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1/44. amyotrophic lateral sclerosis with supranuclear ophthalmoplegia and rigidity.

    ophthalmoplegia is rarely reported in patients with amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS). We describe a patient with sporadic ALS, who had developed progressive external ophthalmoplegia of supranuclear origin and rigidity in the neck. autopsy findings showed histopathological abnormalities consistent with ALS. In addition to these findings, there was neuronal loss and gliosis in the putamina and globi pallidi, and gliosis in the periaqueductal gray matter. Our case appears to raise the possibility that ALS comprises a heterogenous group of disorders.
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keywords = rigidity
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2/44. Progressive supranuclear palsy pathology caused by a novel silent mutation in exon 10 of the tau gene: expansion of the disease phenotype caused by tau gene mutations.

    Genetic mutations in the tau gene on chromosome 17 are known to cause frontotemporal dementias. We have identified a novel silent mutation (S305S) in the tau gene in a subject without significant atrophy or cellular degeneration of the frontal and temporal cortices. Rather the cellular pathology was characteristic of progressive supranuclear palsy, with neurofibrillary tangles concentrating within the subcortical regions of the basal ganglia. Two affected family members presented with symptoms of dementia and later developed neurological deficits including abnormality of vertical gaze and extrapyramidal signs. The third presented with dystonia of the left arm and dysarthria, and later developed a supranuclear gaze palsy and falls. The mutation is located in exon 10 of the tau gene and forms part of a stem-loop structure at the 5' splice donor site. Although the mutation does not give rise to an amino acid change in the tau protein, functional exon-trapping experiments show that it results in a significant 4.8-fold increase in the splicing of exon 10, resulting in the presence of tau containing four microtubule-binding repeats. This study provides direct molecular evidence for a functional mutation that causes progressive supranuclear palsy pathology and demonstrates that mutations in the tau gene are pleiotropic.
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ranking = 0.0022155910927721
keywords = extrapyramidal
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3/44. Neuronal loss in Onuf's nucleus in three patients with progressive supranuclear palsy.

    Disorders of micturition have been reported only sporadically in patients with progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP). We report the results of a clinicopathological study of 3 patients with a definite diagnosis of PSP at various stages of their illness with sphincter abnormalities. electromyography of the sphincter muscles was performed in all 3 patients and was abnormal in 2. Morphological and morphometric evaluation of Onuf's nucleus in the sacral spinal cord, which is involved in sphincter control, showed severe cell loss, presence of neurofibrillary tangles, neuropil threads, and glial inclusions. We conclude that bladder dysfunction and abnormal sphincter electromyographic results are due to pathological changes in Onuf's nucleus, and we propose that sphincter abnormalities should be included in the list of possible symptoms of PSP.
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ranking = 9.1080641538331E-7
keywords = muscle
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4/44. Parkinson's disease associated with argyrophilic grains clinically resembling progressive supranuclear palsy: an autopsy case.

    A 70-year-old male began to show akinesia, rigidity of extremities, finger tremor, disturbed vertical external ocular movement, and nuchal dystonia, which progressed slowly. Brain CT scan and magnetic resonance images showed slight atrophy of the frontal lobe and slight enlargement of the lateral ventricles. Hasegawa's dementia rating scale-revised version gave a moderate score of 11/30 points. He died of pneumonia at the age of 76. The clinical diagnosis was progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP). However, there were no neuropathological characteristics of PSP. Neuropathologically, Parkinson's disease was diagnosed. In addition, many argyrophilic grains (ArGs) in the gray matter were stained, especially in the insula, amygdala, hippocampus, parahippocampal gyrus, lateral occipitotemporal gyrus, and substantia nigra, by the Gallyas-Braak method. We consider that ArGs could modify the symptoms of Parkinson's disease and that Parkinson's disease with ArGs may show a PSP-like clinical course.
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keywords = rigidity
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5/44. July 2000: A 70 year old with rigidity, decreased ocular movements, and dementia.

    The July Case of the Month (COM): A 70 year old male presented with a four year history of cognitive decline, difficulty expressing himself, and an increasingly unsteady gait with numerous falls. At presentation he was wheel-chair bound. Examination showed some slowing of speech, mild memory impairment, but normal cranial nerves. Spastic weakness and brisk reflexes were also noted, with bilateral ankle clonus. MRI scans were normal. Four years later he was admitted with a urinary tract infection and was mute with severely impaired ocular motility. He died 18 months later and autopsy showed the classic neuropathological findings of typical Progressive supranuclear palsy, including tau-positive glial inclusions.
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ranking = 0.8
keywords = rigidity
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6/44. Progressive supranuclear palsy on guam.

    This is the first report demonstrating that progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) exists on guam. This 75-year-old Guamanian Chamorro patient with slight dementia and rigidity with restriction of ocular up gaze was diagnosed as parkinsonism-dementia complex (PDC) of guam clinically. However, neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) were scarcely seen in the cerebral cortices and hippocampus, but many NFTs, composed of 15-17 nm straight tubules, were detected in the subthalamic nucleus and brain stem. A large number of tuft-shaped astrocytes were observed in the putamen and motor cortex, and numerous argyrophilic grains were seen in the CA1 and subiculum. These pathological findings are different from those of PDC and consistent with PSP. The present case indicates that PSP and PDC clinically resemble each other, and that precise neuropathological examination is indispensable for the final diagnosis of the patient with parkinsonism, dementia and disturbance of vertical external ocular movement.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = rigidity
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7/44. Clinical features and disease haplotypes of individuals with the N279K tau gene mutation: a comparison of the pallidopontonigral degeneration kindred and a French family.

    BACKGROUND: An N279K missense mutation in exon 10 of the tau gene reported in an American family with pallidopontonigral degeneration (PPND family) was recently found in members of a French kindred with dementia and supranuclear palsy. OBJECTIVES: To compare clinical phenotypes of both families and to perform genealogical and molecular genetic studies to determine whether they are derived from a common founder. DESIGN AND methods: We performed clinical examinations of affected members of both families and compared clinical phenotypes, existing genealogical family records, and chromosome 17 microsatellite repeat markers in the vicinity of the tau gene. RESULTS: The inheritance pattern is autosomal dominant in the PPND family and appears so in the French family. Average age at onset of clinical symptoms was 43 years in the PPND family and 41 years in the French family. Mean disease duration was 8 years in the PPND family and 6 years in the French family. Parkinsonism, personality changes, and dementia of the frontotemporal type were seen in both kindreds. All affected patients exhibited rapidly progressive parkinsonism characterized by bradykinesia, tremor, postural instability, and rigidity. Some had a transient response to levodopa therapy during the initial stages. Pyramidal signs and eye movement abnormalities, including supranuclear gaze palsy, were common. Results of linkage studies of the tau region in chromosome 17 did not reveal a haplotype common to both kindreds. CONCLUSIONS: Affected members from both families had more clinical similarities than differences. Results of genealogical and molecular genetic studies determined that the families were not related. The N279K mutations found in both families have independent origins.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = rigidity
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8/44. cerebral amyloid angiopathy and motor neurone disease presenting with a progressive supranuclear palsy-like syndrome.

    We describe a 68-year-old woman who presented with falls, mild limb bradykinesia, axial rigidity, and a severe supranuclear gaze palsy, which failed to benefit from levodopa. She subsequently developed severe apraxia, progressive dysarthria, dysphagia, and a frontal cognitive impairment. Pyramidal weakness with fasciculations and widespread chronic partial denervation appeared shortly before her death from bronchopneumonia, 6 months after disease onset. A severe cerebral amyloid angiopathy diffusely involving the cerebral hemispheres and cerebellum was present at autopsy as well as a second pathological condition indicative of motor neurone disease. cerebral amyloid angiopathy may rarely present with a progressive supranuclear palsy-like phenotype.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = rigidity
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9/44. Influence of target size on vertical gaze palsy in a pathologically proven case of progressive supranuclear palsy.

    We document a new oculomotor phenomenon in a patient with pathologically proven progressive supranuclear gaze palsy (PSP), namely that vertical gaze excursion improves with larger pursuit targets. We used computerised video-oculography during vertical smooth pursuit eye movements (SPEM) of circular targets of diameter 0.16 degrees and 16 degrees, sinusoidally oscillating at 0.08 Hz (peak-to-peak amplitude 49 degrees). Increasing target size improved vertical gaze excursion from 10 degrees to 25 degrees. There was no concomitant increase in slow phase eye velocity. The findings could be explained by a potentiation of the position control mechanism of pursuit by target size due to increased activation of brainstem pursuit-optokinetic pathways and to higher order attentional mechanisms. This observation may be useful in the clinical assessment of PSP patients with severe neck rigidity in whom the doll's head-eye manoeuvre cannot be performed by comparing the degree of vertical gaze palsy during smooth pursuit testing between at least two differently sized targets and observing whether there is a larger excursion in response to a large target such as a newspaper.
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ranking = 0.2
keywords = rigidity
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10/44. Progressive supranuclear palsy with widespread cerebral lesions.

    A 51-year-old woman with no history of any familial neurological diseases initially presented with numbness in her extremities, slowing of movements, comprehension deficit, memory disturbance, dyscalculia, muscle rigidity, hyperreflexia, Parkinsonian gait, increasing disorientation, left-right disturbance, finger agnosia, alexia, acalculia, apraxia, aspontaneity, euphoria, gait disturbance, aphasia, echolalia, and in the terminal stage, mutism, contracture of lower extremities and cachexia. She died of bronchopneumonia at the age of 55. The brain showed widespread cerebral lesions, consisting of nerve cell loss and neurofibrillary tangles in the frontal, parietal and occipital cortex, demyelination and gliosis in the frontal, parietal and occipital subcortical white matter in addition to the typical pathological findings of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP): severe neuronal loss with gliosis and neurofibrillary tangles (NFTs) in the subthalamic nucleus, globus pallidus and substantia nigra. In conclusion, we present a case of PSP with unusual clinical features (extrapyramidal signs, frontal and parietal lobe syndromes without ophthalmoplegia) and neuropathologically widespread cerebral lesions in addition to the typical pathological findings of PSP. The differential diagnosis of PSP and Alzheimer's disease and other degenerative disorders is discussed.
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ranking = 0.20221650189919
keywords = rigidity, extrapyramidal, muscle
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