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ABSTRACT: We performed clinical and electrophysiological studies in 42 children with hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type I and II (HMSN I and HMSN II) and in 103 members of their families. In 24 families with HMSN I the conduction velocity and the latency were markedly changed in the nerves innervating the distal muscles (median, peroneal nerves), as well as proximal muscles (facial, axillary, and musculocutaneous nerves). The changes were uniform in all motor and sensory nerves studied in the particular patient. No nerve conduction worsening with age has been found in cross-sectional analysis. In patients with HMSN I the conduction velocity was impaired even when the clinical abnormalities were minimal. The degree of the conduction velocity slowing was uniform within majority of the families. Homogeneity of conduction velocity slowing in individuals with HMSN I regardless of clinical expression suggests a primary myelin defect as an underlying cause. In patients from 18 families with HMSN II slight changes in conduction velocity were found only in the nerves innervating the distal muscles, the latency of axillary and facial nerves was within normal range. We recommend examining conduction time in facial and axillary nerves as a useful procedure for differentiation between HMSN I and II, especially in families with borderline conduction values in the long nerves.
Electromyography and clinical neurophysiology 03/1998; 38(2):95-101.
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ABSTRACT: 54 patients from 45 families were examined one to twelve years after the hospitalization in the Department of Neurology in Warsaw in period between the years 1980 and 1992. The diagnosis of the limb-girdle muscular dystrophy (LGMD) was established, or seriously considered during the first examination. Presently verification of the diagnosis is performed on the basis of DNA analysis and muscular dystrophin assessment. In 14 cases dystrophinopathy was revealed: 13 patients with Becker muscular dystrophy (BMD) and one female manifesting carrier. This examination is of great importance for genetic counselling and for correct diagnosis of sporadic male cases and girls manifesting carriership.
Neurologia i neurochirurgia polska 02/1994; 28(1 Suppl 1):115-24. · 0.43 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The present paper describes clinico-genetic characteristics of childhood and juvenile proximal spinal muscular atrophy (SMA). The investigation involved sporadic and familial cases out in 37 families. These cases showed typical or unusual course of SMA (e.g. the pedigrees suggesting an inheritance other than autosomal recessive, coexistence of SMA with other inherited diseases, unusual patterns in EMG and muscle biopsy). All cases mapped in genetical analysis to the chromosome 5q11.2-13.3 Spino-bulbar form of SMA was excluded in families in which only males were affected. The method of carriership identification is presented.
Neurologia i neurochirurgia polska 02/1994; 28(1 Suppl 1):91-102. · 0.43 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: DNA analysis was carried out in 113 patients of 103 families. In 58 families (55%) deletions were found using different cDNA probes. The attempt of studying the correlation between mental retardation in patients and the exon deletions was made. Dystrophin was evaluated in 80 patients including 12 affected females. One girl had chromosomal translocation X;22 and was a true DMD case. An unusual pedigree typical of X-linked transmission with affected subjects showing clinical features of DMD but with normally expressed dystrophin is presented. Owing to DNA and dystrophin analysis the correct diagnosis in some doubtful cases of muscular dystrophies could be established and some unusual pedigrees detected.
Acta neurobiologiae experimentalis 02/1993; 53(1):297-303. · 2.11 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The result of immunosuppressive treatment in 20 cases of generalized myasthenia gravis with onset before age 16 were analysed. The patients age at the beginning of immunosuppressive treatment ranged from 10 to 22 years. Thirteen patients suffered from a severe form of myasthenia gravis with respiratory attacks, the remaining 7 demonstrated a moderately severe form with bulbar symptoms dominating the clinical picture. Indication for immunosuppressive treatment was lack of or only slight improvement after thymectomy. Prednisone was used in 17 cases, high dosage of methylprednisolone in 8 (in one case twice), azathioprine in 11 and cyclophosphamide in 10. Best results were obtained with cyclophosphamide since significant improvement was recorded in 14/20 of patients. Corticosteroids, i.e. prednisone and high-dose methylprednisolone proved to be of limited value.
European Journal of Pediatrics 04/1992; 151(3):215-7. · 1.88 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A boy with onset features common for a moderate form of congenital nemaline myopathy, after some years developed scapulo-humeral syndrome. Extra- and intrafusal muscle fibers overloaded with rods and indicating focal degenerative changes were seen in the first biopsy. The biopsy was later repeated and revealed an improvement in muscle architecture with a dramatically decreased number of rods. This transformation suggests that rods, as well as Z-line streaming, might be a reversible anomaly of Z-discs.
Neuromuscular Disorders 02/1992; 2(5-6):413-8. · 2.80 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: A 7-year-old girl had external ophthalmoplegia, limb weakness, short stature, hearing loss, pigmentary degeneration of the retina, and increased CSF protein content. Muscle biopsy revealed vacuolar myopathy with accumulation of lipids. Electronmicroscopy showed abnormalities of shape, size, and internal structure of muscle mitochondria. Muscle activity of palmitoyl-CoA synthetase was decreased, and the content of lipids was increased. Serum and muscle carnitine levels were normal, as were muscle carnitine palmitoyltransferase and carnitine acetyltransferase.
Neurology 12/1985; 35(11):1582-6. · 8.31 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: Morphological and biochemical studies were performed in three cases of congenital non-progressive myopathy in two generations of the same family. In the muscle biopsy nearly all the fibres were uniform in enzyme activity and belonged to type 2 C. Typical structural central cores were observed in 90% of the muscle fibres. Some ultrastructural characteristics of the core area, as well as disturbances of the myofibrillar proteins pattern, seen in the examined cases suggest that core formation may be a result of protein synthesis disturbances in an early stage of myogenesis.
Journal of Neurology 02/1984; 231(4):212-9. · 3.47 Impact Factor
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Neurology 10/1981; 31(9):1113-20. · 8.31 Impact Factor
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ABSTRACT: The study of the ultrastructure of the sural nerve and peripheral blood lymphocytes of a boy with late-infantile neuronal ceroid-lipofuscinosis revealed the presence of 'curvilinear bodies' and 'fingerprint profiles'. The elder sister of the patient died at the age of 7 years after progressive mental and motor deterioration. The same kind of cytoplasmic inclusions was found in the lymphocytes of the father of these children, who had had epilepsy since the age of 32. Clinical data and the results of the ultrastructural study suggest that in the same family two different forms of ceroid-lipofuscinosis appear and that the disease is inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. This family seems to suggest the nosological unity of clinically different forms of ceroid-lipofuscinosis.
Journal of Neurology 01/1981; 226(3):205-12. · 3.47 Impact Factor
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Pediatria polska 08/1980; 55(7):875-83.
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ABSTRACT: The results of thymectomy of 28 myasthenic children observed from 1 to 9 years after operation are discussed. Improvement was obtained in 19 cases (67.8%), with full remission in 12 cases (42.8%). Six children died. No correlation was found between the results of thymectomy and the duration of the disease, sex or histological findings in the thymus. No increase of incidence or severity of infections were observed in thymectomized children. Caution is recommended regarding vaccination of myasthenic children.
Journal of Neurology 01/1978; 217(2):133-8. · 3.47 Impact Factor
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Folia histochemica et cytochemica 02/1974; 12(3-4):321-8.
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Pediatria polska 07/1973; 48(6):741-6.
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Pediatria polska 07/1973; 48(6):747-50.
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Pediatria polska 07/1969; 44(6):741-4.
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Polski tygodnik lekarski (Warsaw, Poland: 1960) 04/1969; 24(13):476-8.
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Pediatria polska 02/1968; 44(1):83-5.
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Polish medical journal 02/1968; 7(5):1209-13.
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Pediatria polska 04/1967; 42(3):363-7.