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1/17. A kinematic study of progressive apraxia with and without dementia.

    BACKGROUND: Prehension is an ideationally simple, cued movement requiring proximal (transport) and distal (manipulation) limb control. patients with this syndrome of progressive apraxia are unable to perform many activities of daily living that require prehension. There is little known about how this syndrome kinematically disrupts such movements or whether concurrent dementia might play a critical role. OBJECTIVES: Using prehension as a paradigm for an ideationally simple, cued functional movement, we sought to (1) characterize the kinematic features of progressive apraxia in general, and (2) contrast the kinematic differences between apraxic patients with and without dementia. methods: Eight patients with the syndrome of progressive apraxia (including five without dementia, one of whom had autopsy-confirmed corticobasal ganglionic degeneration, and three with dementia, one of whom had autopsy-confirmed Alzheimer's disease) were compared with eight age-matched normal control subjects on a prehension task using an Optotrak camera system. RESULTS: Compared with control subjects, apraxic subjects had slowed reaction time, slowed transport and manipulation kinematics, greater lateral deviation from the linear prehension trajectory, greater intermanual asymmetry, motor programming disturbances, and mild transport-manipulation uncoupling. There were minor differences between the apraxia subgroups such as greater intermanual differences and impaired grip aperture velocity in the nondemented group, and overall slower movement in the demented group. CONCLUSIONS: There are major kinematic differences between apraxic and control subjects on a prehension task. The differences between clinical-pathologic subgroups are more subtle, and the movement disorder itself rather than concurrent dementia is the greatest determinant of motor disability.
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ranking = 1
keywords = basal ganglion, ganglion
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2/17. Palatal tremor, progressive multiple cranial nerve palsies, and cerebellar ataxia: a case report and review of literature of palatal tremors in neurodegenerative disease.

    We describe a patient with an unusual clinical presentation of progressive multiple cranial nerve palsies, cerebellar ataxia, and palatal tremor (PT) resulting from an unknown etiology. magnetic resonance imaging showed evidence of hypertrophy of the inferior olivary nuclei, brain stem atrophy, and marked cerebellar atrophy. This combination of progressive multiple cranial nerve palsies, cerebellar ataxia, and PT has never been reported in the literature. We have also reviewed the literature of PT secondary to neurodegenerative causes. In a total of 23 patients, the common causes are sporadic olivopontocerebellar atrophy (OPCA; 22%), Alexander's disease (22%), unknown etiology (43.4%), and occasionally progressive supranuclear palsy (4.3%) and spinocerebellar degeneration (4.3%). Most patients present with progressive cerebellar ataxia and approximately two thirds of them have rhythmic tremors elsewhere. ear clicks are observed in 13% and evidence of hypertrophy of the inferior olivary nucleus in 25% of the patients. The common neurodegenerative causes of PT are OPCA/multiple system atrophy, Alexander's disease, and, in most of them, the result of an unknown cause.
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ranking = 0.023429392548234
keywords = nucleus
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3/17. Clinical and brain 18fluoro-2-deoxyglucose positron emission tomographic findings in ethylmalonic aciduria, a progressive neurometabolic disease.

    We report a 2-year-old boy with ethylmalonic aciduria and vasculopathy syndrome evaluated by 18fluoro-2-deoxyglucose positron emission tomographic (18FDG PET) brain scan, with intense uptake of 18FDG in the caudate nucleus and putamen bilaterally but with no morphological changes on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). A repeat 18FDG PET brain scan 1 year later showed a significant bilateral decreased uptake of glucose in the putamen and the head of the caudate nucleus as well as a decreased uptake in the frontal lobes. On MRI, there was atrophy and watershed infarcts in the basal ganglia, explaining the loss of glucose uptake. These results reflect a selective vulnerability of the basal ganglia, their functional derangement, and ultimate degeneration.
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ranking = 0.046858785096467
keywords = nucleus
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4/17. Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation, type 1 is characterized by alpha-, beta-, and gamma-synuclein neuropathology.

    Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation, type 1 (NBIA 1), or Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome, is a rare neurodegenerative disorder characterized clinically by Parkinsonism, cognitive impairment, pseudobulbar features, as well as cerebellar ataxia, and neuropathologically by neuronal loss, gliosis, and iron deposition in the globus pallidus, red nucleus, and substantia nigra. The hallmark pathological lesions of NBIA 1 are axonal spheroids, but Lewy body (LB)-like intraneuronal inclusions, glial inclusions, and rare neurofibrillary tangles also occur. Here we show that there is an accumulation of alpha-synuclein (alphaS) in LB-like inclusions, glial inclusions, and spheroids in the brains of three NBIA 1 patients. Further, beta-synuclein (betaS) and gamma-synuclein (gammaS) immunoreactivity was detected in spheroids but not in LB-like or glial inclusions. Western blot analysis demonstrated high-molecular weight alphaS aggregates in the high-salt-soluble and Triton X-100-insoluble/sodium dodecyl sulfate-soluble fraction of the NBIA 1 brain. Significantly, the levels of alphaS were markedly reduced in the Triton X-100-soluble fractions compared to control brain, and unlike other synucleinopathies, insoluble alphaS did not accumulate in the formic acid-soluble fraction. These findings expand the concept of neurodegenerative synucleinopathies by implicating alphaS, betaS, and gammaS in the pathogenesis of NBIA 1.
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ranking = 0.023429392548234
keywords = nucleus
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5/17. Pallido-Luysio-Nigral atrophy revealed by rapidly progressive hemidystonia: a clinical, radiologic, functional, and neuropathologic study.

    Pallido-luysio-nigral atrophy (PLNA) is a rare neurodegenerative disease in which the clinical and radiologic correlates have not yet been clearly established. A 62-year-old man insidiously developed dystonic postures, choreoathetoid movements, slowness, and stiffness, which initially affected the right hand and foot and progressively spread to the entire right side. T2-weighted magnetic resonance imaging showed increased signal intensity in both left and right medial pallida and in the left substantia nigra. Tests using HMPAO-SPECT and FDG-PET demonstrated left cortical hyperperfusion and hypermetabolism, whereas the left lenticular nucleus was slightly hypometabolic. At age 65, abnormal movements and postures involved all four limbs and the axis causing major gait disturbances, and facial and bulbar muscles atrophied resulting in dysarthria, dysphagia, and impaired breathing. Diffuse amyotrophy and fasciculations also appeared. death occurred at age 66, 4 years after onset. At autopsy, severe bilateral neuronal loss and gliosis restricted to the pallidum, the subthalamic nucleus, the substantia nigra, and the hypoglossal nucleus were noted, accounting for the diagnosis of PLNA with lower motor neuron involvement. Progressive hemidystonia with adult onset represents an unusual clinical presentation for this disorder. Moreover, this observation indicates that a diagnosis of PLNA should be considered for specific magnetic resonance imaging, SPECT, and/or PET data, and suggests that in PLNA, pallidal dysfunction might play a key role in the dystonic presentation.
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ranking = 0.070288177644701
keywords = nucleus
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6/17. Cortical-basal ganglionic degeneration: a clinical, functional and cognitive evaluation (1-year follow-up).

    We decided to evaluate a patient who was diagnosed with cortical-basal ganglionic degeneration from a clinical, instrumental and neuropsychological perspective. Our aim was to employ a new instrumental tool, functional magnetic resonance, in order to evaluate his cortical damage. We then followed the pathological course for 1 year and tested the patient again: we discuss the results of our evaluation, having an overview of the literature on the topic. In particular, we focused our attention on his apraxia, trying to suggest a dynamic and anatomical model to guarantee a possible explanation of his behavior.
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ranking = 5
keywords = basal ganglion, ganglion
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7/17. Recruitment of nonexpanded polyglutamine proteins to intranuclear aggregates in neuronal intranuclear hyaline inclusion disease.

    Recruitment of polyglutamine-containing proteins into nuclear inclusions (NIs) was investigated in neuronal intranuclear hyaline inclusion disease (NIHID). Some polyglutamine-containing proteins, ataxin-2, ataxin-3, and tata box binding protein (TBP), as well as unidentified proteins with expanded polyglutamine tracts were recruited into NIs with different frequencies. Ataxin-3 was incorporated into most of the NIs and disappeared from its normal cytoplasmic localization, whereas only a small fraction of NIs contained ataxin-2 and TBP. The consistent presence of ataxin-3 in NIs could reflect a biological feature of wild-type ataxin-3, which is translocated into the nucleus under pathological conditions and participates in the formation of aggregates. Ataxin-2 also accumulated in the nucleus, but was not necessarily incorporated into NIs, suggesting that transport of these cytoplasmic proteins into the nucleus and their recruitment into NIs are not wholly explained by an interaction with a polyglutamine stretch and must be regulated in part by other mechanisms. The prevalence of ubiquitin-immunopositive NIs was inversely correlated to neuronal loss in all cases examined. This correlation could be explained if NI formation is a protective mechanism involving the ubiquitin-proteasome pathway. This hypothesis is supported by the finding that the polyglutamine epitope in the center of NIs was surrounded by ubiquitin.
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ranking = 0.070288177644701
keywords = nucleus
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8/17. Involuntary hand levitation associated with parietal damage: another alien hand syndrome.

    The alien hand syndrome (AHS) usually consists of an autonomous motor activity perceived as an involuntary and purposeful movement, with a feeling of foreignness of the involved limb, commonly associated with a failure to recognise ownership of the limb in the absence of visual clues. It has been described in association to lesions of the frontal lobes and corpus callosum. However, parietal damage can promote an involuntary, but purposeless, hand levitation, which, sometimes, resembles AHS. In the present study, four patients (cortico-basal ganglionic degeneration - n=2; Alzheimer's disease - n=1 and parietal stroke - n=1) who developed alien hand motor behaviour and whose CT, MRI and/or SPECT have disclosed a major contralateral parietal damage or dysfunction are described. These results reinforce the idea that parietal lobe lesions may also play a role in some patients with purposeless involuntary limb levitation, which is different from the classic forms of AHS.
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ranking = 1
keywords = basal ganglion, ganglion
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9/17. A case of clinically and neuropathologically atypical corticobasal degeneration with widespread iron deposition.

    A 65-year-old woman was admitted to our hospital for forgetfulness, depression and eccentric behavior that had been first noticed 2 years prior to admission. She showed memory impairment, perseveration and repeated violent actions, but no limb-kinetic apraxia. She died 12 years after the onset of symptoms. At autopsy, the unfixed brain weighed 820 g. atrophy was circumscribed in the frontal lobe on both sides. The globus pallidus and the caudate nucleus were markedly atrophic and gold yellow in color, and the substantia nigra was strikingly pale. The cortical area showed neuronal loss and status spongiosus of the second and third cortical layers with ballooned neurons. Marked neuronal loss was observed in the dorsomedial nucleus of the thalamus, Meynert basal nucleus and substantia nigra. With Holzer stain, fibrillary gliosis was found to be severe in the frontal lobe, globus pallidus, subthalamic nucleus, hippocampus, dorsomedial nucleus of thalamus, substantia nigra, pontine tegmentum and inferior olivary nucleus. With Bielschowsky-Hirano stain, neurofibrillary tangles were observed in the cortex, hippocampus, substantia nigra, dentate nucleus, subthalamic nucleus, pontine nucleus, the inferior olivary nucleus, dorsomedial nucleus of the thalamus and, to a lesser extent, the neostriatum. Strikingly numerous argyrophilic and tau-positive threads were present in the cerebral white matter. These neuropathological findings corresponded to corticobasal degeneration, but lesions characteristic of progressive supranuclear palsy were also found. Moreover, widespread iron deposition throughout the central nervous system was the most striking finding of the present case. To our knowledge, such a case has not been reported in the literature to date.
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ranking = 0.25772331803057
keywords = nucleus
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10/17. A case of rapidly progressive multiple system degeneration: morphological findings and pathogenetic implications.

    A 62-year-old woman was referred to our psychiatric hospital by the municipal health office, because she was in such a neglected condition that she was a danger to herself. Initially, it was suspected that she was suffering from dementia or psychosis. x-rays led to the suspicion of bronchial carcinoma. Consequently, the mental changes were interpreted as probable effects of metastases to the brain. There was not enough time, however, to check the patient thoroughly to find the actual cause of her altered personality. The patient developed a high fever (up to 42 degrees C). A few days later, she died of cardiorespiratory failure with severe abscess-forming obstructive pneumonia. An autopsy confirmed the bronchial carcinoma. However, metastases were only found in the hilar lymph nodes. No metastases were detectable in the CNS, either macroscopically or microscopically. The neuropathological examination of the brain revealed multiple system degeneration. The striking microscopic findings (a large number of typical apoptotic figures visible with the light microscope in ganglion cells, lack of cytoplasmic inclusion bodies in the oligodendroglia and an unusually strong monocytic reaction (so-called reactive satellitosis) indicated that the disease course had been very rapid. Perhaps these were early steps in the evolution of a multisystem atrophy. A kind of time-lapse effect, as it were, revealed simultaneously individual details of the pathogenetic course, which would have disappeared in the usual long course of the disease and thus could not have been observed, even with the most up-to-date molecular methods. It is very likely that this was a paraneoplastic syndrome.
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ranking = 0.28247395534864
keywords = ganglion
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