نتایج جستجو برای: hyperekplexia. hypertonia. startle

تعداد نتایج: 3150  

Journal: :medical journal of islamic republic of iran 0
j akhoondian from the department of pediatrics. imam reza hospital, mashhad university of medical sciences mashhad, l.r. iran m jafarzadeh mj parizadeh

we present an infant girl with hyperekplexia, hypertonia, hyperreflexia and a characteristic exaggerated response to nose tap. this disorder is important to recognize because of the increased risk of apnea and sudden infant death, this infant responded to clonazepam.

2010
Jeff S. Davies Seo-Kyung Chung Rhys H. Thomas Angela Robinson Carrie L. Hammond Jonathan G. L. Mullins Eloisa Carta Brian R. Pearce Kirsten Harvey Robert J. Harvey Mark I. Rees

Human startle disease, also known as hyperekplexia (OMIM 149400), is a paroxysmal neurological disorder caused by defects in glycinergic neurotransmission. Hyperekplexia is characterised by an exaggerated startle reflex in response to tactile or acoustic stimuli which first presents as neonatal hypertonia, followed in some with episodes of life-threatening infantile apnoea. Genetic screening st...

Journal: :Postgraduate medical journal 2001
V Praveen S K Patole J S Whitehall

Hyperekplexia (startle disease) is a rare non-epileptic disorder characterised by an exaggerated persistent startle reaction to unexpected auditory, somatosensory and visual stimuli, generalised muscular rigidity, and nocturnal myoclonus. The genetic basis is a mutation usually of the arginine residue 271 leading to neuronal hyperexcitability by impairing glycinergic inhibition. Hyperekplexia i...

Journal: :The Journal of biological chemistry 2012
Eloisa Carta Seo-Kyung Chung Victoria M James Angela Robinson Jennifer L Gill Nathalie Remy Jean-François Vanbellinghen Cheney J G Drew Sophie Cagdas Duncan Cameron Frances M Cowan Mireria Del Toro Gail E Graham Adnan Y Manzur Amira Masri Serge Rivera Emmanuel Scalais Rita Shiang Kate Sinclair Catriona A Stuart Marina A J Tijssen Grahame Wise Sameer M Zuberi Kirsten Harvey Brian R Pearce Maya Topf Rhys H Thomas Stéphane Supplisson Mark I Rees Robert J Harvey

Hereditary hyperekplexia or startle disease is characterized by an exaggerated startle response, evoked by tactile or auditory stimuli, leading to hypertonia and apnea episodes. Missense, nonsense, frameshift, splice site mutations, and large deletions in the human glycine receptor α1 subunit gene (GLRA1) are the major known cause of this disorder. However, mutations are also found in the genes...

Journal: :The Journal of neuroscience : the official journal of the Society for Neuroscience 2010
Seo-Kyung Chung Jean-François Vanbellinghen Jonathan G L Mullins Angela Robinson Janina Hantke Carrie L Hammond Daniel F Gilbert Michael Freilinger Monique Ryan Michael C Kruer Amira Masri Candan Gurses Colin Ferrie Kirsten Harvey Rita Shiang John Christodoulou Frederick Andermann Eva Andermann Rhys H Thomas Robert J Harvey Joseph W Lynch Mark I Rees

Hyperekplexia is a rare, but potentially fatal, neuromotor disorder characterized by exaggerated startle reflexes and hypertonia in response to sudden, unexpected auditory or tactile stimuli. This disorder is primarily caused by inherited mutations in the genes encoding the glycine receptor (GlyR) alpha1 subunit (GLRA1) and the presynaptic glycine transporter GlyT2 (SLC6A5). In this study, syst...

2013
Victoria M. James Anna Bode Seo-Kyung Chung Jennifer L. Gill Maartje Nielsen Frances M. Cowan Mihailo Vujic Rhys H. Thomas Mark I. Rees Kirsten Harvey Angelo Keramidas Maya Topf Ieke Ginjaar Joseph W. Lynch Robert J. Harvey

Startle disease is a rare, potentially fatal neuromotor disorder characterized by exaggerated startle reflexes and hypertonia in response to sudden unexpected auditory, visual or tactile stimuli. Mutations in the GlyR α(1) subunit gene (GLRA1) are the major cause of this disorder, since remarkably few individuals with mutations in the GlyR β subunit gene (GLRB) have been found to date. Systemat...

2012
Natascha Schaefer Nicolas Vogel Carmen Villmann

Defects in glycinergic inhibition result in a complex neuromotor disorder in humans known as hyperekplexia (OMIM 149400) with similar phenotypes in rodents characterized by an exaggerated startle reflex and hypertonia. Analogous to genetic defects in humans single point mutations, microdeletions, or insertions in the Glra1 gene but also in the Glrb gene underlie the pathology in mice. The mutat...

Journal: :Frontiers in Molecular Neuroscience 2008
Robert J. Harvey Eloisa Carta Brian R. Pearce Seo-Kyung Chung Stéphane Supplisson Mark I. Rees Kirsten Harvey

Defects in mammalian glycinergic neurotransmission result in a complex motor disorder characterized by neonatal hypertonia and an exaggerated startle reflex, known as hyperekplexia (OMIM 149400). This affects newborn children and is characterized by noise or touch-induced seizures that result in muscle stiffness and breath-holding episodes. Although rare, this disorder can have serious conseque...

2013
Sujit Kumar Kar MD Psy Shashwat Saxena Bandana Gupta

Hyperekplexia (startle disease) is a rare non-epileptic neurological entity resulting from gene mutation. The onset of this disorder is usually in infancy, but can be delayed until early adulthood. Patients with this disorder usually have normal mental development. Patients with hyperekplexia may present with symptoms ranging from sub-syndromal anxiety, to symptoms of syndromal anxiety disorder...

Journal: :Journal of movement disorders 2017
Yoonju Lee Nan Young Kim Sangkyoon Hong Su Jin Chung Seong Ho Jeong Phil Hyu Lee Young H Sohn

Familial hyperekplexia, also called startle disease, is a rare neurological disorder characterized by excessive startle responses to noise or touch. It can be associated with serious injury from frequent falls, apnea spells, and aspiration pneumonia. Familial hyperekplexia has a heterogeneous genetic background with several identified causative genes; it demonstrates both dominant and recessive...

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