Publications by authors named "N Miyatani"

A 26-year-old woman with a history of feeling nauseated during dental local anesthesia presented to our clinic for tooth extraction under intravenous sedation. Although she had experienced episodes of neurally-mediated syncope, her symptoms were controlled well with drug therapy, stopped 3 years earlier. No syncope episodes developed over the previous 2 years.

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We previously reported two siblings with decreased subcutaneous adipose tissue, muscular atrophy, joint contractures, recurrent skin eruptions, hyper-gamma-globulinemia, and reduced natural killer cell activity. Some of their clinical features are similar to those of partial lipodystrophy, but they are distinct in that muscular atrophy, joint contractures and recurrent skin eruptions are not found in patients with partial lipodystrophy. Thirteen other Japanese patients with similar clinical manifestations have been reported.

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X-linked spinal and bulbar muscular atrophy (SBMA), a motor neuron disease associated with androgen insensitivity, is caused by androgen receptor gene mutations with an increased number of tandem CAG repeats in exon 1. We investigated the increased number of CAG repeats in androgen receptor genes of 19 SBMA patients and found that this correlated strongly with the age at onset of muscle weakness. Thus, SBMA is the first genetic disease in which a strong correlation between the degree of genetic abnormality (number of CAG tandem repeats) and clinical phenotypic expression is demonstrable.

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The gangliosides GM1 and GD1b have recently been reported to be potential target antigens in human motor neuron disease (MND) or motor neuropathy. The mechanism for selective motoneuron and motor nerve impairment by the antibodies directed against these gangliosides, however, is not fully understood. We recently investigated the ganglioside composition of isolated bovine spinal motoneurons and found that the ganglioside pattern of the isolated motoneurons was extremely complex.

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We report a patient with a relapsing form of the acute sensory neuropathy syndrome associated with IgM-kappa type monoclonal gammopathy of undetermined significance. He rapidly developed marked sensory ataxia without weakness following an upper respiratory tract infection at age 44. The symptoms reached their maximum in a few days, followed by subsequent gradual improvement over a few weeks.

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