| Literature DB >> 20359319 |
Michito Namekawa1, Yoshihisa Takiyama, Junko Honda, Haruo Shimazaki, Kumi Sakoe, Imaharu Nakano.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Alexander disease (ALX) is a rare neurological disorder characterized by white matter degeneration and cytoplasmic inclusions in astrocytes called Rosenthal fibers, labeled by antibodies against glial fibrillary acidic protein (GFAP). Three subtypes are distinguished according to age at onset: infantile (under age 2), juvenile (age 2 to 12) and adult (over age 12). Following the identification of heterozygous mutations in GFAP that cause this disease, cases of adult-onset ALX have been increasingly reported. CASEEntities:
Mesh:
Year: 2010 PMID: 20359319 PMCID: PMC2873320 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2377-10-21
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Figure 1Brain MRI of a patient with adult-onset Alexander disease. a-f: T2-weighted axial images showing marked atrophy of the medulla oblongata (a) with slight cerebellar atrophy (a, b) but little atrophy of the pontine base (b), enlargement of the fourth ventricle (b), atrophy of the midbrain, especially the dorsal part (c), bilateral changes in the posterior part of globus pallidus (d), bilateral lesions of the fronto-orbital areas, predominating on the left, caused by brain contusion (d, e, g, h), moderate cortical atrophy with ventricular enlargement (e, f), and bilateral lacunae in the deep white matter, but no leukoencephalopathy (f). g and k: T1-weighted images of the lesions on axial (g) and sagittal (k) sections. h, i and j: FLAIR images of the lesions on axial (h, i) and coronal (j) sections. The lesions on coronal (j) and sagittal (k) sections are indicated by arrows. Note the absence of ventricular garlands [15]. l: T1-weighted sagittal section showing typical tadpole-like brainstem atrophy, consisting of marked cervico-medullary atrophy with an intact pontine base; note that atrophy of the midbrain tegmentum also contributes to the formation of the tadpole.
Summary of the clinical features and MRI features of adult-onset Alexander disease reported in the literature [10,11,15-36].
| Sex Difference | M/F = 23/22 |
|---|---|
| Average age at onset | 37.0 ± 17.9 (n = 36), |
| Clinical features | |
| Bulbar symptom | 35/45 (78%) |
| Pyramidal tract signs | 33/45 (73%) |
| Ataxia | 31/44 (71%) |
| Palatal myoclonus | 15/38 (39%) |
| MRI findings | |
| Marked medullary atrophy | 37/42 (88%) |
| Deep white matter abnormalities | 21/43 (49%) |
| Brainstem signal change | 16/36 (44%) |