Publication | Open Access
Paraneoplastic Cerebellar Ataxia Due to Autoantibodies against a Glutamate Receptor
451
Citations
27
References
2000
Year
Corticobasal DegenerationNeurological DisorderImmunologyPathologySynaptic SignalingNeuro-oncologyExperimental NeuropathologyNeurologyCerebellar AtaxiaNeuropathologyNeuroimmunologyParaneoplastic SyndromeAutoimmune DiseaseAutoimmunityGlutamate ReceptorCommon DiseasesNeuromuscular PathologyMovement DisordersDegenerative DiseaseBreast CancerNeuroscienceCentral Nervous SystemMedicine
There are many types of cerebellar ataxia, including ataxia due to congenital or metabolic disorders and a paraneoplastic form in patients with gynecologic cancer, breast cancer, lung cancer, or Hodgkin's disease.1 This paraneoplastic syndrome is the only type of cerebellar ataxia associated with autoantibodies against neuronal antigens. Often, the neuronal antigens are aberrantly expressed by the tumor cells.2–4 The antineuronal autoantibodies are believed to cause cerebellar ataxia, but this is unproved.5,6 In Hodgkin's disease, the lymphoma precedes the ataxia by months to years in 80 percent of patients, and ataxia often occurs during a prolonged complete remission.4 Among . . .
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