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Query: UMLS:C0016719 (
Friedreich's ataxia
)
2,098
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Phenotypic variants in
Friedreich's ataxia
include late onset, preservation of the lower limbs tendon reflexes, and slow progression. We describe clinical and electrophysiological features from three families with Friedreichlike phenotypes.
Friedreich's ataxia
diagnosis was confirmed by finding two allelic expansions of the GAA trinucleotide repeat at the X25 gene. In family 1 both patients had a late-onset phenotype with preservation of knee and ankle jerks, lack of
cardiomyopathy
, and preserved H reflex. One of them did not have electrophysiologic evidence of sensory axonal neuropathy. Patients from family 2 showed variability in the age of onset, and 2 out of 3 affected children had hyperactive lower limbs reflexes with preserved H reflex. Disease progression in a patient from family 3 was very slow after onset at the age of 21. The finding of two expanded alleles in these families confirms the wide variability of the clinical spectrum of
Friedreich's ataxia
.
...
PMID:GAA trinucleotide repeat expansion in variant Friedreich's ataxia families. 927 Jun 67
To explore the clinical heterogeneity associated with the
Friedreich's ataxia
(
FRDA
) expanded repeat and provide preliminary guidance for future gene testing in patients suspected of having
FRDA
, we tested patients with typical
FRDA
(group I), late-onset
FRDA
or
FRDA
with retained reflexes (group II), as well as those with early onset "non-Friedreich's" recessive or sporadic ataxia (group III). Eighty-seven percent of families in group I tested positive for the
FRDA
triplet repeat expansion. Thirty-six percent of families in group II demonstrated the
FRDA
expansion. Only one of 11 patients in group III had the
FRDA
expansion. Clinical criteria did not clearly distinguish between expansion-positive and expansion-negative individuals in groups I and II. Minimal criteria that were present in all the patients who tested positive were recessive or sporadic inheritance, progressive caudal-rostral gait and limb ataxia, and at least one of the following: dysarthria, Babinski sign, or
cardiomyopathy
. This study confirms recent findings that some patients in group II can carry the
FRDA
mutation. However, we did not observe the
FRDA
expansion in 64% of group II families or in 13% of families with typical
FRDA
(group I), suggesting other genetic or environmental causes for their ataxia.
...
PMID:Friedreich's ataxia GAA repeat expansion in patients with recessive or sporadic ataxia. 933 80
Molecular analysis of spinocerebellar ataxias revealed a pathologic GAA expansion in the gene encoding frataxin in six adult patients from three families. These patients, carrying expanded alleles in the low-range size, had an exceptionally late onset and lacked
cardiomyopathy
, pointing to phenotypic variability of
Friedreich's ataxia
. Both mitotic and gametic instability of the expanded triplet repeat were present in these families.
...
PMID:Very late onset Friedreich's ataxia without cardiomyopathy is associated with limited GAA expansion in the X25 gene. 933 8
Ataxia with vitamin E deficiency (AVED), or familial isolated vitamin E deficiency, is a rare autosomal recessive neurodegenerative disease characterized clinically by symptoms with often striking resemblance to those of
Friedreich ataxia
. We recently have demonstrated that AVED is caused by mutations in the gene for alpha-tocopherol transfer protein (alpha-TTP). We now have identified a total of 13 mutations in 27 families. Four mutations were found in >=2 independent families: 744delA, which is the major mutation in North Africa, and 513insTT, 486delT, and R134X, in families of European origin. Compilation of the clinical records of 43 patients with documented mutation in the alpha-TTP gene revealed differences from
Friedreich ataxia
:
cardiomyopathy
was found in only 19% of cases, whereas head titubation was found in 28% of cases and dystonia in an additional 13%. This study represents the largest group of patients and mutations reported for this often misdiagnosed disease and points to the need for an early differential diagnosis with
Friedreich ataxia
, in order to initiate therapeutic and prophylactic vitamin E supplementation before irreversible damage develops.
...
PMID:Ataxia with isolated vitamin E deficiency: heterogeneity of mutations and phenotypic variability in a large number of families. 946 7
Friedreich ataxia
(
FRDA
) is an autosomal recessive, neurodegenerative disease, characterized by progressive gait and limb ataxia, dysarthria, lower-limb areflexia, Babinski sign, loss of position and vibration senses,
cardiomyopathy
, and carbohydrate intolerance. It is the most common inherited ataxia, and is associated with a GAA triplet repeat expansion in the first intron of the X25 gene on the long arm of chromosome 9. We present a case whose clinical diagnosis was initially confounded by the mildness of the ataxic phenotype and a family history of multiple sclerosis. Evaluation of the X25 gene revealed that the patient was homozygous for the GAA triplet repeat expansion, pathognomonic of
FRDA
. Investigation of her sural nerve biopsy revealed a significantly smaller expansion size, constituting the first direct demonstration of somatic mosaicism involving the nervous system in
FRDA
. We speculate that a similar contraction in pathologically affected tissues could be the molecular basis for the mildness of the ataxia.
...
PMID:A mild case of Friedreich ataxia: lymphocyte and sural nerve analysis for GAA repeat length reveals somatic mosaicism. 948 68
The aim of this study was to determine phenotypie characteristics of patients with early onset cerebellar ataxia (EOCA) with preserved tendon reflexes. The series comprises 25 patients, representing 10% of all ataxic patients who have been genetically studied in our laboratory since 1990. There were 11 males and 14 females. Fourteen patients were homozygous for the GAA expansion on chromosome 9q13 (group 1) and therefore a diagnosis of
Friedreich's ataxia
with retained reflexes (FARR) was given. The remaining 11 patients had two normal non-expanded alleles (group 2) and a working diagnosis of EOCA with retained reflexes (EOCARR) was established. Mean ages of onset were 13.7 +/- 5.9 years (3-25) for group 1 and 10.3 +/- 7.3 for group 2; the difference was not significant. Frequencies of symptoms and signs were also comparable for both groups the only significant differences being the higher frequency of nystagmus,
cardiomyopathy
and sensory neuropathy in group 1 patients. There was a tendency for FARR patients to have higher frequencies of hypopallesthesia in the lower limbs and skeletal deformities. In none of the cases diabetes mellitus was observed. We conclude that differentiation of FARR and EOCARR may be suspected by classical clinical and electrophysiological data and confirmed by analysis of the GAA repeat.
...
PMID:Early onset cerebellar ataxia and preservation of tendon reflexes: clinical phenotypes associated with GAA trinucleotide repeat expanded and non-expanded genotypes. 1019 66
Friedreich's ataxia
(
FRDA
) is the most frequent cause of recessive ataxias. Neurological examination shows oculo-motor ataxia, dysarthria, limbs ataxia, tendon areflexia, pyramidal signs and sensory deficits. Extra-neurological involvement consists in osteoarticular deformities,
cardiomyopathy
and diabetes mellitus. Neurological deficits and osteoarticular deformities both contribute to the gait disorder, which is the main disabling deficit. In 98% of the cases, a trinucleotide repeat is found in chromosome 9. Gene implicated in
FRDA
codes for a protein called frataxin. Experimental studies have revealed iron accumulation in mitochondria of neurons and cardiomyocytes, suggesting that frataxin plays a determinant role in intramitochondrial iron homeostasis. These discoveries are now considered as a clue for new strategies of treatment in this hereditary disease.
...
PMID:[Friedreich's ataxia: recent developments and prospects for treatment]. 1033
Friedreich ataxia
is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutations in the FRDA gene that encodes a 210-amino acid protein called frataxin. An expansion of a GAA trinucleotide repeat in intron 1 of the gene is present in more than 95% of mutant alleles. Of the 83 people we studied who have mutations in FRDA, 78 are homozygous for an expanded GAA repeat; the other five patients have an expansion in one allele and a point mutation in the other. Here we present a detailed clinical and genetic study of a subset of 51 patients homozygous for an expansion of the GAA repeat. We found a correlation between the size of the smaller of the two expanded alleles and age at onset, age into wheelchair, scoliosis, impaired vibration sense, and the presence of foot deformity. There was no significant correlation between the size of the smaller allele and
cardiomyopathy
, diabetes mellitus, loss of proprioception, or bladder symptoms. The larger allele size correlated with bladder symptoms and the presence of foot deformity. The duration of disease is correlated with wheelchair use and the presence of diabetes, scoliosis, bladder symptoms and impaired proprioception, and vibration sense but no other complications studied.
...
PMID:Clinical and genetic study of Friedreich ataxia in an Australian population. 1053 31
There are many neuromuscular diseases associated with
cardiomyopathy
. Cardiac involvement with progressive muscular dystrophy (Duchenne and Becker type) and some type of limb-girdle muscular dystrophy were characterized by impaired left ventricular systolic function, such as dilated cardiomyopathy like status. In
Friedreich ataxia
various types of left ventricular hypertrophy were reported. While in myotonic dystrophy and Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy, conduction disturbance and tachyarrhythmia are common types of cardiac manifestation. The severity of cardiac involvement in these diseases is not necessarily concordant with that of skeletal muscle. Recently the genes of these diseases were identified by linkage analysis. We review cardiac abnormalities of these diseases, especially relationship between severity of cardiac disorder and gene abnormalities.
...
PMID:[Secondary cardiomyopathy accompanied by neuromuscular disorders]. 1088 12
We clinically assessed and performed polymerase chain reaction analysis for the GAA trinucleotide repeat expansion in 103 patients from 73 families in Ireland, with a prior clinical diagnosis of
Friedreich's ataxia
(FA) or an unclassified progressive ataxic syndrome. The patients were classified as "typical" or "atypical" FA according to Harding's mandatory clinical diagnostic criteria. All patients underwent blood glucose analysis, and electrocardiography and echocardiography was performed in 99 and 101 patients, respectively. Mutation screening for expanded CAG trinucleotide repeats, associated with spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) 1, 2, 3 and 6 was performed in 86 patients overall, including all GAA negative patients. Forty-nine of 56 typical patients and 13 of 47 atypical patients were either homozygous or heterozygous for the GAA expansion. Seven patients with a typical FA phenotype were negative for the GAA expansion. Although one of these patients had vitamin E deficiency, and two had raised alpha-fetoprotein levels, three other GAA negative patients with a typical FA phenotype had no other identifiable cause for their ataxia, once again raising the possibility of locus heterogeneity in FA. It is also possible that these patients have two point mutations in the X25 gene, or that they have another ataxic syndrome mimicking the FA phenotype. Two families who were homozygous for the GAA expansion exhibited intrafamilial phenotypic variability. Only one GAA negative patient had the SCA 3 mutation, and this was the only patient in the study with a possible autosomal dominant inheritance pattern. In the homozygous GAA population typical patients had significantly more repeats on the smaller allele than atypical patients, and there was an inverse relationship between the number of repeats on the smaller allele and the age at presentation. There was also an inverse relationship between the repeat size on both the larger and the smaller of the two alleles and the age at becoming wheelchair bound. There was no significant relationship between repeat size and the other indices of disease severity, including the presence or absence of diabetes or
cardiomyopathy
. This is the first large study of an Irish population with progressive ataxia that has shown a similar phenotype/genotype relationship to studies of FA in other European and non-European populations. The relatively low sensitivity and specificity of Harding's clinical diagnostic criteria must be appreciated when clinically assessing patients with a progressive ataxic syndrome. Although molecular genetic analysis now plays an essential role in diagnosis and classification, patients with a typical FA phenotype without any identifiable cause for their ataxia exist.
...
PMID:Typical Friedreich's ataxia without GAA expansions and GAA expansion without typical Friedreich's ataxia. 1089 66
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