Search results for "MYOPATHY"
showing 10 items of 352 documents
Juvenile autophagic vacuolar myopathy - a new entity or variant?
2013
Gene-Related Protein Surplus Myopathies
2000
Numerous muscular dystrophies, such as dystrophinopathies, sarcoglycanopathies, and emerino- and laminopathies, are marked by the absence or reduction of mutant transsarcolemmal or nuclear proteins. In addition to these recently identified minus-proteinopathies, there are a growing number of plus-proteinopathies among neuromuscular disorders marked by a surplus or excess of endogenous proteins within muscle fibers of different, i.e., nontranssarcolemmal and nonnuclear types. These proteins are often filamentous; for example, desmin and actin accrue in respective desmin-related myopathies, among which are entities marked by mutant desmin, true desminopathies, and actinopathy, the latter ofte…
Congenital myopathies with inclusion bodies: a brief review
1998
Abstract Based on morphological abnormalities, congenital myopathies can be classified into several categories: (1) enzyme histochemically abnormal appearance without structural pathology, e.g. congenital fibre type disproportion or congenital fibre type uniformity; (2) abnormally placed nuclei, e.g. myotubular and centronuclear myopathies; (3) disruption of normal intrinsic structures, largely sarcomeres, e.g. central cores and minicores; (4) abnormal inclusions within muscle fibres. Several such inclusions are derived from pre-existing structures, most notably rods or nemaline bodies. Other derivatives of Z-band material are cytoplasmic bodies and possibly related inclusions as spheroid b…
Ischemic and non-ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy
2014
Abstract Dilated Cardiomyopathy is a high-incident disease, which diagnosis of and treatments are clinical priority. The aim of our study was to evaluate the diagnostic potential of cardiac magnetic resonance (CMR) imaging; echocardiography and the biochemical parameters that can help us differentiate between the post-ischemic and non-ischemic dilated cardiomyopathy. Materials and methods. The study enrolled 134 patients with dilated cardiomyopathy: 74 with the post-ischemic form and 60 with the non-ischemic one. All patients underwent a coronary imaging test, with echocardiogram, cardiac magnetic resonance and a blood test. Pro-inflammatory cytokines were evaluated using Luminex kit. Data …
Mitochondria-related encephalomyopathies.
1989
Owing to advances in morphological and biochemical techniques, the mitochondria-related myopathies and encephalomyopathies have emerged as a still rapidly growing group of primary and secondary metabolic disorders, which may extend from infancy to late adulthood. Impairment of the biochemically diversified mitochondria is reflected in an enormous number of deficiencies, often affecting several mitochondrial enzymes in the same patient; morphologically abnormal mitochondria are common and are thus not specific to individual mitochondrial enzyme deficiencies. Skeletal muscle biopsies have provided a wealth of data through histological and histochemical studies and from isolated mitochondria. …
Cardiomyopathic lentiginosis: an echo-Doppler report
1995
We report a case of a 64-year-old woman with cardiomyopathic lentiginosis. All the echocardiographic features of a hypertrophic obstructive cardiomyopathy were detected, with an accurate noninvasive measure of the left ventricle outflow gradient.
Speech treatment in nemaline myopathy: A single-subject experimental study
2020
Abstract Purpose The objective of this work was to verify the efficacy of a treatment based on myofunctional therapy techniques which aimed to improve the tongue strength, precision, and speed of a ten-year-old girl with nemaline myopathy (NM) and the repercussions of this therapy on her speech intelligibility. NM is a rare congenital muscle disorder that causes extreme muscle weakness, especially in the face and neck, as well as severe dysarthria and dysphagia, although this does not affect the nervous system or cognitive development. Method This was a single-subject experimental study which used an interrupted pre- and post-treatment time-series design, and which applied autoregressive in…
In HCV-related liver cirrhosis, local pulse wave velocity increases and in decompensated patients correlates with poorer survival
2018
BackgroundCirrhotic cardiomyopathy (CCM) refers to cardiac dysfunction in patients with liver cirrhosis, in the absence of other known cardiac disease.MethodsControl group and patients diagnosed of liver cirrhosis without known cardiac disease or hepatocellular carcinoma were enrolled for this clinical observation study. Patients with diabetes mellitus, hypertension were excluded. Absolute global longitudinal strain, one-point carotid pulse wave velocity (one-point PWV) and various parameters were measured in resting status.ResultsThere were 29 participants in the control group and 80 patients in the liver cirrhosis group. 27.8% of cirrhotic patients presented with normal systolic but abnor…
Clinical implications of the hyperdynamic syndrome in cirrhosis.
2014
Abstract The hyperdynamic syndrome is a late consequence of portal hypertension in cirrhosis. The principal hemodynamic manifestations of the hyperdynamic syndrome are high cardiac output, and increased heart rate and total blood volume, accompanied by reduced total systemic vascular resistance. Pathophysiology involves a complex of humoral and neural mechanisms that can determine hemodynamic changes, and lead to hyperdynamic circulation. In this review we focus our attention on the manifestations of the hyperdynamic syndrome. Some of these are well described and directly related to portal hypertension (varices, ascites, hepatic encephalopathy, and hepatorenal syndrome), while others, such …
Cardiac involvement in patients with cirrhosis: a focus on clinical features and diagnosis
2016
Cirrhotic heart has been traditionally considered protected from cardiovascular disease, even if a large amount of literature has recently shown that patients affected by chronic liver disease are exposed to cardiovascular events, as well. Since the first recognition of cardiac involvement in cirrhosis, all published studies explain that decompensated cirrhotic patients suffer from haemodynamic changes, currently known as hyperdynamic syndrome, which finally lead to cirrhotic cardiomyopathy. This is defined by the presence of a subclinical systolic dysfunction unmasked under stress conditions, impaired diastolic function and electrophysiological abnormalities, in the absence of any known ca…