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Truncal ataxia
Did you mean truncus ataxia?
- ... muscle stiffness (spasticity) and difficulty with coordinating movements (ataxia). There may also be some deterioration of mental ... and symptoms of the condition. CACH syndrome Childhood ataxia with central nervous system hypomyelination Cree leukoencephalopathy Myelinosis ...
- ... inability to speak, problems with balance and coordination (ataxia), and difficulty standing or walking. Individuals who do ... cause X-linked mental retardation, microcephaly, epilepsy, and ataxia, a phenotype mimicking Angelman syndrome. Am J Hum ...
- ... scar tissue in the liver (hepatic fibrosis); cerebellar ataxia, which is difficulty with coordination and balance arising ... disease MZSDS Renal dysplasia, retinal pigmentary dystrophy, cerebellar ataxia, and skeletal dysplasia Saldino-Mainzer dysplasia Saldino-Mainzer ...
- ... a person's sixties and often cause cerebellar ataxia, which refers to problems with coordination and balance ... deficiency Primary CoQ10 deficiency Ubiquinone deficiency Autosomal recessive ataxia due to ubiquinone deficiency Coenzyme Q10 deficiency National ...
- ... dysarthria X-linked mental retardation with dystonic movements, ataxia, and seizures Genetic Testing Registry: Partington syndrome Partington ...
- ... the course of the disease.Difficulty coordinating movements (ataxia), which begins in childhood and slowly worsens over ... separate disorders. Affected individuals may be diagnosed with ataxia, delayed dentition, and hypomyelination (ADDH); hypomyelination, hypodontia, hypogonadotropic ...
- ... HDL4). Sometimes, HDL4 is also known as spinocerebellar ataxia type 17 (SCA17). HDL1, HDL2, and HDL4 usually ... Huntington disease-like 2 Genetic Testing Registry: Spinocerebellar ataxia type 17 Huntington disease-like 2 National Organization ...
- ... this form of spastic paraplegia can also have ataxia; a pattern of movement abnormalities known as parkinsonism; ... A. Loss of paraplegin drives spasticity rather than ataxia in a cohort of 241 patients with SPG7. ...
- ... have muscle weakness (myopathy) and difficulty coordinating movements (ataxia), which may impair their ability to walk. People ... destroys cells in many different tissues, leading to ataxia, myopathy, and the other features of Marinesco-Sjögren ...
- ... muscle stiffness (spasticity), problems with movement and balance (ataxia), head and neck tremors (titubation), involuntary tensing of ... airway (stridor), nystagmus, progressive speech difficulties (dysarthria), severe ataxia, hypotonia, and seizures. As the condition worsens, affected ...