Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
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Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
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Query: UMLS:C0013421 (
dystonia
)
8,418
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The syndrome of deafness-
dystonia
is rare and refers to the association of hearing impairment and
dystonia
when these are dominant features of a disease. Known genetic causes include Mohr-Tranebjaerg syndrome, Woodhouse-Sakati syndrome, and mitochondrial disorders, but the cause frequently remains unidentified. The aim of the current study was to better characterize etiological and clinical aspects of deafness-
dystonia
syndrome. We evaluated 20 patients with deafness-
dystonia
syndrome who were seen during the period between 1994 and 2011. The cause was identified in only 7 patients and included methylmalonic aciduria, meningoencephalitis, perinatal hypoxic-ischemic injury, large genomic deletion on chromosome 7q21, translocase of inner mitochondrial membrane 8 homolog A (TIMM8A) mutation (Mohr-Tranebjaerg syndrome), and
chromosome 2 open reading frame 37
(
C2orf37
) mutation (Woodhouse-Sakati syndrome). The age of onset and clinical characteristics in these patients varied, depending on the etiology. In 13 patients, the cause remained unexplained despite extensive work-up. In the group of patients who had unknown etiology, a family history for deafness and/or
dystonia
was present the majority of patients, suggesting a strong genetic component. Sensory-neural deafness always preceded
dystonia
. Two clinical patterns of deafness-
dystonia
syndrome were observed: patients who had an onset in childhood had generalized
dystonia
(10 of 13 patients) with frequent bulbar involvement, whereas patients who had a
dystonia
onset in adulthood had segmental
dystonia
(3 of 13 patients) with the invariable presence of laryngeal
dystonia
. Deafness-
dystonia
syndrome is etiologically and clinically heterogeneous, and most patients have an unknown cause. The different age at onset and variable family history suggest a heterogeneous genetic background, possibly including currently unidentified genetic conditions.
...
PMID:The syndrome of deafness-dystonia: clinical and genetic heterogeneity. 2341 71