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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0013362 (
dysarthria
)
3,768
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Episodic ataxia (EA) is a rare, familial disorder producing attacks of generalized ataxia, with normal or near-normal neurological function between attacks. Families with autosomal dominant EA represent at least two distinct clinical syndromes. One clinical type of EA (MIM 160120) includes individuals who have episodes of ataxia and
dysarthria
lasting seconds to minutes. In addition, myokymia (rippling of muscles, diagnosable by electromyography) is evident during and between attacks. Since K+ channel genes are candidate genes for EA, we tested markers near known K+ channel genes for linkage. Using a group of Genethon markers from one such region--chromosome 12p--we found evidence of linkage in four EA/myokymia families. A maximum combined lod score of 13.6 was obtained at theta = 0, with the marker D12S99. A human Ca++ channel gene, CACNL1A1, and three human K+ channel genes--KCNA5, KCNA6, and
KCNA1
--map close to D12S99, but the Ca++ channel gene is unlikely to be the site of the defect, because crossovers have been observed to occur between the disease gene and a CA-repeat marker located close to this gene. Studies of a large EA family with a different clinical phenotype (MIM 108500), which lacks myokymia but is associated with nystagmus, have excluded the gene causing that disease from the chromosome 12p locus.
...
PMID:A gene for episodic ataxia/myokymia maps to chromosome 12p13. 794 48
Episodic ataxia type1 (EA1) is an autosomal dominant disorder characterised by episodes of ataxia,
dysarthria
, tremor and visual disturbances lasting for seconds or minutes, precipitated by physical and emotional stress, startle or sudden movements. In addition there is continuous myokymia. Phenotypic variants such as the combination with epilepsy, shortening of the Achilles tendon in children, transient postural abnormalities in infancy, and a very few patients with longer lasting episodes have been reported. We describe a 10-year-old girl with EA1 who has distal weakness with paresis of the extensors of the feet and prolonged spells of limb stiffness (neuromyotonia) lasting up to 12 hours. A novel single nucleotide change at position 785 T > C that alters a highly conserved residue in the third transmembrane segment of the voltage-gated potassium channel
Kv1.1
was found.
...
PMID:Episodic ataxia type 1 with distal weakness: a novel manifestation of a potassium channelopathy. 1512 17
Episodic ataxia type 1 (EA1) is an autosomal dominant K(+) channelopathy which manifests with short attacks of cerebellar ataxia and
dysarthria
, and may also show interictal myokymia. Episodes can be triggered by emotional or physical stress, startle response, sudden postural change or fever. Here we describe a 31-year-old man displaying markedly atypical symptoms, including long-lasting attacks of jerking muscle contractions associated with hyperthermia, severe migraine, and a relatively short-sleep phenotype. A single nucleotide change in
KCNA1
(c.555C>G) was identified that changes a highly conserved residue (p.C185W) in the first transmembrane segment of the voltage-gated K(+) channel
Kv1.1
. The patient is heterozygous and the mutation was inherited from his asymptomatic mother. Next generation sequencing revealed no variations in the CACNA1A, CACNB4, KCNC3, KCNJ10, PRRT2 or SCN8A genes of either the patient or mother, except for a benign variant in SLC1A3. Functional analysis of the p.C185W mutation in
KCNA1
demonstrated a deleterious dominant-negative phenotype where the remaining current displayed slower activation kinetics, subtle changes in voltage-dependence and faster recovery from slow inactivation. Structural modeling also predicts the C185W mutation to be functionally deleterious. This description of novel clinical features, associated with a
Kv1.1
mutation highlights a possibly unrecognized relationship between K(+) channel dysfunction, hyperthermia and migraine in EA1, and suggests that thorough assessments for these symptoms should be carefully considered for all patients affected by EA1.
...
PMID:Novel phenotype associated with a mutation in the KCNA1(Kv1.1) gene. 2564 94