نتایج جستجو برای: calcium channelopathy
تعداد نتایج: 167790 فیلتر نتایج به سال:
primary hypokalemic periodic paralysis is a familial channelopathy inherited as an autosomal dominant trait. the first attack of paralysis may be evolved at any age, but has been reported to be most common in the second decade, so that some authorities believe that an episodic weakness beginning after age 25 is almost never due to primary periodic paralysis. in this retrospective study, we revi...
Channelopathies are often linked to defective protein folding and trafficking. Among them, the calcium channelopathy episodic ataxia type-2 (EA2) is an autosomal dominant disorder related to mutations in the pore-forming Ca(v)2.1 subunit of P/Q-type calcium channels. Although EA2 is linked to loss of Ca(v)2.1 channel activity, the molecular mechanism underlying dominant inheritance remains uncl...
This is the first report of benign adult familial myoclonic epilepsy (BAFME) with night blindness. Our cases of BAFME (mother, son, and daughter) demonstrated night blindness with a reduced b-wave response on electroretinography (ERG) suggesting an alteration in calcium-mediated neurotransmitter release from photoreceptors in response to light. Several familial epilepsies have been shown to be ...
De novo phosphatase and tensin homolog on chromosome ten (PTEN) mutations are a cause of sporadic autism. How single-copy loss of PTEN alters neural function is not understood. Here we report that Pten haploinsufficiency increases the expression of small-conductance calcium-activated potassium channels. The resultant augmentation of this conductance increases the amplitude of the afterspike hyp...
Congenital or familial short QT syndrome is a genetically heterogeneous cardiac channelopathy without structural heart disease that has a dominant autosomal or sporadic pattern of transmission affecting the electric system of the heart. Patients present clinically with a spectrum of signs and symptoms including irregular palpitations due to episodes of paroxysmal atrialfibrillation, dizziness a...
Ion channel dysfunction or "channelopathy" is a proven cause of epilepsy in the relatively uncommon genetic epilepsies with Mendelian inheritance. But numerous examples of acquired channelopathy in experimental animal models of epilepsy following brain injury have also been demonstrated. Our understanding of channelopathy has grown due to advances in electrophysiology techniques that have allow...
Channelopathies are inherited genetic changes in ion channel genes that generate a disease. Given the pivotal role of voltage-dependent potassium channels in moderating neuronal excitability, it is not surprising that these channels are well represented among the channelopathies contributing to epilepsy. Voltage-dependent potassium channels are regarded as the “initial responders” that shape an...
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