نتایج جستجو برای: nondystrophic myotonia

تعداد نتایج: 1472  

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...

Journal: :iranian journal of neurology 0
mohammad rohani department of neurology, school of medicine, iran university of medical sciences, ‎tehran, iran shahnaz miri department of medicine, medstar :union: memorial hospital, baltimore, maryland, usa alireza rezai-ashtiani department of neurology, school of medicine, arak university of medical sciences, arak, ‎iran

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Journal: :The Journal of General Physiology 1996
L J Hayward R H Brown S C Cannon

Missense mutations in the skeletal muscle Na+ channel alpha subunit occur in several heritable forms of myotonia and periodic paralysis. Distinct phenotypes arise from mutations at two sites within the III-IV cytoplasmic loop: myotonia without weakness due to substitutions at glycine 1306, and myotonia plus weakness caused by a mutation at threonine 1313. Heterologous expression in HEK cells sh...

Journal: :Muscle & nerve 2015
Torberg Torbergsen Karin Jurkat-Rott Erik V Stålberg Sissel Løseth Anne Hødneø Frank Lehmann-Horn

INTRODUCTION Two previously reported Norwegian patients with painful muscle cramps and giant myotonic discharges were genotyped and compared with those of members of 21 families harboring the same mutation. METHODS Using primers specific for SCN4A and CLCN1, the DNA of the Norwegian family members was amplified and bidirectionally sequenced. Clinical and neurophysiological features of other f...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 1982
A H Heller E M Eicher M Hallett R L Sidman

Electromyographic (EMG) and histological studies were carried out with the new mouse mutant myotonia (mto, autosomal recessive). Affected animals exhibited behavioral myotonia which was apparent at 2 weeks of age. EMG studies revealed myotonic discharges (prolonged repetitive discharges with recurrent variation in amplitude and frequency) in all skeletal muscles tested. These discharges were no...

Journal: :Neurology 2013
Yi-Jen Wu Chou-Ching Lin

A 48-year-old man presented with episodic paraplegia and stiffness of hands, face, and tongue, along with eyelid myotonia when exposed to cold temperature, which he had since childhood. Eyelid myotonia was evoked either by exposure to cold weather (video on the Neurology® Web site at www.neurology.org and figure 1) or by forceful eye closure. Myotonia was elicited with percussion of the tongue ...

Journal: :Reproductive Biology and Endocrinology 2006
Jennifer L Juengel

Sirs: Myotonia is a clinical phenomenon consisting of uncontrolled temporary muscle stiffness after voluntary or evoked muscle contractions [1]. It is a cardinal symptom in non-dystrophic myotonias, including chloride and sodium channelopathies. Myotonia typically occurs after a period of rest and decreases with continuing exercise, commonly referred to as the warm-up phenomenon. This is in con...

Journal: :The Journal of physiology 2002
Aisling Ryan Reinhardt Rüdel Maya Kuchenbecker Christoph Fahlke

Mutations in the voltage-dependent skeletal muscle chloride channel, ClC-1, result in dominant or recessive myotonia congenita. The Q552R mutation causes a variant of dominant myotonia with a milder phenotype, myotonia levior. To characterise the functional properties of this mutation, homodimeric mutant and heterodimeric wild-type (WT) mutant channels were expressed in tsA201 cells and studied...

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