Literature DB >> 16138254

Complicated hereditary spastic paraplegia with thin corpus callosum (HSP-TCC) and childhood onset.

K Brockmann1, M A Simpson, A Faber, C Bönnemann, A H Crosby, J Gärtner.   

Abstract

The hereditary spastic paraplegias (HSPs) are a group of rare disorders with the predominant clinical feature of progressive spastic paraplegia. They are subdivided into pure and complicated forms according to whether the disorder is associated with other neurological abnormalities. We report on two unrelated female Caucasian patients with complicated HSP, aged 16 and 24 years, who showed progressive gait disturbance with spasticity and ataxia as well as cognitive impairment. Onset of symptoms was at age 3 and 10 years, respectively. MRI revealed mild diffuse non-progressive T (2)-signal alterations of cerebral white matter and thinning of the body and genu of the corpus callosum. Some similarity of clinical symptoms and MRI patterns with the phenotype of Mast syndrome prompted a mutation analysis of the SPG21 gene, encoding maspardin, which revealed a wild-type sequence in both patients. Clinical and neuroradiological features in our patients are diagnostic for complicated autosomal recessive hereditary spastic paraplegia with thin corpus callosum (HSP-TCC, SPG11). This disorder, characterized by a typical MRI pattern and a progressive spastic paraplegia that may be associated with dementia and ataxia, may have an onset in early childhood and probably is one of the more common forms of complicated HSP.

Entities:  

Mesh:

Substances:

Year:  2005        PMID: 16138254     DOI: 10.1055/s-2005-872809

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Neuropediatrics        ISSN: 0174-304X            Impact factor:   1.947


  5 in total

1.  Cerebral metabolic and structural alterations in hereditary spastic paraplegia with thin corpus callosum assessed by MRS and DTI.

Authors:  Steffi Dreha-Kulaczewski; Peter Dechent; Gunther Helms; Jens Frahm; Jutta Gärtner; Knut Brockmann
Journal:  Neuroradiology       Date:  2006-09-30       Impact factor: 2.804

2.  A new locus (SPG46) maps to 9p21.2-q21.12 in a Tunisian family with a complicated autosomal recessive hereditary spastic paraplegia with mental impairment and thin corpus callosum.

Authors:  Amir Boukhris; Imed Feki; Nizar Elleuch; Mohamed Imed Miladi; Anne Boland-Augé; Jérémy Truchetto; Emeline Mundwiller; Nadia Jezequel; Diana Zelenika; Chokri Mhiri; Alexis Brice; Giovanni Stevanin
Journal:  Neurogenetics       Date:  2010-07-01       Impact factor: 2.660

3.  Spastic paraplegia with thin corpus callosum: description of 20 new families, refinement of the SPG11 locus, candidate gene analysis and evidence of genetic heterogeneity.

Authors:  Giovanni Stevanin; Giorgia Montagna; Hamid Azzedine; Enza Maria Valente; Alexandra Durr; Valentina Scarano; Naima Bouslam; Denise Cassandrini; Paola S Denora; Chiara Criscuolo; Soraya Belarbi; Antonio Orlacchio; Philippe Jonveaux; Gabriella Silvestri; Anne Marie Ouvrad Hernandez; Giuseppe De Michele; Meriem Tazir; Caterina Mariotti; Knut Brockmann; Alessandro Malandrini; Marjo S van der Knapp; Marcella Neri; Hassan Tonekaboni; Mariarosa A B Melone; Alessandra Tessa; M Teresa Dotti; Michela Tosetti; Flavia Pauri; Antonio Federico; Carlo Casali; Vitor T Cruz; José L Loureiro; Federico Zara; Sylvie Forlani; Enrico Bertini; Paula Coutinho; Alessandro Filla; Alexis Brice; Filippo M Santorelli
Journal:  Neurogenetics       Date:  2006-05-13       Impact factor: 2.660

4.  Hereditary spastic paraplegia with a thin corpus callosum.

Authors:  Sivaraman Somasundaram; Seetharam Raghavendra; Atampreet Singh; Chandrasekharan Kesavadas; Muraleedharan Nair
Journal:  Pediatr Radiol       Date:  2007-03-27

5.  Clinical heterogeneity and genotype-phenotype correlations in hereditary spastic paraplegia because of Spatacsin mutations (SPG11).

Authors:  C Paisan-Ruiz; P Nath; N W Wood; A Singleton; H Houlden
Journal:  Eur J Neurol       Date:  2008-08-20       Impact factor: 6.089

  5 in total

北京卡尤迪生物科技股份有限公司 © 2022-2023.