Clinical manifestations of 102 cases with the Crow- Fukase syndrome (the syndrome of polyneuropathy, anasarca, skin changes, endocrinopathy, dysglobulinemia, and organomegaly), with or without myeloma, were reviewed. Fifty-six cases with myeloma consisted of 31 with osteosclerotic, 17 with mixed osteosclerotic and osteolytic, and 8 with osteolytic. Forty-six cases without myeloma consisted of 2 with extramedullary plasmacytoma, 33 with M protein alone, and 11 with polyclonal protein alone. There was no significant difference in incidence of the major clinical manifestations between the two groups with and without myeloma. They had a common characteristic histologic finding of the lymph node resembling that of Castleman's disease.
Between October 1972 and October 1973, the first nationwide survey of the multiple sclerosis group of diseases in Japan was performed by the Multiple Sclerosis Research Committee of Japan, supported by the Japan Ministry of Health and Welfare. Reports on 1,084 patients with the multiple sclerosis group were collected: 509 patients with multiple sclerosis, 82 with Devic's disease, 357 with "multiple sclerosis possible," and 136 with "other or unclassified demyelinating diseases." The natural history in the present nationwide series of multiple sclerosis patients showed considerable similarity to that of patients in Western countries, suggesting that multiple sclerosis in Japan is essentially the same as that in the Western countries. However, the previously reported special characteristics of Japanese multiple sclerosis patients, namely, a higher rate of visual impairment at onset, a higher rate of optic nerve involvement during the course of illness, and a higher rate of Devic's disease, were reconfirmed in the present series.
\s=b\Ocular movement was studied in 19 patients with Parkinson's disease and in ten normal controls. Common abnormalities included "hypometric saccade" on the eye-tracking test and on command, "saccadic pursuit," and convergence paresis. Reaction time was longer in patients with Parkinson's disease than in controls for horizontal saccadic gaze, finger movements, and body movements. Maximal saccadic velocity of horizontal gaze was slower in patients with Parkinson's disease than in controls. Slowing of the horizontal saccadic movement correlated significantly with an increased reaction time of finger and body movements.Correlation of decreased saccadic velocity with increased reaction time of finger movement was found for the finger ipsilateral to the direction of horizontal gaze, but not for the contralateral finger. It is postulated from these facts that bradykinesia also exists in eye movements in Parkinson's disease.
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