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Results 1 - 10 of 25 for chorea
  1. Chorea-acanthocytosis is primarily a neurological disorder that affects movement in many parts of the body. Chorea refers to the involuntary jerking movements made by ...
  2. ... develop involuntary jerking or twitching movements known as chorea. As the disease progresses, these movements become more ... Huntington's disease (36 repeats or more). Huntington chorea Huntington chronic progressive hereditary chorea Huntington disease Huntington' ...
  3. ... Costeff optic atrophy syndrome Infantile optic atrophy with chorea and spastic paraplegia Iraqi Jewish optic atrophy plus ...
  4. ... OPA3_HUMAN optic atrophy 3 (autosomal recessive, with chorea and spastic paraplegia) Tests of OPA3 PubMed OUTER ...
  5. ... the VPS13A gene have been found to cause chorea-acanthocytosis. Most of these mutations insert or delete ... are specific to single families, although people with chorea-acanthocytosis who are French-Canadian or Japanese tend ...
  6. ... Such cases are sometimes called isolated benign hereditary chorea.Nearly everyone with brain-lung-thyroid syndrome has brain-related movement abnormalities. Benign hereditary chorea is the most common feature of the syndrome. ...
  7. ... novo ADCY5 mutation causes early-onset autosomal dominant chorea and dystonia. Mov Disord. 2015 Mar;30(3): ... ADCY5 mutations are another cause of benign hereditary chorea. Neurology. 2015 Jul 7;85(1):80-8. ...
  8. ... novo ADCY5 mutation causes early-onset autosomal dominant chorea and dystonia. Mov Disord. 2015 Mar;30(3): ... ADCY5 mutations are another cause of benign hereditary chorea. Neurology. 2015 Jul 7;85(1):80-8. ...
  9. ... common features of this syndrome are benign hereditary chorea, which involves involuntary jerking movements (chorea) of the face, torso, and limbs and other ...
  10. ... apraxia, affected individuals can have involuntary jerking movements (chorea) or muscle twitches (myoclonus); these movement problems tend ... As in type 1, affected individuals may have chorea or myoclonus, although these movement problems persist throughout ...
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