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  • Connatal Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease  (1)
  • Kearns syndrome  (1)
  • 1
    ISSN: 1432-0533
    Keywords: Connatal Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease ; Congenital stridor ; X-linked inheritance ; Psychomotor retardation ; Quantified cerebral morphology
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Summary Two maternal cousins are described with the connatal form of Pelizaeus-Merzbacher Disease (PMD) and congenital stridor. Study of brain biopsy material confirms the diagnosis of PMD. The neuropathological findings are suggestive for the transitional form of this disease. Quantitative morphology gives support to the hypothesis that PMD is a disturbance in maturation of neurons and in myelin formation rather than an active degenerative process. The hereditary transmission is most consistent with a sex-linked recessive pattern. Different X-linked signs seem combined in the presented cases.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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  • 2
    ISSN: 1573-2622
    Keywords: Kearns syndrome ; chronic progressive external ophthalmoplegia ; dominant hereditary multisystem mitochondrial disease
    Source: Springer Online Journal Archives 1860-2000
    Topics: Medicine
    Notes: Abstract In connection with 4 new cases of Kearns syndrome (multisystem form of mitochondrial CPEO), the condition was found to be present in slight to oligosymptomatic form in all 4 families. The marker symptom in subclinical patients was nearly always ptosis (sometimes very slight) and occasionally diabetes. In the literature other endocrine disorders, retinal anomalies, deafness, growth disturbances, etc., have been noted as subclinical symptoms in former generations. Heredity appears to be autosomal dominant in these 4 families, with very variable expressivity. The possibility that one gene is responsible for the disease seems to be plausible, but the marked variation in expressivity suggests a modifying influence of other alleles; in this sense, therefore, one may speak of multifactor inheritance. Supporting facts could also be found in the literature, where there was autosomal dominant heredity of the disease-carrying gene, but for its complete expression ‘amplifying’ factors (alleles) were needed. The pleiotropia of the disease-carrying gene is explained by a mitochondrial disorder of various organs. On the basis of the heredity, therefore, Kearns syndrome is not a syndrome but a disease. The most serious, most progressive and most extensive (multisystem) variant of Kearns disease is the infantile form, known as the ‘Kearns-Sayre syndrome’. When the expressivity of the disease is less extensive it usually occurs later in life and is less progressive: the adult form of Kearns disease.
    Type of Medium: Electronic Resource
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