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Query: UMLS:C0040822 (
tremor
)
18,428
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Neuroferritinopathy is a hereditary neurodegenerative disorder caused by mutations in the
ferritin light chain
gene (FTL1). The cardinal features are progressive movement disturbance, hypoferritinemia, and iron deposition in the brain. To date, five mutations have been described in Caucasian and Japanese families, but the genotype-phenotype correlations remain to be established. We identified a novel FTL1 mutation (exon 4, c.641/642, 4-nucletotide duplication) in a Japanese family and compared the clinical traits with those previously reported. All mutations but one are insertions in exon 4, resulting in frameshifts. Clinical features are similar among patients with the same mutations. Middle-age onset chorea is common in patients with insertions in the 5' portion of exon 4 including our cases, whereas patients with insertions in the 3' portion of exon 4 develop early-onset
tremor
, suggesting genotype-phenotype correlations. In this family, male predominance and normal serum ferritin levels are characteristic.
...
PMID:A novel ferritin light chain gene mutation in a Japanese family with neuroferritinopathy: description of clinical features and implications for genotype-phenotype correlations. 1911 39
To describe a family with a hereditary ferritinopathy (HF) due to a mutation in the
ferritin light chain
gene (FTL498-499InsTC mutation). Case reports of the clinical features, MRI, (18)FDG PET, and pathological findings observed in this family with two patients described in more details. Postural tremor (phenotype-1) or cerebellar signs (phenotype-2) were the first neurological symptoms detected. Parkinsonian, cerebellar and pyramidal syndromes, abnormal involuntary movements, dementia were observed in both phenotypes at more advanced stages. Beside characteristics T2* hypointense signals suggestive of iron accumulation in the striatum, mesencephalon, and cerebellum, we detected more diffuse changes including cerebellar, cortical and subcortical atrophy, cortical iron deposition, and severe leukoencephalopathy. (18)FDG PET showed frontal and cerebellum hypometabolism with more severe frontal defect in patients with cognitive decline. Pathological examination showed ferritin and iron deposition in the liver, kidney, muscle, skin, and in the central nervous system. Members of this family affected by HF due to the FTL498-499InsTC mutation have a specific clinical presentation with initial postural
tremor
or cerebellar ataxia, followed by pyramidal and extrapyramidal motor syndromes and late severe subcortical dementia.
...
PMID:Clinical phenotype and neuroimaging findings in a French family with hereditary ferritinopathy (FTL498-499InsTC). 1951 68
Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) is etiologically, clinically, and by imaging a heterogeneous group including NBIA types 1 [pantothenate kinase-associated neurodegeneration (PKAN)] and 2 (PLA2G6-associated neurodegeneration), neuroferritinopathy, and aceruloplasminaemia. Data on genetically defined Indian-subcontinent NBIA cases are limited. We report 6 patients from the Indian-subcontinent with a movement disorder and MRI basal ganglia iron deposition, compatible with diagnosis of an NBIA syndrome. All patients were screened for abnormalities in serum ceruloplasmin and ferritin levels and mutations in NBIA-associated genes [pantothenate kinase 2 (PANK2), PLA2G6 and
ferritin light chain
(exon 4)]. We present clinical, imaging and genetic data correlating phenotype-genotype relations. Four patients carried PANK2 mutations, two of these were novel. The clinical phenotype was mainly dystonic with generalized dystonia and marked orobulbar features in the 4 adolescent-onset cases. One of the four had a late-onset (age 37) unilateral jerky postural
tremor
. His mutation, c.1379C>T, appears associated with a milder phenotype. Interestingly, he developed the eye-of-the-tiger sign only 10 years after onset. Two of the six presented with adult-onset levodopa (L-dopa)-responsive asymmetric re-emergent rest
tremor
, developing L-dopa-induced dyskinesias, and good benefit to deep brain stimulation (in one), thus resembling Parkinson's disease (PD). Both had an eye-of-the-tiger sign on MRI but were negative for known NBIA-associated genes, suggesting the existence of further genetic or sporadic forms of NBIA syndromes. In conclusion, genetically determined NBIA cases from the Indian subcontinent suggest presence of unusual phenotypes of PANK2 and novel mutations. The phenotype of NBIA of unknown cause includes a PD-like presentation.
...
PMID:Indian-subcontinent NBIA: unusual phenotypes, novel PANK2 mutations, and undetermined genetic forms. 2062 44