Demonstration of infra-clinical neuropathy face to a clinical syndrome of ALS should prompt too careful screening for a gammapathy.
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PMID:[Peripheral neuropathies simulating amyotrophic lateral sclerosis in gammopathies]. 323 59

Frontotemporal degeneration (FTD), formerly known as Pick's disease has become recognized as a distinct and relatively common entity encompassing behavioural (bvFTD language (PPA) and extrapyramidal (CBD/PSP) presentations. Further clinical subdivisions such as semantic dementia(SD), and pathological subtypes such as mesial temporal sclerosis increase the complexity of diagnosis.The relatively younger age of onset, the typical presentations of syndromes and focal asymmetrical frontotemporal atrophy on imaging allows experienced clinicians to make the diagnosis confidently as long as the overlap between the syndromes is recognized. There is also an overlap with ALS pathologically and clinically. The underlying histology in FTD/Pick complex is ubiquitin positive tau and synuclein negative neuronal inclusions (FTLD-U) in more than half of autopsies and tau positive CBD/PSP/ Pick bodies (FTLD-T) in the rest. The clinical syndromes of bvFTD and SD are likely associated with FTLD-U and PPA/CBDS/PSP with FTLD-T, but there is too much overlap to predict the pathology from the clinical syndromes reliably. The ubiquitin-tau pathological dichotomy is best considered under the Pick complex umbrella to allow for the significant overlap. So far trazodone in behavior and galantamine in aphasia had symptomatic benefit in small trials and SSRI-sand antipsychotics in uncontrolled reports were used as symptomatic therapies. Recent discoveries of tau and progranulin (in the ubiquitin-positive cases) mutations on chromosome 17 and other mutations on chromosome 3 and 9 in the high incidence of autosomal dominant families and a common protein abnormality, the TDP-43 in FTLD-U and ALS are likely to be important in finding therapeutic targets.
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PMID:Clinical features and diagnosis of frontotemporal dementia. 1918 72

We report a 54-year-old male with progressive and asymmetrical lower extremity weakness caused by familial amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (FALS) with a Cu/Zn superoxidase dismutase 1 (SOD1) gene mutation. He was initially misdiagnosed with a lumbosacral polyradiculopathy because of spinal stenosis and underwent a laminectomy surgery with no benefit. He was also misdiagnosed with a myopathy due to moderate CK elevation from acute denervation and pseudomyopathic changes on muscle biopsies from chronic denervation. He eventually developed respiratory muscle weakness and upper motor neuron signs, consistent with familial ALS.
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PMID:Familial ALS with SOD1 mutation misdiagnosed with polyradiculopathy and myopathy. 1992 43

We report on a patient belonging to a large family with autosomal-dominant amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, who developed asymmetrical akineto-rigid symptoms at 33 years of age. He had no signs of lower motor neuron disease after four years of follow-up. All seven ALS patients from this family harboured a mutation located in the fourth intron of the SOD1 gene. The proband also harboured the same mutation, associated with a 40% decrease in SOD1 erythrocyte activity. This case report suggests that SOD1 mutations might be associated with marked phenotypic variability (ALS or early onset Parkinsonism in this family).
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PMID:Early onset Parkinsonism associated with an intronic SOD1 mutation. 2221 12

Progressive muscular atrophy (PMA), or the lower motor neuron disease, is a sporadic disorder characterized by onset in adulthood, pure lower motor neuron involvement and relatively benign course. Muscle atrophy and weakness may be symmetrical or asymmetrical, but they are always bilateral. We present a male patient with exclusively left-side flaccid paresis due to lower motor neuron disease without electromyographic evidence of neurogenic lesion of contralateral muscles and with no signs of corticospinal tracts involvement. The rapid disease progression was typical of the generalized phenotype of PMA and it suggested the relation to the aggressive course of classical ALS.
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PMID:Unilateral progressive muscular atrophy with fast symptoms progression. 2685 91