Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0003635 (
apraxia
)
2,817
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Since it was first described by Andrea Rett 50 years ago, Rett syndrome (RS) has been the subject of further investigations, nonetheless it continues to be a not well known condition. Our own experience and an updated literature review on RS is presented. RS is a severe dominant X chromosome-linked neurodevelopmental disorder with a characteristic clinical picture that mostly occurs in girls, most of the cases are sporadic and genetically determined. The diagnosis of RS is made based on observation and clinical assessment. Main clinical features are mental retardation, behavioural changes, stereotypes, loss of speech and hand skills, gait
apraxia
, irregular breathing with hyperventilation while awake, and frequent seizures. The internationally established criteria are reviewed. RS is caused by mutations in MECP2 in the majority of cases, but a proportion of atypical cases may result from mutations in
CDKL5
, particularly the early onset seizure variant. However, the molecular pathogenesis of this disorder remains unclear, as well as the relation between the mutations in MECP2 and other neurodevelopmental disorders. Neuroimaging, neuropathological and biochemical findings in RS are reviewed. Besides symptomatic treatment, no therapeutic trials have shown effectiveness. Some perspectives in the treatment of RS have been provided by a recent work showing a phenotypic reversal by activation of MeCP2 expression in a mouse model.
...
PMID:[Rett syndrome: 50 years' history of a still not well known condition]. 1842 79
Mutations in the human X-linked
cyclin-dependent kinase-like 5
(
CDKL5
) gene have been shown to cause infantile spasms as well as Rett syndrome (RTT)-like phenotype. To date, less than 25 different mutations have been reported. So far, there are still little data on the key clinical diagnosis criteria and on the natural history of
CDKL5
-associated encephalopathy. We screened the entire coding region of
CDKL5
for mutations in 183 females with encephalopathy with early seizures by denaturing high liquid performance chromatography and direct sequencing, and we identified in 20 unrelated girls, 18 different mutations including 7 novel mutations. These mutations were identified in eight patients with encephalopathy with RTT-like features, five with infantile spasms and seven with encephalopathy with refractory epilepsy. Early epilepsy with normal interictal EEG and severe hypotonia are the key clinical features in identifying patients likely to have
CDKL5
mutations. Our study also indicates that these patients clearly exhibit some RTT features such as deceleration of head growth, stereotypies and hand
apraxia
and that these RTT features become more evident in older and ambulatory patients. However, some RTT signs are clearly absent such as the so called RTT disease profile (period of nearly normal development followed by regression with loss of acquired fine finger skill in early childhood and characteristic intensive eye communication) and the characteristic evolution of the RTT electroencephalogram. Interestingly, in addition to the overall stereotypical symptomatology (age of onset and evolution of the disease) resulting from
CDKL5
mutations, atypical forms of
CDKL5
-related conditions have also been observed. Our data suggest that phenotypic heterogeneity does not correlate with the nature or the position of the mutations or with the pattern of X-chromosome inactivation, but most probably with the functional transcriptional and/or translational consequences of
CDKL5
mutations. In conclusion, our report show that search for mutations in
CDKL5
is indicated in girls with early onset of a severe intractable seizure disorder or infantile spasms with severe hypotonia, and in girls with RTT-like phenotype and early onset seizures, though, in our cohort, mutations in
CDKL5
account for about 10% of the girls affected by these disorders.
...
PMID:Key clinical features to identify girls with CDKL5 mutations. 1879 Aug 21