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Query: UMLS:C0007758 (
cerebellar ataxia
)
3,609
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
L-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria is a rare and novel autosomal recessive inherited neurometabolic disorder. Since its first description by Duran in 1980, less than 100 cases have so far been reported. Occurring mostly in childhood, it is characterized by slowly progressive neurological dysfunction with
cerebellar ataxia
, pyramidal signs, intellectual decline, seizure, and extrapyramidal symptoms. MRI scanning is highly characteristic and screening for organic acid (L-
2-hydroxyglutaric acid
) in urine, serum, and cerebrospinal fluid is diagnostic. We investigated six Iranian children, aged 4, 14, 16, and 16 years, (the last one had two affected brothers and both of them died of similar illness at the ages of 20 and 22), by urinary organic acids assay and MRI scanning with suspicion of this rare disorder. Symptoms were suspicious for one of the leukoencephalopathies accompanied by macrocephaly. Affected cases were evaluated because of mild to moderate psychomotor retardation and regression. Head circumferences were above 2 standard deviations. Urine levels of L-
2-hydroxyglutaric acid
were strongly increased. MRI scanning of the brain showed hyperintense signal on T2W images of the subcortical white matter and basal ganglia in all of them. Because of its inheritance pattern (autosomal recessive) and the high rate of consanguineous marriages in Iran, the prevalence of this disorder might be high among the mentally-handicapped patients, especially those with macrocephaly. Therefore, this entity should be considered in the differential diagnosis of mentally-retarded patients with macrocephaly.
...
PMID:L-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria: a report of six cases and review of the literature. 1664 64
L-2-Hydroxyglutaric (L-2-HG) aciduria is a rare inherited metabolic disease usually observed in children. Patients present a very slowly progressive deterioration with
cerebellar ataxia
, mild or severe mental retardation, and various other clinical signs including extrapyramidal and pyramidal symptoms, and seizures. The disease is characterized by increased levels of L-2-HG in body fluids such as urine and cerebrospinal fluid. We report on two sisters from consanguineous parents, in whom L-2-HG aciduria was diagnosed at an adult age. Although magnetic resonance imaging and spectroscopic findings were severely abnormal in both, they experienced a different clinical course. The older sister presented with severe mental retardation, recurrent epileptic seizures, and progressive deterioration in her ability to walk and to talk; she is now confined to a wheelchair with severe speech deficit. In contrast, the younger sister only had a few epileptic seizures in childhood and moderate mental retardation, is still able to walk, and performs manual work, and has a social life in a specialized institution for moderately mentally handicapped persons. For the two patients, a complete deletion of exon 9 was demonstrated in a gene located on chromosome 14q22.1, which most probably encodes for L-2-hydroxyglutarate dehydrogenase. The pathological findings observed in this metabolic disorder could therefore be related to a toxic effect of L-2-
hydroxyglutarate
on the central nervous system, although the presence of other toxic metabolites cannot be excluded.
...
PMID:L-2-Hydroxyglutaric aciduria: clinical, genetic, and brain MRI characteristics in two adult sisters. 1672 76
L-2-Hydroxyglutaric aciduria (L-2-OHGA) is a rare autosomal recessive neurometabolic disease linked to chromosome 14q21.1 and is caused by mutations in the gene that most likely encodes L: -2-hydroxyglutarate dehydrogenase, which normally catalyses L: -2-
hydroxyglutarate
to alpha-ketoglutarate. It is characterized by progressive mental deterioration, pyramidal and cerebellar syndromes, macrocephaly and marked polycystic white-matter degeneration mainly involving frontal lobes. Brain tumours of variable nature have frequently been observed in L-2-OHGA. We report a patient affected by this disease who at the age of 20 years developed a bone tumour involving the right frontal region of the calvaria. He had first presented at the age of 10 years with psychomotor delay, clumsy gait and moderate mental impairment. Examination showed macrocephaly,
cerebellar ataxia
and quadripyramidal syndrome. Brain MRI showed low signal intensities on T1-weighted images and high signal intensities on T2-weighted images in cerebral subcortical white matter. Serum and urinary amino acid assay was normal. Urinary
2-hydroxyglutaric acid
was 1418 mmol/mol creatinine (controls <25). Analysis of the L-2-hydroxyglutarate dehydrogenase gene revealed a homozygous mutation in exon 2 (A320G). At the age of 20 years, an osteoma of the right frontal bone was diagnosed. This finding reinforces the opinion concerning the association of L-2-OHGA and tumorigenesis and prompted us to verify the possible responsibility of some overproduced substances in this disease for the development of tumours and to look for any correlation between the type of mutation in the L-2-OHGA gene and the tumorigenic potential observed in some patients affected by this disease.
...
PMID:Osteoma of the calvaria in L-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria. 1791 88
L-2-Hydroxyglutaric aciduria (L2HGA) is a rare, neurometabolic disorder with an autosomal recessive mode of inheritance. Affected individuals only have neurological manifestations, including psychomotor retardation,
cerebellar ataxia
, and more variably macrocephaly, or epilepsy. The diagnosis of L2HGA can be made based on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI), biochemical analysis, and mutational analysis of L2HGDH. About 200 patients with elevated concentrations of 2-
hydroxyglutarate
(2HG) in the urine were referred for chiral determination of 2HG and L2HGDH mutational analysis. All patients with increased L2HG (n=106; 83 families) were included. Clinical information on 61 patients was obtained via questionnaires. In 82 families the mutations were detected by direct sequence analysis and/or multiplex ligation dependent probe amplification (MLPA), including one case where MLPA was essential to detect the second allele. In another case RT-PCR followed by deep intronic sequencing was needed to detect the mutation. Thirty-five novel mutations as well as 35 reported mutations and 14 nondisease-related variants are reviewed and included in a novel Leiden Open source Variation Database (LOVD) for L2HGDH variants (http://www.LOVD.nl/L2HGDH). Every user can access the database and submit variants/patients. Furthermore, we report on the phenotype, including neurological manifestations and urinary levels of L2HG, and we evaluate the phenotype-genotype relationship.
...
PMID:An overview of L-2-hydroxyglutarate dehydrogenase gene (L2HGDH) variants: a genotype-phenotype study. 2005 67
L-2-hydroxyglutaric aciduria (L-2-HGA), a neurometabolic disorder caused by mutations in the L-2
hydroxyglutarate
dehydrogenase (L-2-HGDH) gene, presents with psychomotor retardation,
cerebellar ataxia
, extrapyramidal symptoms, macrocephaly and seizures. Characteristic magnetic resonance imaging findings include subcortical cerebral white matter abnormalities with T2 hyperintensities of the dentate nucleus, globus pallidus, putamen and caudate nucleus. The diagnosis can be confirmed by elevated urinary L-2
hydroxyglutaric acid
and mutational analysis of the L-2-HGDH gene. We report two siblings with dystonia diagnosed by classical neuroimaging findings with elevated urinary 2
hydroxyglutaric acid
. Riboflavin therapy has shown promising results in a subset of cases, thus highlighting the importance of making the diagnosis in these patients.
...
PMID:An interesting case of metabolic dystonia: L-2 hydroxyglutaric aciduria. 2475 71