Cases reported "leigh disease"

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1/254. vocal cord paralysis and hypoventilation in a patient with suspected leigh disease.

    The authors report the case of a 16-month-old male with suspected leigh disease, which was diagnosed on the basis of the clinical manifestations, abnormal lactate stimulation test, proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy, and neuroradiologic findings. Progressive stridor resulting from bilateral vocal cord paralysis and hypoventilation was evident. The authors suggest that for infants or children who exhibit vocal cord paralysis, mitochondrial disorders, such as leigh disease, should be considered. ( info)

2/254. adult Leigh syndrome with mitochondrial dna mutation at 8993.

    adult onset Leigh syndrome with a nucleotide (nt) 8993 mutation in mitochondrial (mt) dna is reported. A 43-year-old woman with a 6-year-history of insulin-resistant diabetes mellitus developed muscular weakness, intractable nausea and vomiting, and anemia. These were followed vertigo, blindness, and deafness with nystagmus. magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) revealed abnormal high intensities in the bilateral medial regions of the thalamus and periaqueductal gray matters. autopsy disclosed well-demarcated necrotizing lesions with prominent capillaries in the areas detected by MRI, which were sufficiently diagnostic for Leigh syndrome. MtDNA analysis performed on DNAs extracted from formalin-fixed tissues including liver, heart, brain, muscle, kidney and pancreas showed a T-->G mutation at nt 8993. This is the first case of adult Leigh syndrome demonstrating on mtDNA mutations. ( info)

3/254. Alexander's disease: unique presentation.

    Subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy (Leigh syndrome) refers to a nebulous disease entity characterized by lactic acidosis, a wide variety a clinical manifestations, and a consistent conglomeration of pathologic findings. Several abnormalities in metabolism have been delineated in association with Leigh syndrome, but many cases have no identified metabolic abnormality. We report a case that clinically, metabolically, and neuroradiologically appeared to be Leigh syndrome. In addition, our patient exhibited other unusual clinical findings, including ocular motility abnormalities. Neuropathologically, however, the diagnosis of Alexander's disease was confirmed. A review of the literature failed to find other cases of Alexander's disease reported with the metabolic abnormalities and clinical manifestations with which our patient presented. ( info)

4/254. Leigh syndrome associated with a mutation in the NDUFS7 (PSST) nuclear encoded subunit of complex I.

    Leigh syndrome is the phenotypical expression of a genetically heterogeneous cluster of disorders, with pyruvate dehydrogenase complex deficiency and respiratory chain disorders as the main biochemical causes. We report the first missense mutation within the nuclear encoded complex I subunit, NDUFS7, in 2 siblings with neuropathologically proven complex I-deficient Leigh syndrome. ( info)

5/254. Proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy to study the metabolic changes in the brain of a patient with Leigh syndrome.

    Localized proton magnetic resonance spectroscopy (MRS) was performed to study the metabolic changes in the brain of a patient with Leigh syndrome, who had a T-->G point mutation at nt 8993 of mitochondrial dna. In this patient, sodium dichloroacetate therapy normalized the lactate and pyruvate levels in both blood and cerebrospinal fluid (CSF). However, his psychomotor retardation did not improve and magnetic resonance imaging showed progressive cerebral atrophy. In the patient's spectra, elevation of brain lactate was observed throughout the brain with regional variations, predominantly in the basal ganglia and brainstem with an abnormal MRI appearance. Although the lactate/creatine ratio observed on proton-MRS was related to the CSF lactate level, the ratio did not completely parallel the CSF lactate level, i.e. brain lactate was detected even when the CSF lactate level had become normalized. Furthermore, proton-MRS revealed a decrease in the N-acetylaspartate/creatine ratio and an increase in the choline/creatine ratio, representing neuronal loss and breakdown of membrane phospholipids. The clinical and MRI findings were well related to the changes in spectroscopically determined brain metabolites. These results indicate that the brain metabolites observed on proton-MRS are useful indicators of a response to therapy and prognosis in Leigh syndrome. ( info)

6/254. 3-Methylglutaconic aciduria and hypermethioninaemia in a child with clinical and neuroradiological findings of leigh disease.

    We report on a child with a clinical and neuroradiological picture consistent with leigh disease and an unusual association of isolated hypermethioninaemia and 3-methylglutaconic aciduria. A low-methionine diet normalized both plasma methionine and urine 3-methylglutaconic acid; a methionine-loading test led to significant increase of both metabolites. In the skin fibroblasts the activity of 3-methylglutaconyl-CoA hydratase was essentially normal. No explanation of this uncommon association of hypermethioninaemia and glutaconic aciduria is available. The possibility of a common transporter for 3-methylglutaconic acid and methionine is an attractive hypothesis. ( info)

7/254. Acute or subacute cranial computed tomography findings in patients with congenital lactic acidemia.

    Two patients with congenital lactic acidemia of unknown etiology developed striking and extensive cranial computed tomography abnormalities of acute or subacute onset. In addition to Leigh syndrome and MELAS (mitochondrial encephalomyopathy, lactic acidosis, and stroke-like episodes), other lactic acidemia disorders may produce evolving cerebral radiographic abnormalities. An aggressive effort should be made in such patients to obtain a specific diagnosis through biochemical and molecular genetic studies. ( info)

8/254. Uncommon morphologic characteristics in Leigh's disease.

    We describe a 4-month-old male patient with severe developmental delay and elevated lactate in blood and CSF. The MR images showed abnormalities differing from the typical pattern found in association with Leigh's disease. The examination of fibroblast cultures showed diminished activity of mitochondrial complexes I and III. The patient died at the age of 9 months. ( info)

9/254. adult leigh syndrome: treatment with intravenous soybean oil for acute central respiratory failure.

    This study reports a 38-year-old woman with adult Leigh syndrome associated with partial deficiency of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. The patient had intermittent diplopia, loss of vision, dystonia, central respiratory failure and unconsciousness with lactic acidosis. Treatment with an intravenous ketogenic emulsion resulted in rapid clinical and biochemical improvement. In patients with acute respiratory failure under these circumstances, intravenous ketogenic emulsion therapy is worth consideration. copyright Lippincott Williams & Wilkins ( info)

10/254. Acute necrotising encephalopathy of childhood after exanthema subitum outside japan or taiwan.

    Acute necrotising encephalopathy of childhood (ANE) is an uncommon disease which predominantly affects infants and young children living in japan and taiwan. A multifocal encephalopathy with symmetrical lesions in the thalamus, tegmentum of the brain stem, cerebral periventricular white matter and cerebellar medulla is characteristic. We present the imaging features in a 4-year-old Japanese boy who had been living in germany for 2 1/2 years before presentation. ( info)
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