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1.
We reported a case of Becker type congenital myotonia with myalgia. A 28 year-old woman admitted to our hospital because of right anterior chest pain and back pain. She was diagnosed as myotonic dystrophy by other university hospital when she was 16 years old. Physical examination revealed only myotonia and could not find muscle atrophy or cataracta which were usually found in myotonic dystrophy. The quadriceps muscle biopsy revealed complete absence of type IIB muscle fiber. We diagnosed her Becker type congenital myotonia by the clinical course and family history and the histopathological findings of quadriceps muscle. Myalgia which she complained seemed to have some connection with this disease. But we could not prove the pathogenesis of this myalgia.  相似文献   

2.
A 3-month-old female baby was diagnosed as having Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS), based on the following clinical findings: type II lissencephaly associated with marked ventricular dilatation, cerebellar malformation, retinal malformation, elevated serum creatine kinase level and abnormal muscle CT findings. She was a product of parents with consanguineous marriage. She presented with severe hypotonia and profound psychomotor retardation since birth. She developed infantile spasms at 8 months of age, and vitamin B6 was very effective. A genetic analysis revealed the absence of the founder haplotype commonly seen in Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), suggesting that the WWS gene is not always identical to the FCMD gene. When she was examined at the age of 4 years, she had no apparent further psychomotor development. Her clinical symptoms were more severe than those of the typical FCMD.  相似文献   

3.
We report an 18-year-old female with facioscapulohumeral dystrophy (FSHD), who had sensorineural deafness, retinal vessel abnormality, mental retardation, and epilepsy. She had infantile spasms at 6 months of age. Muscle atrophy and weakness of facial muscles were first noticed at 3 years of age. From 10 years of age, she had rapidly progressive generalized muscle weakness especially of facial, neck and truncal muscles with marked lordosis. Although mental retardation is commonly complicated with FSHD, infantile spasms or epilepsy has never been reported. Not only mental retardation but epilepsy may be one of the central nervous system symptoms in a systemic disorder, FSHD.  相似文献   

4.
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   

5.
Pregnancy and delivery present a number of risks for the mother suffering from myotonic dystrophy, and for her infant. Most of the time, she does not even know that she is affected by the disease and a carrier of the gene. We review the complications of pregnancy and delivery in myotonic patients, and propose a simple management with specific items for each gestational period. The child of a dystrophic mother has a 50% risk of inheriting the abnormal gene. He may also exhibit a developmental and malformation syndrome called "congenital myotonic dystrophy". From the beginning, he may show respiratory distress, thereafter inability to swallow and severely hypotonia. Later, he may demonstrate mental retardation. Some of the most obvious signs found in neonates in our practice are illustrated. We also add a few tests to the list of those already recommended for these children.  相似文献   

6.
We describe a child who presented at birth with arthrogryposis. Following a muscle biopsy a diagnosis of congenital muscular dystrophy was made and a skin biopsy 12 years later confirmed the presence of merosin. Her clinical picture was unusual, however, for merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy. She had extreme wasting and weakness of her arms and legs. In contrast, she had good neck and trunk control, and no facial or respiratory muscle weakness. We have used magnetic resonance imaging to examine the pattern of muscle involvement in this case. No recognizable muscle could be identified in the limbs. In contrast, the axial muscles were preserved. This striking pattern of virtual absence of muscles in the limbs with sparing of the axial muscle suggests that a gene responsible for the migration and/or proliferation of limb muscle precursor cells may be involved in the disease process. It is recognized that merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy is a heterogeneous disease. Magnetic resonance imaging is a useful tool for examining in detail the pattern of muscle involvement and identifying individual phenotypes. Understanding more about which muscles are affected in children with congenital myopathies may provide information on the underlying pathological process and help in the search for candidate proteins and genes.  相似文献   

7.
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   

8.
We report a case of 13-year-old girl with short stature, microcephalus, blepharophimosis, ptosis, bilateral microphthalmia (more prominent in the right), hypogonadism, other minor anomalies, and severe mental retardation. Her mother had two spontaneous abortions. She was born as the second baby of dizygotic twins. The first baby died of diaphragm hernia and heart failure. Her body height, body weight and head circumference were below -3 SD. She did not have epicanthus inversus, hypoplastic teeth, heart anomalies, seizures, muscle weakness, and hearing loss. She was able to handle her wheelchair, but could neither understand nor speak meaningful words. When she looked at something in front of herself, she turned her face up and lifted the left eyelid with her own fingers. She had no somatic change of puberty. Laboratory and radiological examinations demonstrated a normal karyotype, normal bone age, findings of Chilaiditi syndrome, and absence of brain malformation on cranial CT. The serum levels of LH and FSH were high for age and those of estradiol and progesterone were low, suggesting immaturity of ovarian function. These findings suggested the ovarian functions might not get maturations. Hypogonadism has previously been reported in female cases of the blepharophimosis, ptosis and epicanthus inversus syndrome (BPES) type I, but not in those with the Ohdo blepharophimosis syndrome (OBS). Our case's condition differs from BPES because of the presence of mental retardation and the absence of epicanthus inversus. We also discuss the distinction from OBS, a disease entity of unknown etiology presenting with a variety of complications.  相似文献   

9.
We report the first Japanese female patient with Walker-Warburg syndrome. She had generalized muscle hypotonia with hydrocephalus due to Dandy-Walker malformation and bilateral microphthalmia with opaque corneas. She had severe motor and mental retardation. Muscle histology reflected advanced changes of muscular dystrophy. We discuss the relationship between Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy and Walker-Warburg syndrome, both of which fall within a spectrum of developmental abnormalities with a common cause. In Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy, ocular abnormalities are less severe.  相似文献   

10.
We report a case of congenital muscular dystrophy with secondary merosin deficiency, structural involvement of the central nervous system and mental retardation in an 8-year-old girl from a consanguineous family. She had early-onset hypotonia, generalized muscle wasting, with weakness especially of the neck muscles, joint contractures, mental retardation and high creatine kinase. Muscle biopsy showed dystrophic changes with partial deficiency of the laminin 2 chain. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging revealed multiple small cysts in the cerebellum, without cerebral cortical dysplasia or white matter changes. The laminin 2 chain (6q2), Fukuyama type congenital muscular dystrophy (9q31–q33) and muscle–eye–brain disease (1p32–p34) loci were all excluded by linkage analysis. We suggest that this case represents a new entity in the nosology of congenital muscular dystrophy.  相似文献   

11.
We report here a 25-year-old girl with Friedreich's ataxia (FA) who showed slowly progressive ataxia, deep sensory disturbance and loss of large myelinated fiber in the sural nerve. There was no evidence of cerebellar atrophy or abnormal values of vitamin E, albumin, CK, and gamma-globulin in the serum. Except for mild mental retardation, her clinical and laboratory findings were consistent with those of FA. However, she had no abnormal GAA trinucleotide repeat expansion on chromosome 9q13, unlike typical FA patients in Europe. Her cardiac muscle is not involved instead of 20 years have passed since her ataxia developed. She is considered to belong to a specific type of FA which lacks cardiac muscle involvement and abnormal gene encoding frataxin.  相似文献   

12.
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   

13.
An autopsy case of Fahr disease (infantile form)]   总被引:1,自引:0,他引:1  
A 13-year-old girl with Fahr disease (infantile form) was reported. Her parents were consanguineous. Her elder sister had mental retardation and spasticity of the lower limbs, and died at 23 years of age. The patient suffered from infantile spasms at 3 month. She was bed-ridden, nonverbal, microcephalic and blind. Cranial CT revealed massive calcifications in the basal ganglia, periventricular white matter, dentate nucleus and cerebellar white matter. EEG showed a suppression-burst pattern. At 13 years, she died of pneumonia and hyperammonemia. Microscopic examination of brain showed perivascular non-arteriosclerotic ferro-calcinosis. The periventricular granules are 1-4 mu or 12 mu in diameter. This pathological change was observed only in the central nervous system above midbrain. No calcifications were found in the pituitary and the vessels of pia mater. Also a reduced ornithine transcarbamylase activity was found in the liver, which was probably not related with cerebral calcifications. Infantile form of Fahr disease is rare and may be heterogeneous in etiology. However, clinical manifestations and pathological findings were similar to those in previous reports of Fahr disease in childhood. It is one of the disorders causing infantile spasms.  相似文献   

14.
A 45-year-old female had progressive difficulty in climbing stairs and standing from a chair for 10 years. She had binocular cataracts which were operated at the age of 42 years. On examination, she had marked muscle wasting in the proximal limbs, scapular and sternomastoid muscles. She presented as marked muscle weakness in the proximal portion of the lower extremities and moderate in the upper extremities and the legs. Deep tendon reflexes were absent in all limbs. There was no grip myotonia, or percussion myotonia of the thenar muscle and tongue. Myotonia was not elucidated even after the hands were exposed to cold water. Moreover, none of the examined muscles revealed insertion myotonic discharge on electromyography. Serum CK level was normal and IgG value decreased to 546 mg/dl. Muscle biopsy of the left biceps muscle showed the variation in fiber size, increased central nuclei and many fiber with pyknotic nuclear clumps on HE staining. Sarcoplasmic mass and ring fibers were also found on HE staining. There were a few percents of ragged-red fibers on Gomori-trichrome staining, and type 1 fiber atrophy was found on pH 4.5 ATP-ase staining. The expansion of lymphocyte CTG trinucleotide repeats in the myotonin protein kinase gene was about 733, so that she was diagnosed as having myotonic dystrophy (MD). MRI of skeletal muscles exhibited marked atrophy especially in the femoral region and the biceps muscle. This patient had the proximal dominant muscle weakness, and absent myotonia even on electromyographic examination, which are unusual clinical features of adult onset MD.  相似文献   

15.
The pathological findings of an adult woman and clinical features of her brothers identified a new type of congenital muscular dystrophy with brain malformation. The 40-year-old woman, born to parents who were first cousins, was retarded in both mental and physical development from early infancy. She had a monkey-like face with macroglossia, dwarfism, decreased subcutaneous fat with hard skin, joint contracture, and muscular atrophy and weakness with myopathic changes, but she was able to walk until the age of 31 years. Two brothers showed clinical features more or less similar to hers, but their mental and physical development was not severely retarded. Autopsy of the patient revealed that the brain malformation consisted of micropolygyria and pachygyria, and the muscular atrophy was of the normal dystrophin type. In addition, presenile occurrence of Alzheimer's neurofibrillary tangles was prominent in the malformed brain. The overall picture was that of congenital muscular dystrophy of the Fukuyama type, demonstrating an adult variant of the disease.  相似文献   

16.
We describe the early manifestation and sequential assessment of the central and peripheral nervous system in a Japanese girl with merosin-deficient congenital muscular dystrophy. She showed severe hypotonia (‘‘floppy infant”) and suffered mild respiratory failure postnatally. Serum creatine kinase was elevated to 11,487 IU/L. The muscle biopsy showed dystrophic changes with negative expression of merosin (laminin α2), thereby confirming merosin-deficient congenital muscular dystrophy. Her motor milestones were severely delayed, but she could sit without support at the age of 3 years. After 3 years, her motor ability deteriorated and by the age of 5 years, she could not sit and control her neck. Magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) at 2 months of age revealed patterns that were appropriate for her age. At 1 year of age, the T2 weighted images showed diffuse high signal intensities throughout the centrum semiovale, and periventricular and subcortical white matter of the frontal and occipital lobes, while the U fibers, the corpus callosum and the internal capsule were spared. At the age of 7 years, these white matter abnormalities decreased. MR spectroscopy (MRS) revealed normal values of N-acetylaspartate (NAA)/creatine (Cr) and choline (Cho)/Cr metabolite ratios as well as slightly increased myoinositol (mI)/Cr metabolite ratios. Neurophysiological motor nerve conduction velocity (MCV) and compound muscle action potential (CMAP) of the median nerve were in the normal range at the age of 2 months. After the child reached 1 year of age, the MCV and CMAP lagged behind those of healthy controlled children. The sensory nerve conduction velocity of the median nerve demonstrated a mild delay at the age of 15 months. It improved to normal range at the age of 6 years but decreased at 7 years of age. These sequential findings suggest not only that muscular degeneration and dysmyelination had occurred but also that various other factors, including demyelination and the vasogenic system, may influence the pathology of MDC1A.  相似文献   

17.
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   

18.
A Japanese girl with incontinentia pigmenti had characteristic skin lesions at birth. The diagnosis was confirmed by skin biopsy and positive family history. Her mother and sisters also suffered from IP. She had generalized tonic seizures at 1 month of age, and infantile spasms at 7 months. ACTH therapy was very effective to infantile spasms. At 9 years now, she is suffering from atypical absence, mild mental retardation and mild left hemiparesis. MRI revealed marked atrophy of the cerebral white matter predominantly around the posterior horn of right lateral ventricle, cystic lesions in the white matter around the anterior horns of both lateral ventricles, which were not clear by CT scan, and atrophy of the right cerebral peduncle and pontine basis. Although these findings are non-specific, they may be clues which explicate the mechanism of central nervous system involvement in incontinentia pigmenti.  相似文献   

19.
A 53-year-old female with muscular symptoms and incomplete Turner's syndrome was presented. She had two sons with Duchenne type muscular dystrophy (DMD). Her muscular symptoms became apparent at age 52 years, and her elevated serum CK, EMG and pathological findings of the biopsied muscle were consistent with muscular dystrophy. Her cytogenetic analysis from the cultured lymphocytes and fibroblasts showed a 45XO/46XX/47XXX chromosome constitution. Analysis of number of Barr bodies in the muscle specimen revealed that the total number of the bodies were significantly decreased in this case than in the control muscles. The result indicated that nuclei of 45XO karyotype were evidently present in her muscle and contributed to the process of muscle fiber breakdown as a major pathogenetic factor. However, inactivation of normal X chromosome also concerned the pathologic process because there were nuclei with Barr bodies in the damaged fibers as well. Only seven cases with X chromosome mosaicism and muscular symptoms attributable to DMD gene were seen in the literature. Four of them showed rather typical clinical features of DMD, but the muscular symptoms were much milder in the remainder, and patients were still able to walk in their middle lives. It was presumed that the severity of the clinical symptoms was parallel to the ratio of 45XO karyotype in the total number of muscular nuclei.  相似文献   

20.
We reported a clinical course and autopsy results of an 8-year-old severely handicapped girl with marked periventricular leukomalacia. She was well until 3 days prior to first admission in local hospital. Two days prior to admission, she began to vomit. Twelve hours later, she was noted to be lethargic and developed malaise with frequent vomiting. At physical examination on admission, she had frequent fits and her posture was decerebrate rigidity. Consciousness disturbance continued for two weeks. Thereafter, she became severely handicapped with spastic quadriplegia, mental retardation and intractable epilepsy. She was transferred to our hospital one month later. We cared her totally and carefully with our rehabilitation staff, but during her course several rare happening occurred; she suffered from subdural hemorrhage due to hypocupremia and received an operation for the release of contracture of her hips. She died of acute cardio-respiratory failure at 8 years and 5 months of age. Her autopsy findings were characteristic of the damage to an immature brain during development; cactus formation of cerebellar cortex and periventricular leukomalacia.  相似文献   

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