Literature DB >> 11097445

Orthopaedic manifestations of familial dysautonomia. A review of one hundred and thirty-six patients.

E Bar-On1, Y Floman, S Sagiv, K Katz, R D Pollak, C Maayan.   

Abstract

BACKGROUND: Familial dysautonomia is a hereditary multisystemic disease primarily affecting people of Ashkenazi Jewish descent. Musculoskeletal problems are related to gait disorders, spinal deformities, foot deformities, fractures, and arthropathies.
METHODS: The charts and radiographs of 136 patients who ranged in age from three months to forty-six years (mean, sixteen years) were reviewed. Sixty-four patients were available for follow-up examination.
RESULTS: Spinal deformity was the most common orthopaedic problem and was diagnosed in seventy-eight patients starting at the age of four years, with a prevalence of 86 percent (forty-eight of fifty-six) by the age of fifteen years. Forty-one (53 percent) of the seventy-eight patients had scoliosis only, thirty-four (44 percent) had kyphoscoliosis, and three (4 percent) had kyphosis only. Bracing was accompanied by emotional, pulmonary, and skin problems, leading to a high rate of noncompliance and progression of the curve. Twenty-four patients had an operation at a mean age of thirteen years (range, five to eighteen years): twenty patients had posterior spinal arthrodesis, and four had combined anterior and posterior arthrodesis. Fifteen patients had a total of nineteen complications, of which seven were systemic and twelve were related to the spinal fixation. Eight patients had revision surgery. At the time of the surgery, scoliosis was corrected from a mean of 55 degrees to a mean of 35 degrees and kyphosis was corrected from a mean of 69 degrees to a mean of 61 degrees. After a mean duration of follow-up of sixty-five months, scoliosis measured 49 degrees (range, 18 to 62 degrees) and kyphosis measured 67 degrees (range, 30 to 115 degrees). Postoperative progression of the deformity was caused by failure of the instrumentation or progression in unfused segments. Walking was delayed in 72 percent (ninety-four) of the 130 patients who were of walking age. All sixty-four of the patients who were examined had an ataxic gait. Foot deformities were found in sixteen patients, six of whom were treated surgically. Two patients had Charcot joints. Fifty-five patients sustained at least one fracture before skeletal maturity, with a mean of 1.5 fractures per patient. All but one of the fractures was treated nonoperatively, and fracture-healing was often accompanied by profuse callus formation.
CONCLUSIONS: Spinal deformity is common in patients with familial dysautonomia. Bracing is of questionable benefit, and surgical intervention should be considered once curve progression is well documented. Arthrodesis should be extended as far proximally as possible to prevent junctional kyphosis. Swelling and warmth in a limb should raise suspicion of an undiagnosed fracture.

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Year:  2000        PMID: 11097445

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  J Bone Joint Surg Am        ISSN: 0021-9355            Impact factor:   5.284


  7 in total

1.  Obstructive Sleep-Disordered Breathing Is More Common than Central in Mild Familial Dysautonomia.

Authors:  Max J Hilz; Sebastian Moeller; Susanne Buechner; Hanna Czarkowska; Indu Ayappa; Felicia B Axelrod; David M Rapoport
Journal:  J Clin Sleep Med       Date:  2016-12-15       Impact factor: 4.062

2.  Hereditary and sensory autonomic neuropathies.

Authors:  Mojdeh Khaledi; Nima Rezaei
Journal:  Iran J Pediatr       Date:  2012-12       Impact factor: 0.364

3.  Congenital insensitivity to pain and anhidrosis.

Authors:  Ashok H Sasnur; Prakash A Sasnur; Raza Shamikh Muneer Ghaus-Ul
Journal:  Indian J Orthop       Date:  2011-05       Impact factor: 1.251

4.  The familial dysautonomia disease gene IKBKAP is required in the developing and adult mouse central nervous system.

Authors:  Marta Chaverra; Lynn George; Marc Mergy; Hannah Waller; Katharine Kujawa; Connor Murnion; Ezekiel Sharples; Julian Thorne; Nathaniel Podgajny; Andrea Grindeland; Yumi Ueki; Steven Eiger; Cassie Cusick; A Michael Babcock; George A Carlson; Frances Lefcort
Journal:  Dis Model Mech       Date:  2017-02-06       Impact factor: 5.758

5.  Bone biomechanical properties and tissue-scale bone quality in a genetic mouse model of familial dysautonomia.

Authors:  G Vahidi; H Flook; V Sherk; M Mergy; F Lefcort; C M Heveran
Journal:  Osteoporos Int       Date:  2021-05-25       Impact factor: 4.507

6.  Familial Dysautonomia: Mechanisms and Models.

Authors:  Paula Dietrich; Ioannis Dragatsis
Journal:  Genet Mol Biol       Date:  2016-08-04       Impact factor: 1.771

7.  Characteristics of ataxic gait in familial dysautonomia patients.

Authors:  Sigal Portnoy; Channa Maayan; Jeanna Tsenter; Yonah Ofran; Vladimir Goldman; Nurit Hiller; Naama Karniel; Isabella Schwartz
Journal:  PLoS One       Date:  2018-04-26       Impact factor: 3.240

  7 in total

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