Cases reported "Neuroaxonal Dystrophies"

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1/8. Acute hemorrhagic encephalitis (Hurst disease) associated with neuroaxonal dystrophy.

    Two cases that fulfil the clinical and neuropathological criteria of acute hemorrhagic encephalitis are described. Histological examination revealed additionally focal changes in the white matter characteristic for neuroaxonal dystrophy. The differences in the clinical course and morphological picture observed in both cases are discussed.
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keywords = white matter, matter, white
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2/8. Neuroaxonal dystrophy with dystonia and pallidal involvement.

    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 T2-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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keywords = nervous system
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3/8. Neuroaxonal leukodystrophy associated with congenital cutis laxa: report of an autopsy case.

    A male patient, who was born with congenital cutis laxa characterized by cutaneous laxity due to the degeneration of elastic fibers, presented with an arrest of mental and motor development at the age of 3 years. The progressive decline of the psychomotor abilities led to the patient's death at the age of 4 years and 9 months. An autopsy revealed extensive white matter degeneration, characterized by the formation of numerous neuroaxonal spheroids and a diffuse loss of axons and myelin sheaths. The centrum semiovale and the cerebellar white matter were the most severely affected. The ultrastructure of the spheroids was consistent with a dystrophic type of axonal swelling. neurons of the cerebral cortex, cerebellar cortex, and some brain stem nuclei were lost in moderate to severe degrees, and there were relatively few neuroaxonal spheroids in the gray matter. The pallidum and substantia nigra were well preserved. Neuroaxonal leukodystrophy, in which the spheroid formation predominantly affects the white matter, is the rarest variant of primary neuroaxonal dystrophies, and there are very few reports of autopsied cases. Among the reported cases, two Japanese siblings had congenital skin lesions similar to those of our case. The unique association of neuroaxonal leukodystrophy and congenital cutis laxa may form a distinct variant in this disease category.
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ranking = 2.2599046710274
keywords = white matter, matter, white
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4/8. Transganglionic gracile response following limb amputation in man.

    Gracile neuroaxonal dystrophy (nad) is an distinctive morphological alteration of central projecting axon terminals of dorsal root ganglion neurons. Experimentally, lower limb amputation has been shown to accelerate the formation of gracile nad, suggesting that the transganglionic response to peripheral axotomy may play a role in its development. To determine if a similar response occurs in the human sensory nervous system following peripheral nerve injury, we have performed postmortem histopathological examinations of the dorsal column nuclei of three patients (aged 15, 55, and 77 years old); all of whom had undergone accidental or therapeutic unilateral limb amputation (1 year, 38 years, and 1 year 8 months prior to death, respectively). In a 15-year-old man who underwent therapeutic leg amputation, the gracile nuclei on the transected side revealed reactive gliosis and many small axonal spheroids. The spheroids and fine neurites were immunolabelled with antibodies for growth-associated protein-43, ubiquitin and neuropeptide y (NPY). Neither routine histological nor immunohistochemical methods demonstrated comparable changes in the contralateral gracile nucleus. In a 77-year-old man who underwent leg amputation, the gracile nucleus on the amputated side was gliotic and showed several NPY and ubiquitin-immunoreactive spheroids, which were not seen in the contralateral non-transected side. A 55-year-old man with a history of accidental arm amputation showed well-developed nad in the cuneate nucleus only on the transected side. This study clearly demonstrates the occurrence of transganglionic response to limb amputation in human dorsal column nuclei. The extent of the regenerative and/or degenerative responses may vary depending on the age of the patient and the time interval following the peripheral axotomy.
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ranking = 0.032974128420005
keywords = nervous system
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5/8. Infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy and giant axonal neuropathy--overlap diseases of neuronal cytoskeletal elements in childhood?

    giant axonal neuropathy (GAN) and infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy (INAD) are two progressive neurodegenerative disorders of childhood that have considerable clinical as well as histological overlap but are believed to be ultrastructurally distinct. The clinicopathological and ultrastructural features of three cases of INAD, two of whom are siblings and one case of GAN are described. The sural nerve biopsies in all four cases were essentially similar on light microscopy revealing giant axons. On electron microscopy, the findings in the case of GAN were typical with dense accumulation of neurofilaments within the giant axons. In the three cases of INAD, too, in addition to accumulation of mitochondria and organelles with vesiculotubular profiles, a similar increase in neurofilaments was evident. We, therefore, believe that these two disorders may represent a spectrum in evolution of intermediate filament pathology with various organelles participating in the temporal evolution of the disease process.
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ranking = 0.035330084430841
keywords = childhood
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6/8. Etiology and pathophysiology of autistic behavior: clues from two cases with an unusual variant of neuroaxonal dystrophy.

    Two unrelated individuals with autistic behavior had numerous swollen axon terminals (spheroids) located in specific brain regions relevant to their behavioral symptoms. Spheroids are characteristic of neuroaxonal dystrophy, but the clinical profile and anatomic distribution of the lesions in these two patients differed from those of previously described patients with neuroaxonal dystrophy. Spheroids were numerous in the sensory nuclei of the spinal cord and medulla, specific nuclei and the reticular formation of the brainstem tegmentum, hypothalamus, anterior and dorsomedial thalamus, hippocampus, and cingulate and orbitofrontal cortices. Spheroids were sparse in the primary and association cortices and basal ganglia and absent in the hemispheric white matter. Cerebellar atrophy was present in both cases but associated with spheroids in only one case. These cases represent a new variant of neuroaxonal dystrophy in which behavioral symptoms characteristic of autism dominated the clinical picture. Neuroaxonal dystrophy should be included in the list of diseases that may be found in persons with autism.
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7/8. neurologic manifestations of Kanzaki disease.

    We describe the neurologic findings in a patient with alpha-n-acetylgalactosaminidase deficiency (Kanzaki disease). Clinical and electrophysiologic studies revealed sensory-motor polyneuropathy, and sural nerve pathology showed decreased density of myelinated fibers with axonal degeneration. The patient had mildly impaired intellectual function with abnormal brain MRI and sensory-neuronal hearing impairment with repeated episodes of vertigo attacks. These findings suggest that Kanzaki disease may develop neurologic complications in the CNS and peripheral nervous system.
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ranking = 0.032974128420005
keywords = nervous system
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8/8. Thalamic dementia: an example of primary astroglial dystrophy of Seitelberger.

    Pure thalamic dementia is highly uncommon and typically demonstrates widespread loss of neurons throughout the thalamus associated with reactive gliosis. This report describes an autopsy case in which there is widespread gliosis of subcortical white matter, focal hippocampal sclerosis and a unique proliferation of protoplasmic astrocytes in the thalamus, with limited bilateral focal loss of neurons. The alterations of the protoplasmic astrocytes consist of proliferation of perivascular feet surrounding blood vessels and velate sheets which surround individual neurons. It is proposed that the astrocytic alterations, or astrocytic dystrophy, constitute the primary and critical pathologic-change, sufficiently severe to produce dementia in the presence of a relatively intact neuronal population.
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keywords = white matter, matter, white
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