The properties of neuromuscular junctions (NMJs) were studied in motor-point biopsy samples from eight patients with congenital myasthenic syndromes affecting primarily proximal limb muscles ['limb-girdle myasthenia' (LGM)]. All had moderate to severe weakness of the proximal muscles, without short-term clinical fatigability but with marked variation in strength over periods of weeks or months, with little or no facial weakness or ptosis and no ophthalmoplegia. Most had a characteristic gait and stance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFTwelve children with vertebrobasilar artery stroke are reported (seven males, five females; aged 6 months to 15 years). Patient 1 showed an arcuate foramen in the posterior arch of the atlas, an anatomical variant occurring in 3 to 15% of the population. It was hypothesized that the presence of the arcuate foramen might cause tethering of the vertebral artery and lead to its dissection by repetitive trauma.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFAlthough the association between celiac disease and progressive myoclonic ataxia is well recognized, in each of the reported cases the neurologic features began in middle adult life and usually in patients who had clinical or laboratory evidence of malabsorption. We report a case of progressive myoclonic ataxia and epilepsy (Ramsay Hunt syndrome) that began in childhood. In this patient there were no features suggestive of gluten intolerance.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report a mother and two sons with developmental delay, absent nails and an abnormal gait. Review of the literature did not reveal another report of this distinctive pattern of malformations. This family appears to represent a previously undescribed neurogenetic syndrome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA regional population-based survey identified six patients with pyridoxine dependency. Four presented on the first day of life and the other two at 1 and 8 months of age. Apart from multiple seizure types, other presenting features included jitteriness; encephalopathy, at first thought to be hypoxic-ischaemic; hepatomegaly, and abdominal distension with bilious vomiting.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFIn four generations of a family with autosomal dominant hyperekplexia (startle disease), untreated affected adult members had pes cavus and extensor plantar responses, as well as hyper-reflexia. Electroencephalography during a startle, electromyography, nerve conduction velocities and somatosensory evoked potentials were normal. Genetic studies showed linkage to the CSF1R locus on chromosome 5q33-q35, which includes the glycine receptor.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA case of neurogenic arthrogryposis multiplex congenita (AMC) with associated neuronal migration abnormalities is described. A child with neurogenic AMC and developmental delay presented with late onset of seizures. The first trimester of the mother's pregnancy was marked by an episode of gastro-enteritis and the intrauterine death of a twin fetus.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFDev Med Child Neurol
March 1995
The authors collected Verbal, Performance and Full-scale IQs for 74 patients in whom complete analysis of the dystrophin gene for deletions and duplications had been performed. There was a significant difference in the mean Full-scale IQ between patients with deletions at the 5' and 3' ends of the gene, with no patients with 5' deletions having mental retardation. No relationship was established between mental retardation and the presence or absence of deletions or length of deletions, and similar deletions were observed in the presence and absence of mental retardation.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFSeizures in a term infant with Ohtahara syndrome, associated with polymicrogyria, and a pre-term neonate with similar clinical features, failed to respond to conventional anticonvulsants, but were controlled with vigabatrin monotherapy. Another infant with Aicardi syndrome improved with vigabatrin. Autopsy in the first infant showed no evidence of intramyelinic oedema.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFProc Inst Mech Eng H
March 1997
Winging of the scapula occurring in muscular disorders (muscular dystrophy and spinal muscular atrophy) or nerve injury has been investigated, resulting in a thorough understanding and presentation of the underlying biomechanics causing this occurrence. This includes a biomechanical explanation of the characteristic prominence of the medial border of the scapula upon attempted elevation, together with the biomechanical reasons for the rotation of the scapula in a direction contrary to the normal scapulohumeral rhythm. Based on these findings, a non-invasive alternative to the surgical technique for scapular stabilization has been devised, using an inflatable orthosis, placed between the scapula and an external restraint (such as a spinal jacket).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report two children who developed thalamic infarctions which were demonstrated by CT. Both children had apparently normal angiograms although the extra cranial portions of the vertebral arteries were not demonstrated on the initial examination. Subsequent angiograms demonstrated abnormalities of the cervical portion of the vertebral arteries, dissection and pseudoaneurysm in one case and a large fusiform aneurysm in the other.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFWe report the radiological appearances of 5 children with hemimegalencephaly. There are few reports of this rare condition in the radiological literature. Two of the children have hemimegalencephaly as an isolated finding while the other three have Proteus syndrome.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThree children with pronounced livedo reticularis present since birth (cutis marmorata-telangiectasia congenita) have been followed to the ages of eight, 17 and 21 years. During childhood they developed frequent recurrent transient stroke-like hemipareses, affecting either side of the body, associated with ipsilateral pain, headache, visual symptoms, dysphasia, fits and confusion. Intellectual failure and, in one, progressive spasticity have followed.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFA brother and sister with mental retardation, malformations of the cerebellar vermis, characteristic 'metronome' eye movements, lingual hamartomas, and postaxial polydactyly are described. The clinical overlap with the OFD group of syndromes, in particular OFD III and OFD VI, and Joubert's syndrome is discussed. If OFD III syndrome is to be recognised as a distinct entity, these two cases represent the second and third cases reported.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis report is the third part of a trilogy from a multidisciplinary study which was undertaken to investigate gene and protein expression in a large cohort of patients with well defined and diverse clinical phenotypes. The aim of part 3 was to review which of the analytical techniques that we had used would be the most useful for differential diagnosis, and which would provide the most accurate indication of disease severity. Careful clinical appraisal is very important and every DMD patient was correctly diagnosed on this basis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis report is the second part of a trilogy from a multidisciplinary study which was undertaken to record the relationships between clinical severity and dystrophin gene and protein expression. The aim in part 2 was to correlate the effect of gene deletions on protein expression in individual patients with well defined clinical phenotypes. Among the DMD patients, most of the deletions/duplications disrupted the open reading frame, but three patients had in frame deletions.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThis multidisciplinary study was undertaken to record the variation in gene and protein expression in a large cohort of patients with well defined clinical phenotypes. The patients, whose ages ranged from 4 years to 66 years, spanned a wide range of disease severity. They represented the first 100 patients who had been examined in Newcastle, had undergone a muscle biopsy, and provided a blood sample for DNA analysis.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFThe age when boys lose the ability to walk independently is one of the milestones in the progression of Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD). We have used this as a measure of disease severity in a group of 30 patients with DMD and six patients with intermediate Duchenne/Becker dystrophy (D/BMD). Dystrophin analysis was performed on tissue sections and western blots of muscle biopsy specimens from these patients and the relationships that were found between clinical severity and abundance of dystrophin labelling are reported.
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