| Literature DB >> 21294910 |
Jean-Philippe Camdessanché1, Véronique V Belzil, Guillemette Jousserand, Guy A Rouleau, Christelle Créac'h, Philippe Convers, Jean-Christophe Antoine.
Abstract
Patients with TARDBP mutations have so far been classified as ALS, sometimes with frontal lobe dysfunction. A 66-year-old patient progressively developed a severe sensory disorder, followed by a motor disorder, which evolved over nine years. Symptoms started in the left hand and slowly involved the four limbs. Investigations were consistent with a mixed sensory and motor neuronopathy. A heterozygous change from an alanine to a proline at amino acid 382 was identified in exon 6 of the TARDPB gene (p.A382P). This case expands the phenotypic spectrum associated with mutations in the TARDBP gene and shows that sensory neurons can be severely damaged early in the course of the disease, following a propagating process, with an orderly progression from a focal starting point. A combination of severe sensory and motor neuronopathy is rarely encountered in clinical practice. The possibility of an A382P TDP-43 mutation should be considered in patients with such an association.Entities:
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Year: 2011 PMID: 21294910 PMCID: PMC3042904 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-6-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Evolution of sensory evoked potentials (SEPs) and sensory action potentials (SAPs) with disease course.
| RIGHT | LEFT | |||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Median nerve | ||||||||
| SEPs | ||||||||
| N9 | + | + | - | + | - | - | ||
| N13 | + | - | ND | - | - | - | ND | - |
| P14 | + | + | - | - | - | - | ||
| N20 | + | + | + | - | - | - | ||
| SAP (μV) N > 8 μV | 13.8 | 12.7 | 4.75 | 0 | 6.8 | 5 | 0 | 0 |
| Tibial nerve | ||||||||
| SEPs | ||||||||
| N20 | ND | ND | - | - | ND | ND | - | - |
| P30 | - | - | - | - | ||||
| Sural nerve | ||||||||
| SAP (μV) N > 8 μV | 7.8 | ND | 6.4 | 6.1 | 8 | ND | 6.4 | 3.8 |
SEPs were recorded after stimulation of the median nerve at the wrist or the tibial nerve at the ankle, and SAPs were recorded in the median or sural nerves. N9, Erb point; N13, cervical spinal cord posterior horn; P14, gracilis and cuneatus nuclei; N20, parietal cortex, and P30, frontal cortex. '+' indicates a recorded potential and '-'an absent potential. ND: not done. SAPs were dromically registered with surface electrode in the ulnar nerve (head level, normal ≥ 8 μV) and antidromically in the sural nerve (foot level, normal ≥ 8 μV)
Figure 1Parallel evolution of electroneuromyographic abnormalities (top row) and clinical sensory and motor perturbations (bottom row). The slight neurogenic changes were motor unit potentials (MUPs) with increased polyphasism, size, and duration according to multi-MUP computer-assisted analysis, the active neurogenic changes were fasciculation potentials, fibrillations potentials, or positive sharp waves, while the chronic neurogenic changes were loss of MUPs or high firing rate. 1, abductor policis brevis; 2, first dorsal interosseus; 3, abductor digiti minimi; 4, extensor carpi radialis longus; 5, brachioradialis; 6, palmaris longus; 7, trapezius; 8, vastus lateralis; 9, gastrocnemius; 10, tibialis anterior; 11, extensor digitorum brevis; 12, biceps brachialis; 13, deltoidus; 14, mentalis. The bars correspond to sensory action potentials in μV registered dromically with a surface electrode in the ulnar nerve (head level, normal ≥ 8 μV) and antidromically with the electrode in the sural nerve (foot level, normal ≥ 8 μV).
Figure 2Fiber loss mainly involved large fibers with a few degenerating axons (arrows) and no regenerating cluster as seen in the photograph of the superficial radial nerve biopsy (semithin section × 40) in (A) and the histogram in (B), (C), Abnormal hyperintensity in the left posterior column on the cervical spinal cord T2-MRI.
Figure 3Immunohistochemical study using anti-TDP-43 antibodies of the patient's nerve biopsy (A × 40) and a control nerve biopsy (B × 30). In both nerves, only Schwann cell nuclei are immunolabeled.
Figure 4Sequence traces and across-species conservation. (A) Sequence trace for the p.A382P variant; the patient is shown below the wild type sequence. The red square marks the substituted nucleotide and the substituted amino acid is in red. (B) Conservation across nine species of amino acids 377 to 405 of TDP-43 is shown using the Clustal W method. Amino acid 382 is boxed in red and the proline present in the mouse and rat is underlined in red.