نتایج جستجو برای: myotonia congenita

تعداد نتایج: 4830  

Journal: :Acta neurologica Scandinavica 2010
C Kornblum G G Lutterbey B Czermin J Reimann J-C von Kleist-Retzow K Jurkat-Rott M P Wattjes

BACKGROUND Muscle magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is the most sensitive method in the detection of dystrophic and non-dystrophic abnormalities within striated muscles. We hypothesized that in severe myotonia congenita type Becker muscle stiffness, prolonged transient weakness and muscle hypertrophy might finally result in morphologic skeletal muscle alterations reflected by MRI signal changes....

Journal: :Archives of neurology 1990
K Ricker F Lehmann-Horn R T Moxley

Autosomal-dominantly inherited nondystrophic myotonic disorders are an interesting group of muscle diseases that provide considerable opportunity for future molecular genetic studies to identify the genes responsible for specific membrane functions. A family with such a myotonic disorder is described with features that are distinctly different from myotonia congenita and paramyotonia congenita....

Journal: :Egyptian Journal of Medical Human Genetics 2022

Abstract Background Congenital myotonia is a congenital disorder that affects skeletal muscles with myotonia. Affected show stiffness and pain sometimes. The two major types of congenita are known as Thomsen disease Becker disease. These conditions distinguished by the severity their symptoms patterns inheritance. causative factor mutations in CLCN1 gene. Myotonia rarely reported black especial...

2017
Ahmed A. Hawash Andrew A. Voss Mark M. Rich

OBJECTIVE Patients with myotonia congenita have muscle hyperexcitability due to loss-of-function mutations in the ClC-1 chloride channel in skeletal muscle, which causes involuntary firing of muscle action potentials (myotonia), producing muscle stiffness. The excitatory events that trigger myotonic action potentials in the absence of stabilizing ClC-1 current are not fully understood. Our goal...

Journal: :Arquivos de neuro-psiquiatria 2003
Rosana Herminia Scola Fabio Massaiti Iwamoto Carlos Henrique Camargo Walter Oleschko Arruda Lineu Cesar Werneck

Approximately 1-2% of the population has a deficiency of the enzyme myoadenylate deaminase. Early reports suggested that patients with myoadenylate deaminase deficiency had various forms of myalgia, and exercise intolerance. However, a deficiency of the enzyme has been described in many conditions, including myopathies, neuropathies, and motor neuron disease. We report a patient with clinical d...

Journal: :Journal of Medical Genetics 1972

Journal: :Medical History 1968

Journal: :Proceedings of the Royal Society of Medicine 1923

2009
Sang-Chan Lee Hyang-Sook Kim Yeong-Eun Park Young-Chul Choi Kyu-Hyun Park Dae-Seong Kim

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE Mutations of the skeletal muscle sodium channel gene SCN4A, which is located on chromosome 17q23-25, are associated with various neuromuscular disorders that are labeled collectively as skeletal muscle sodium channelopathy. These disorders include hyperkalemic periodic paralysis (HYPP), hypokalemic periodic paralysis, paramyotonia congenita (PMC), potassium-aggravated myo...

Journal: :Neuron 1995
Michael Pusch Klaus Steinmeyer Manuela C. Koch Thomas J. Jentsch

Autosomal dominant myotonia congenita (Thomsen's disease) is caused by mutations in the muscle chloride channel CIC-1. Several point mutations found in affected families (I29OM, R317Q, P480L, and Q552R) dramatically shift gating to positive voltages in mutant/WT heterooligomeric channels, and when measurable, even more so in mutant homooligomers. These channels can no longer contribute to the r...

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