首页 | 本学科首页   官方微博 | 高级检索  
相似文献
 共查询到20条相似文献,搜索用时 46 毫秒
1.
A case of congenital myotonic dystrophy with infantile autism   总被引:2,自引:0,他引:2  
An 11-year-old girl with congenital myotonic dystrophy and infantile autism was reported. Her mother also suffered from typical myotonic dystrophy. Since her birth, the patient had been floppy, and showed bilateral talipes equinus at 1 year of age. Her subsequent psychomotor and speech development has been retarded. She showed autistic behavior and persistence to the sameness before 2 years old. She was admitted to Sawarabien at the age of 10 years. She could not talk anything but could understand simple, oral messages. Although she had severe degree of mental retardation, her ability for matching figures was relatively well reserved. Her autism was so manifest that it could not be explained by the degree of mental retardation. Neurological examinations revealed that she had facial diplegia, inverted V-shaped mouth, high-arched palate, talipes equinus, percussion myotonia of the tongue, generalized muscular atrophy and weakness, lordosis, areflexia, and congenital cataracta. The serum CPK was slightly elevated. EMG showed a myopathic pattern but did not show any myotonic discharge yet. The brachioradial muscle was biopsied and examined by light- and electron-microscopy. It mainly showed mild varieties of muscle fiber diameter and internal nuclei. Ultrastructurally, irregularly indented central nuclei and perinuclear degeneration of myofibrils associated with secondary lysosomes, lipid droplets and glycogen granules were revealed. Ventricular dilatation and some dysfunction of the brain were also revealed by CT scan and EEG respectively. The present case suggests that congenital myotonic dystrophy can be added into the disease group associated with infantile autism.  相似文献   

2.
This report concerns a 41-year-old female case of spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) associated with vocal cord paralysis. Her parents were not consanguineous. Her maternal grandmother and younger brother were suspected of having SMA. At age 37, she first experienced gait disturbance and began to have slowly progressive dysarthria and weakness of the extremities. Neurological examination revealed that she had inspiratory stridor, dysarthria and proximal muscular weakness of the extremities. Achilles tendon reflexes were absent, while there were no pathological reflexes or sensory disturbances. She showed a waddling gait and Gowers' sign. The laboratory data indicated mild elevation of serum CK. The nerve conduction study was normal, while the electromyographic study and muscle biopsy revealed neurogenic changes. We diagnosed the case as adult onset SMA of the autosomal dominant type. Laryngoscopy revealed that the patient had vocal cord paralysis, which was predominant in abductor muscles and of the posterior paralysis type according to the categories established by Isozaki. Genetic analysis showed no mutations in the genes of the neuronal apoptosis inhibitory protein and of the survival motor neuron.  相似文献   

3.
A 53-year-old female with sensori-motor neuropathy associated with bilateral club feet was reported. She was admitted because of numbness in the bilateral feet and gait disturbance. Her parents were not related. There was no family history of any neurological diseases. She had bilateral club feet which were present at birth to developed in early childhood. She could walk, but could not run. Since 5 years prior to the admission she noted gradually increasing disturbance of gait. Neurological examination revealed muscular weakness and wasting in the distal parts of the lower extremities and decreased deep tendon reflexes. There were hypesthesia, hypalgesia and dysesthesia in the lateral portions of the bilateral feet. Deep sensation was normal. There was no weakness or wasting in the upper extremities. Motor nerve conduction velocities were normal and sensory nerve conduction velocities were reduced in the median nerve. No action potentials could not be elicited in the bilateral tibial and peroneal nerves. A sural nerve biopsy showed a markedly hypertrophic perineurium, 28-150 micron thick, a large Renaut body measured 140 micron by 200 micron in diameters and a markedly reduced number of the myelinated fibers. Fiber size histogram showed many unmyelinated fibers larger than 1 micron, despite loss of fibers of the usual size. Therefore, a part of the unmyelinated fibers might be demyelinated. There were no axonal degeneration and onion-bulb formation. Segmental demyelination was found in approximately 30% of the myelinated fibers.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

4.
A 29-year-old African American woman with an 8-year history of biopsy-proven renal sarcoidosis and end-stage renal disease requiring hemodialysis was admitted to the hospital with progressive weakness and shortness of breath for 2 months. Eight months prior to admission, she was prescribed 15 mg of prednisone twice a day and 200 mg of hydroxychloroquine sulfate twice a day for hypercalcemia and elevated angiotensin-converting enzyme level. As her laboratory abnormalities improved, the prednisone dose was gradually decreased, and hydroxychloroquine was continued. Six months earlier, she noticed numbness in her feet and progressive loss of muscle bulk in her feet and hands. She also noticed difficulty reaching overhead, getting out of a chair, and climbing stairs. She denied any pain or muscle cramps. Results of electrophysiological tests at that time, which included nerve conduction studies and needle electromyography, revealed moderately severe axonal sensorimotor polyneuropathy. Her weakness worsened and so she was admitted to the hospital and subsequently transferred to our facility for further management.  相似文献   

5.
We report a case of 68-year-old woman who was diagnosed spinocerebellar ataxia type 6 (SCA 6) by genomic testing. She presented hypochondriasis, parkinsonism, and ataxia. Since the age of 60, she noted difficulty in walking due to dizziness, and MRI showed minimal cerebellar atrophy. She became unable to walk without assistance at the age 67. She was referred to us when she was 68 years old. She had no family history of cerebellar ataxia, and her general physical examination was normal. Her speech was fluent, with neither slurring nor scanning, and she complained of much anxiety regarding her physical condition and was diagnosed as having hypochondriasis. Neurological examination revealed parkinsonism consisting of small steppage gait, mask-like face, akinesia, rigidity of neck and limbs, and postural instability. She also showed cerebellar signs such as saccadic smooth pursuit, ataxia of upper and lower limbs, and increased tendon reflexes. Her parkinsonism had developed slowly and symmetrically yet she showed a lack of response to levodopa. Our results suggest that the genomic testing is useful for differential diagnosis for the diseases presenting ataxia and parkinsonism, even if the family history is negative.  相似文献   

6.
A 73-year-old woman with progressive proximal-dominant muscular atrophy and weakness was described. She had been well until 70-year-old, when she found difficulty in standing up from sitting position. At age 72 years, she could not raise her arms. Neurological examination showed muscular wasting and weakness in the proximal parts of extremities, shoulder and pelvic girdle. In the thigh, the flexors and adductors were severely affected. Muscular weakness was also observed in m. tibialis anterior. Serum CK and aldolase were normal. Electromyography showed low voltage short duration motor unit potentials with positive sharp waves and fibrillations. Rimmed vacuoles were observed in 4.8% of muscle fibers in biopsy sample obtained from right m. quadriceps femoris. No inflammatory cells, PAS-positive materials and inclusion bodies were observed in the sample. This case differs from distal myopathy with rimmed vacuoles, because the onset was very late and her muscular weakness and atrophy was proximal dominant. This case also differs from inclusion body myositis, because muscle biopsy revealed no inflammatory cells or inclusion body.  相似文献   

7.
Here we report a sixty-year-old woman of Brown-Vialetto-van Laere (BVVL) syndrome in Japan. She had sensorineural deafness, weakness and atrophy of her extremities from 15 years of age. Her neurological symptoms slowly progressed. She first visited our hospital in 1993 when she was 49 years old. At that time, she had distal muscle weakness and atrophy of the four extremities and bulbar palsy. Deep tendon reflexes were absent and the plantar toe reflex was flexor. EMG revealed neurogenic changes and the nerve conduction studied were normal. The vital capacity was marked decreased. On August 10, 2003, she was admitted to our hospital because of CO2 narcosis. She had III, VII, X, XI, XII cranial nerve palsy, distal muscle weakness and atrophy of the four extremities. From her neurological symptoms and signs, we made a diagnosis of BVVL syndrome. MRI revealed no high signal in pyramidal tract by FLAIR image. ABR showed no response, and VEP demonstrated delay of the P100. She was intubated, and was attached to a respirator to improve her CO2 narcosis. After treatment she improved and did not need to be assisted by a respirator during daytime. During night time, she had apnea, and her blood gas showed the retention of CO2, and she still required the respiratory assistance during her sleep. This is the first report of BVVL syndrome in Japanese literature.  相似文献   

8.
We herein report a Japanese case of Poland-M?bius syndrome. The patient was a 19-year-old female. She was the product of a full-term forceps delivery. Birth weight was 2500 g. She had a defect of the right pectoral muscle, and syndactyly of the right hand. When she was 10 days old, facial diplegia, bilateral abducens nerve palsy, and bilateral ptosis were also noted. She was admitted to our hospital at 19 years of age. On physical examination, she had microsyndactyly of the right hand, and her right pectoralis major muscle was absent. Neurological examination revealed bilateral abducens nerve paresis, mild impairement of the upward and adducting movement of both eyes and bilateral facial weakness and atrophy of the left side of her tongue. Her karyotype was normal. Neither R 1 nor R 2 response was evoked in the blink reflex on either side. Brain MRI disclosed thin facial nerves and atrophy of the pons and medulla. Therefore, she was diagnosed as a case of Poland-M?bius syndrome. In this case, the facial nerves were considered to be hypoplastic.  相似文献   

9.
Motor amusia following a right temporal lobe hemorrhage--a case report   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A 65-year-old female was admitted to our hospital because of left hemiparesis with sudden onset one week before. She was congenitally right-handed. She had been a teacher of Japanese string instrument (samisen) playing and been able to sing Japanese traditional songs well. A tape on which she had recorded her songs one year before the admission also proved her to be a good singer. Neurological examination on admission revealed almost normal findings except for minimal weakness in her left hand fingers. Right temporal lobe hemorrhage was revealed by CT scan. One month after the admission, she complained that she was unable to sing her songs and to play samisen as she used to do. Her intelligence was normal (WAIS VIQ116, PIQ108) and there were no abnormal findings as follows: aprosodia, aphasia, agraphia, memory disturbance, agnosia and ideational, ideomotor, constructional or limb-kinetic apraxia. She could point out her errors while singing. However, musical receptive function was slightly disturbed with tonal memory in Seashore test. When she was asked to sing a song without any instrumental support, she hummed a melody occasionally with wrong pitch, but rhythmically. After hearing a song she knew well, she reproduced it with slight improvement. With the vocal or the instrumental accompaniment, she could sing fairly well. She had some mistakes of pitch while playing a samisen. MRI was performed one year and a half after the brain hemorrhage. It displayed a thin linear of hematoma in the white matter of the right upper temporal and transverse gyrus. It was proved in our case that motor amusia with minimal musical receptive dysfunction could appear following a cerebral lesion and musical function might be independent of intelligence or verbal function.  相似文献   

10.
A woman has appeared normal during her neonatal and childhood period except for a short stature. Her parents were healthy and non-consanguineous. At the age of 8, she noticed difficulty in climbing stairs and had tendency to fall. In her 13th year, she developed marked scoliosis and genu valgum. Physical examination at 14 years of age revealed a gentle and shy child of short stature with brown-black kinky hair. Neurological examinations revealed progressive mental retardation, optic nerve atrophy, moderate and coarse nystagmus on lateral and vertical gaze, atrophic tongue with fasciculations, slow and scanning speech, distal muscular weaknesses with diffuse atrophies in the four extremities and sensory deficiencies in all modalities with a glove-stocking type distribution. At the age of 15, she was unable to walk without a wheelchair. During the course she showed slowly progressive muscular weakness, ataxia and decreasing sensation especially in the lower extremities. She died of infection of the respiratory and urinary tracts at the age of 25. Pathologically the abnormalities in the biopsied and autopsied sural nerve were characterized by an advanced stage of nerve fiber degeneration without giant axons. The phrenic nerve obtained at autopsy at 1 to 10 cm from axon terminal revealed the presence of several large focal axonal swelling of 15-20 microns in diameter. On the other hand, sections of the phrenic nerve at 15 cm from axon terminal displayed a mild to moderate reduction in the number of myelinated fibers without giant axons. The difference of pathological findings among these specimens seems to depend on the time as well as the site of the examination.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)  相似文献   

11.
A girl with congenital muscular dystrophy with severe scoliosis from birth was presented. No positive family history was obtainable. She developed muscle hypotonia and weakness, and feeding difficulty during the neonatal period. Her developmental milestones were delayed; she learned to walk at the age of 2 years when she walked with a "waddling gait" and stood up with Gowers' maneuver. On physical examination at 2 years old, she had mild proximal dominant muscle weakness and atrophy, and severe scoliosis with a Cobb's angle of 74 degrees but no joint contractures in the extremities. Creatine kinase was slightly elevated. Biopsied muscle showed myopathic changes, including variation in fiber size, moderate fibrous tissue proliferation, some necrotic and regenerating fibers and type 1 fiber predominance, consistent with those seen in chronic progressive muscular dystrophy.  相似文献   

12.
We report an 84-year-old woman with progressive mental deterioration. She was well until January 1994, when she was 80 years of the age. At that time she developed a delusional ideation, in that she stated that she would be killed by her fellow members of the society for elderly, in which she was belonging. At times, she closed the shutter of her house saying that a stranger was wandering outside of her house. In 1995, she could not identify the face of her son's wife. When she went out for shopping, she lost her way to the home. She prowled about in and out of her home. In 1996, she had to be admitted to a nursing home, where quarrelled with other patients and behaved violently. She was admitted to the neurology service of Hatsuishi Hospital on November 20th, 1997. Family history revealed that her mother was said to be demented. On admission, she was alert and behaved in a good manner. She was disoriented to the time and unable to do serial 7. Her memory was very poor. She did not show aphasia or apraxia. Cranial nerves appeared to be intact. She showed no weakness or muscle atrophy. Gait was normal for her age. Plastic rigidity was noted in four limbs more on the right side. No ataxia was noted. Deep tendon reflexes were exaggerated, however, no Babinski sign was noted. Sensory examination was intact. Her hospital course was characterized by the development of progressive gait disturbance, violent behaviour, and prowling around. On November 30th, 1998, she fell down and suffered from a fracture in the neck of her femur. Although replacement of the femur head was performed, she became unable to walk after this episode. Her mental functions deteriorated further. She developed pneumonia and expired on February 2, 1999. She was discussed in a neurological CPC and the chief discussant arrived at a conclusion that the patient probably had diffuse Lewy body disease, because of the combination of dementia and parkinsonism. Other possibilities discussed in the CPC included Pick's disease, frontotemporal dementia and parkinsonism, and Alzheimer's disease. Post-mortem examination revealed moderate atrophy in the frontal and temporal cortices. Microscopic examination showed atrophy and gliosis in the hippocampus. Many diffuse plaque and neuritic plaques were seen in the frontal cortex by methenamine silver staining. Neurofibrillary tangles were also found. The Meynert nucleus was preserved. The putamen and the substantia nigra were also intact. Pathologic diagnosis was consistent with Alzheimer's disease.  相似文献   

13.
A patient with Facial diplegia and paresthesias, a rare regional variant of Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS), is described. A 37-year-old woman developed paresthesias in the distal limbs and subsequently bifacial weakness. She had had a preceding episode of laryngitis. Neurological examination showed severe facial diplegia with loss of taste sensation on the tip of the tongue. Limb muscle power was preserved. Deep tendon reflexes were generally absent. She complained of paresthesias in the distal limbs, but sensory examination was normal. Cerebrospinal fluid showed albuminocytological dissociation. Electrophysiological studies revealed severe facial nerve involvements and demyelinative findings in her limbs. Intravenous immunoglobulin rapidly improved the abnormal sensation in her limbs. Although facial diplegia gradually lessened after the therapy, mild residual weakness was noted 6 months after the neurological onset. To diagnose facial diplegia and paresthesias, it is important to clarify the findings common to typical GBS such as the antecedent illness, acute and monophasic course, distal paresthesias, areflexia, cerebrospinal fluid albuminocytological dissociation, and demyelinative conduction abnormalities in the limbs.  相似文献   

14.
The proband was a 38 year old mother, who had begun to walk abnormally at one year old. She developed weakness and wasting in the intrinsic hand muscles in the third decades. On neurological examinations, she showed weakness with atrophy in the distal muscles of the upper and lower limbs, mild impairment of deep sensation in the feet, and severe spastic gait with scissoring. Deep tendon reflexes were hypoactive in the arms and at the ankles, and brisk at the knees. Babinski sign was present bilaterally. Nerve conduction studies revealed mild slowing of conduction velocities and reduction of muscle and sensory action potential amplitudes. Sural nerve biopsy showed a prominent decrease in myelinated fiber density, especially in the large fibers. Neither demyelination nor typical onion-bulb was found. Results of gene analysis of PMP-22 was negative. Her two daughters, 14- and 11-year-old, respectively, also presented with gait disturbance from the beginning of walking at one year old and had almost the same clinical manifestations as their mother, indicating autosomal dominant inheritance. This family of the hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy with spastic paraplegia (HMSN type V) was distinctive in having phenotypic uniformity including onset in early childhood.  相似文献   

15.
This report describes a case of a 17-year-old girl with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) representing rigid spine and respiratory failure. At age 11, she tended to walk on her toes and had difficulty in getting up from the floor without support. She became aware of flexion limitation of the neck at the age of 12. At 15 years of age, She began to have dyspnea on effort. When she was 17 years old, neurological examination revealed mild weakness of the upper extremities and severe weakness of the distal lower extremities, generalized wasting and areflexia. Superficial sensation was mildly impaired distally, and vibration sensation was severely impaired in the lower extremities. Motor and sensory nerve conduction velocities were mildly reduced, and compound muscle action potential of the tibial and peroneal nerves and sensory nerve action potential on ulnar and sural nerves were absent. Electromyography showed neurogenic changes with denervation potentials. Sural nerve biopsy revealed severe loss of myelinated fibers without any onion-bulb formation. As for family history, her elder sister showed moderate loss of vibration sensation in the lower extremities. On the basis of these findings, she was diagnosed as having CMT type 2, though a mode of inheritance was uncertain. She also had peculiar findings of flexion limitation of the spine (rigid spine), contracture of the hip joint, and fatty degeneration of paraspinal muscles on CT. Percent vital capacity (VC) was 22.5%, and arterial blood gas analysis showed PaO2 of 60.5 mmHg and PaCO2 65.0 mmHg. To our knowledge, this is the first case of CMT accompanied by rigid spine and respiratory failure. Motor and sensory neuropathy combined with rigid spine also have not been reported previously. The relationship between rigid spine syndrome with neurogenic muscular atrophy and CMT type 2C with the clinical characteristics of diaphragm and vocal cord paresis is discussed.  相似文献   

16.
We report a patient with acute oropharyngeal palsy following enteritis. A 19-year-old woman developed increasing nasal voice over a few days. Neurological examination on day 7 of her course showed paretic dysarthria and mild weakness of neck flexion and quadriceps femoris muscle (Medical Research Council grade, 4+). Her palatal movement was diminished, whereas both palatal and pharyngeal reflex was normal. She could swallow water, although she had a slight amount of liquid reflux to her nose on swallowing. High titers of serum anti-Campylobacter jejuni, anti-GQ1b and anti-GT1a IgG antibodies were detected. Her symptoms improved gradually without any treatment, and disappeared by 40 days from neurological onset. Nasal voice with slight swallowing impairment as initial symptom has been rarely reported, but can occur in acute oropharyngeal palsy. Therefore, neurologists should take into account the possibility of Guillain-Barré syndrome and the regional variants in patients who show nasal voice during the initial stage.  相似文献   

17.
A 74-year-old woman suffered from progressive muscle atrophy and weakness of her arms since she was seventy two years old. Before referral to our department, she was diagnosed as having cervical spondylotic myeloradiculopathy and received spinal fusion. Though spinal decompression was successful, muscle weakness of her upper limbs were progressive even after the surgery. On admission, neurological examinations revealed marked atrophy and weakness of her bilateral upper limbs with absent deep tendon reflexes showing man-in-the-barrel syndrome. Her lower extremities had normal muscle strength, but fasciculations were seen in her all four limbs. Electrophysiologically, motor nerve conduction velocity was almost normal but the amplitude was remarkably decreased, conduction block was not detected, and electromyography showed neurogenic patterns on her all extremities. Spinal progressive musclar atrophy (SPMA) accompanied with Sj?gren's syndrome was the likely diagnosis. Because 50 kDa anti-neuronal antibodies were found in her serum, we assumed that anterior horn cells were impaired by an autoimmune mechanism. Thus we treated her with corticosteroid pulse therapy, plasma exchange (PE) and intravenous immunoglobulin infusion therapy (IVIG). Although steroid pulse therapy only had a minimal effect, PE and IVIG promoted a remarkable improvement on her weakness, and the effect lasted for about three months. This is the first case of SPMA with Sj?gren's syndrome which showed good response to PE and IVIG in the early course of the disease. We considered that some SPMA-like motor neuron syndrome accompanied with autoimmune features may require immunomodulating therapies.  相似文献   

18.
A 29-year-old woman with benign congenital nemaline myopathy is reported. She did not walk until the age of one year and seven months. Although she acquired the ability to run, she ran very slowly. She first noticed the progression of weakness of the limbs at age 21, and it worsened gradually. On admission, she showed moderate weakness in the face, neck, and four limbs. Serum creatine kinase was elevated to 218 U/l. Needle electromyography showed giant and polyphasic motor unit potentials with a reduced reference pattern in the four limbs diffusely. In muscle biopsy, about 10% of fibers had many small vacuoles, and half of them were rimmed. Modified Gomori trichrome stain revealed nemaline rods in about 20% of both type I and type II fibers. Fibers with large diameter and atrophic ones showed increased acid phosphatase activity. Type I fibers were small, and type II fibers numbered only 2%. We diagnosed her illness as a congenital nemaline myopathy that began in infancy and progressed in adulthood. The increased autophagic activity probably caused the progression of muscle weakness. Moreover, the presence of both nemaline rods and rimmed vacuoles may have contributed to the development of diffuse neurogenic changes seen in electromyography.  相似文献   

19.
We report a 20-year-old female who presented with congenital non-progressive cerebellar ataxia, pigmentary retinal degeneration, fiber type disproportion, hypercreatine kinasemia and mental retardation. No family history of neuromuscular disorders was found. There was consanguinity between the grandfather and grandmother. Pregnancy and delivery were uneventful. Although neck control was obtained at three months old, she could walk at 23 months old. She had a tendency to tumble. Her mentality was retarded. At 12-years-old, she was diagnosed as having pigmentary retinal degeneration. When she visited to our hospital at 20-year-old, she had slight scoliosis. Neurological examination disclosed mental retardation, pigmentary retinal degeneration, gaze evoked nystagmus on horizontal gaze and proximal dominant muscle weakness. Tandem gait was unsteady. Deep tendon reflexes were slightly hyperactive in all four extremities. The serum creatine kinase was elevated to 2346U/l. Muscle biopsy revealed type I. fiber atrophy and predominance. This case is therefore considered to be cogenital non-progressive cerebellar ataxia presenting with fiber type disproportion, pigmentary retinal degeneration and hypercreatine kinasemia.  相似文献   

20.
We report an 80-year-old Japanese woman who presented levodopa-responsible parkinsonism followed by progressive dementia. She was well until her 61 years of age (in 1978) when she noted onset of resting tremor in her right hand followed by tremor in her right leg. She was treated with levodopa and trihexyphenidyl with good response, however, later on, she suffered from gait disturbance. In 1985, she had an episode of cardio-pulmonary arrest from which she was resuscitated, however, she started to show hypermetamorphosis, memory defect, and aggressive behaviors. She also developed motor fluctuations and dyskinesias from levodopa. She was admitted to our service in 1986; she showed rather typical parkinsonism and mild dementia. She received left Vim thalamotomy in the same year. Her dyskinesias improved, however, her gait disturbance became progressively worse. In 1995, she was admitted to our service again; she showed marked dementia and advanced parkinsonism; she was unable to walk unsupported. She became bedridden in 1996 and gastrostomy was placed. She was transferred to Zushi Aoki Hospital. Her dementia became progressively worse, and she was in the akinetic and mute state. She expired on April 22, 1998. She was discussed in a neurological CPC. The chief discussant arrived at a conclusion that the patient had Parkinson's disease with complication by Alzheimer's disease in her later clinical course. The diagnoses of participants were divided among Parkinson's disease with dementia, Parkinson's disease and Alzheimer's disease, and diffuse Lewy body disease. Postmortem examination revealed marked neuronal loss in the substantia nigra and the locus coeruleus. Lewy bodies were found in the substantia nigra. In addition, rather many Lewy bodies of cortical type were seen in the cingulate gylus, inferior temporal gylus, and in the amygdaloid nucleus. These Lewy bodies were positive for alpha-synuclein. Also, tau-positive intra-neuronal tangles were seen in the hippocampus and in the substantia nigra. The Meynert nucleus showed marked neuronal loss. Pathologic findings were consistent with the diagnosis of diffuse Lewy body disease.  相似文献   

设为首页 | 免责声明 | 关于勤云 | 加入收藏

Copyright©北京勤云科技发展有限公司  京ICP备09084417号