1,721,110 research outputs found

    An unusual case of meningeal gliomatosis

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    A case of meningeal gliomatosis following a primary spinal cord tumor is reported. The clinico-pathological features of this unusual extension of a spinal glioma are described. The rare incidence of this malignancy and its occurrence in young patients only are stressed. The possible pathophysiological events leading to the diffuse dissemination of the neoplastic cells are discussed

    Hepatitis C virus infection of peripheral nerves in type II cryoglobulinaemia

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    Peripheral neuropathy is a frequent complication in patients suffering from type II mixed cryoglobulinaemia (mCGII), a sort of vasculitis that is strongly associated with hepatitis C virus (HCV) infection and characterised by high concentrations of anti-HCV antibodies and HCV RNA in the cryoprecipitates. We report the finding of HCV RNA in homogenates of nerve biopsies from five such patients, by reverse transcription-polymerase chain reaction (RT-PCR) amplification of different regions of the viral genome. HCV RNA was localized in epineurial cells by in situ RT-PCR. Our data suggest that HCV infection of nerves plays a major role in mCGII-associated neuropathy

    Neurophysiological study in chronic GM2 gangliosidosis (hexosaminidase A and B deficiency), with motor neuron disease phenotype

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    We report the electrophysiological investigation of two adult cases with GM 2 gangliosidosis with hexosaminidase A and B deficiency. Superficial peroneal biopsy was obtained from one patient. The electrophysiological alterations of the peripheral nervous system were fasciculations, signs of collateral reinnervation and loss of motor units, decrease in sensory potential amplitude and increase in distal motor latency. Increase in N9-N13 interpeak latency of the somatosensory evoked potentials and an increase I-V interpeak latency of the brain-stem auditory potentials were evident in both cases. Visual evoked potentials were normal. Nerve biopsy showed a severe loss of myelinated fibers, especially of those with the largest diameter, with no signs of segmental demyelination, or remyelination. A tentative interpretation of our findings is given. PMID: 2793417 [PubMed - indexed for MEDLINE

    Motor neuron disease with pyramidal tract dysfunction involves the cortical generators of the early somatosensory evoked potential to tibial nerve stimulation

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    We evaluated somatosensory evoked potentials (SEPs) to tibial nerve stimulation in 39 patients with sporadic motor neuron disease using multiple scalp derivations (earlobe reference). SEPs were altered in 22 of 29 amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) patients, whereas they were unaffected in 10 progressive muscular atrophy (PMA) patients. The main changes involved the amplitude and the field distribution of the early P40 and N37 cortical potentials with different modalities varying from a selective loss of the P40 potential (33% of tested sides) to absence of all early cortical SEPs (22% of tested sides). The later components following N50 were generally spared. The commonly used Cz-Fz montage was inadequate for detecting these alterations. Central afferent conduction was slightly affected. The selective loss of cortical SEPs and their close correlation with clinicoelectrophysiologic evidence of central motor system involvement strongly support a cortical origin of the SEP alterations in ALS. We suggest that neuronal loss in the somatosensory cortex may selectively affect the generator sites of the cortical SEPs to lower limb stimulation

    Choroid plexus papilloma of the cerebello-pontine angle

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    The clinical symptoms, neuroradiological findings and post-operative course is described in four patients affected with a choroid plexus papilloma of the cerebello-pontine angle. Clinical criteria (such as the early onset of signs and symptoms of raised intracranial pressure, and the early impairment of the auditory function) and the neuroradiological pictures (the lack of bone lesions, the tumour appearance as a hypodense mass on CT scan, which is well-enhanced after contrast injection) help the neurosurgeon to predict the surgical findings, but they cannot be considered as definite. The prognosis of such tumours is related more to the difficulties of the surgical intervention than to the peculiar properties of the growth

    Sensory and motor peripheral neuropathy in olivopontocerebellar atrophy

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    We report the findings of an electrophysiological study in 9 patients affected by olivopontocerebellar atrophy, 4 with a dominant form and 5 with a sporadic form. Superficial peroneal nerve biopsy was obtained from 2 patients. The electrophysiological alterations were signs of collateral reinnervation and loss of motor units, decrease in sensory potential amplitude and increase in distal motor latency. Only a slight reduction in motor and sensory conduction velocity was observed in some cases. Nerve biopsy showed slight reduction of the number of myelinated fibres. In the first case, fibre diameter distribution was unimodal, due to reduction of myelinated fibres of large diameter, in the second case there was no significant alteration of the fibre distribution. In both cases short internodes were present with no signs of segmental demyelination, remyelination or axonal degeneration. The alterations observed in the peripheral nervous system are probably secondary to a lesion of the posterior root ganglion and the anterior horn cell in the spinal cord

    Neuroaxonal dystrophy with dystonia and pallidal involvement

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    Infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy (INAD) is an autosomal recessive disease of infantile onset, characterised by progressive clinical course, multi-systemic involvement and widespread presence of dystrophic axons in both the central and peripheral nervous system. Clinical, neurophysiological and neuroradiological criteria of the disease are established, but the occurrence of atypical cases is known. Since the availability of molecular markers is still lacking, diagnostic evidence in vivo is provided by the presence of specific axonal lesions distally in the peripheral nerve fibres. In two children who had a protracted course of the disease with dystonic postures of the upper limbs and showed dystrophic axons following sural nerve biopsy, bilateral pallidal hypointensity was observed after T-2-weighted MRI scans. These findings are consistent with iron deposition, and are usually observed in Hallervorden-Spatz syndrome (HSS), a condition which is also characterised by dystrophic axons diffusely present in the central nervous system. but without peripheral nervous system involvement. These observations raise the issue of different phenotypes of INAD, and are consistent with the existence of intermediate forms between INAD and HSS. Altered mechanisms of iron storage and transport to and from the cellular compartments may play a role in the pathogenesis of the disease
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