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2.
Sem Hop ; 59(36): 2555-6, 1983 Oct 13.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-6316514

ABSTRACT

The authors report a case of mixed connective tissue disease with involvement of the fifth and seventh cranial nerves. While involvement of the trigeminal nerve is well-known, that of the seventh nerve is much less so. However, seventh nerve involvement is beginning to be recognized in other connective tissue diseases such as scleroderma. Neurological manifestations in Sharp syndrome are reviewed.


Subject(s)
Cranial Nerve Diseases/etiology , Facial Nerve Diseases/etiology , Facial Paralysis/etiology , Mixed Connective Tissue Disease/complications , Trigeminal Nerve , Adult , Female , Humans , Mixed Connective Tissue Disease/diagnosis
3.
Rev Neurol (Paris) ; 136(8-9): 495-508, 1980.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7221327

ABSTRACT

During a survey conducted in Tunisia in 1978, 204 cases of hereditary degenerative spinocerebellar diseases were discovered among members of 117 families. The cases included 109 patients with Friedreich's ataxia, 28 with Piere Marie's heredo-ataxia, 20 with Strumpell-Lorrain's disease, and 47 with intermediary forms. The latter group included incomplete forms of Friedreich's and Pierre Marie's diseases. The onset or progression of the disease was linked to a febrile episode in 25 p. cent of the cases. Emphasis is placed on the presence of bladder sphincter disorders in approximately one third of the patients with Friedreich's or Pierre Marie's diseases. Manometric studies in 17 cases demonstrated the presence of normal bladders in 4 cases, hypertonicity of the bladder in 5 patients, and hypesthesic retention-type bladders in 5 other cases. In 3 patients the disorder was difficult to classify. These results show that sphincter disorders should not constitute a criterium for exclusion of the diagnosis of spinocerebellar degeneration.


Subject(s)
Cerebellar Ataxia/genetics , Spinal Cord Diseases/genetics , Urination Disorders/etiology , Adolescent , Adult , Cerebellar Ataxia/complications , Cerebellar Ataxia/diagnosis , Child , Child, Preschool , Friedreich Ataxia/diagnosis , Humans , Manometry , Muscle Spasticity/genetics , Paraplegia/genetics , Spinal Cord Diseases/complications , Tunisia , Urinary Bladder/physiology , Urination Disorders/physiopathology
4.
Rev Neurol (Paris) ; 135(12): 885-93, 1980.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-7466115

ABSTRACT

The primary interest of the case reported here of congenital atrophy of the granular layer of the cerebellum (Norman type) lies in the presence of an associated pontocerebellar degeneration, interpreted to be secondary (transsynaptic and retrograde) to the granular involvement and due to the length (42 years) of the evolution. Secondly, the sporadic character of this case is not in favor of a genetic disorder. By analogy with Herringham and Andrewes cat ataxia due to a perinatal virus infection (Margolis and Kilham), it can be hypothesized that granular cerebellar atrophy in man is related to an injury incurred at a "favorable" moment in histogenesis, that is, between the 3rd and 6th month of fetal life.


Subject(s)
Cerebellar Diseases/pathology , Adult , Animals , Atrophy , Cats , Cerebellar Ataxia/microbiology , Cerebellar Diseases/congenital , Cerebellar Diseases/embryology , Cerebellar Diseases/genetics , Female , Humans , Virus Diseases/microbiology
5.
J Neuropathol Exp Neurol ; 38(4): 401-6, 1979 Jul.
Article in English | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-448399

ABSTRACT

The authors report a case of olivopontocerebellar atrophy (OPCA) with velopharyngolaryngeal paralysis. The cerebellar syndrome appeared in a 66 year-old woman and ran its course until her death at 75. The velopharyngolaryngeal paralysis occured two years after the beginning of the cerebellar symtomatology and was limited for 6 months to a Gerhardt syndrome. Postmortem examination showed typical lesions of OPCA, and on serial sections of the medulla a massive loss of neurons in the lower two thirds of the nucleus ambiguus, bilaterally. The association of OPCA with velopharyngolaryngeal paralysis is exceptional. The anatomical findings in this case contribute to the somatotopy of the nucleus ambiguus in man by demonstrating the location of the velopharyngolaryngeal centers in this formation. The upper third plays only an accessory role in the velopharyngolaryngeal functions, and in the two lower thirds one finds, from the oral to the caudal extremity, first the velopharyngeal, then the laryngeal centers.


Subject(s)
Cerebellar Diseases/complications , Cerebellum/pathology , Larynx , Palate, Soft , Paralysis/etiology , Pharynx , Aged , Atrophy , Cerebellar Diseases/pathology , Female , Humans , Medulla Oblongata/pathology , Neurons/pathology , Paralysis/pathology
6.
J Neurol Sci ; 41(3): 359-67, 1979 May.
Article in French | MEDLINE | ID: mdl-438859

ABSTRACT

The purpose of this paper is to present explanations for various patterns of IIIrd cranial nerve involvement in diabetes mellitsus, based on its vascularisation. Three clinical cases of diabetes with numerous attacks of IIIrd nerve paralysis are reported. The following patterns were observed: (1) isolated; (2) associated with Vth nerve involvement and; (3) associated with invovlement of the Vth, IVth, VIth, and occasionally IInd and VIIth nerves. An anatomical study of IIIrd nerve vascularisation demonstrates three territories which could correspond to the 3 patterns of clinical expression. The arterial branches to the IIIrd nerve give off no collaterals in the posterior region of the circle of Willis. In the supra-cavernous region, vascularisation of the IIIrd nerve may be associated with that of the IVth. Eventually, vascularisation of the IIIrd nerve in the intracavernous region is associated with that of the Vth, IVth, VIth, and occasionally IInd and VIIth cranial nerves. Thus, a painless paralysis of the IIIrd nerve (isolated or associated only with an involvement of the IVth) would predictably be related to a vascular disturbance limited to the first or second portion of this nerve, whereas a painful paralysis of the IIIrd nerve, without or with associated involvement of other cranial nerves, would relate to a vascular distrubance in the intra-cavernous region. The anatomo-clinical relationships that have been presented: (1) support the vascular basis of IIIrd nerve paralysis in diabetes; (2) explain the various clinical patterns of IIIrd nerve involvement in that disorder and; (3) act as a model which can be applied to the study of ischemic pathology in other cranial nerves and other etiologies.


Subject(s)
Diabetes Complications , Oculomotor Nerve/blood supply , Ophthalmoplegia/etiology , Aged , Diabetes Mellitus/pathology , Female , Humans , Male
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