| Literature DB >> 24957181 |
Juan Darío Ortigoza-Escobar, Mercedes Serrano, Marta Molero, Alfonso Oyarzabal, Mónica Rebollo, Jordi Muchart, Rafael Artuch, Pilar Rodríguez-Pombo, Belén Pérez-Dueñas1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: The clinical characteristics distinguishing treatable thiamine transporter-2 deficiency (ThTR2) due to SLC19A3 genetic defects from the other devastating causes of Leigh syndrome are sparse.Entities:
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Year: 2014 PMID: 24957181 PMCID: PMC4099387 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-9-92
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
The clinical, biochemical and genetic data of the four patients with thiamine transporter-2 deficiency
| Mutation | c.68G < T in homozygosis | c.1079dupT/ c.980-14A < G | c.74dupT/ c.980-14A < G | c.74dupT/ c.980-14A < G |
| Phenotype | Leigh syndrome | Leigh syndrome | BTBGD | BTBGD |
| Sex and Onset | Male, 1 month | Male, 13 months | Female, 4 years | Male, 15 years |
| Encephalopathy | Lethargy, vomiting | Irritability, continuous crying | Agitation, lethargy | Agitation, coma |
| Extrapiramidal features | Hypotonia, jitteriness, dystonia, opisthotonus, tremor | Hypotonia, status dystonicus, ophistotonus, tremor | Paroxysmal dystonia, generalized dystonia, tremor | Status dystonicus, akinetic-rigid syndrome, tremor |
| Cranial nerves | Dysphagia | Dysphagia, nystagmus, strabismus | Anarthria, dysphagia | Nystagmus, ptosis, diplopia, dysarthria, vertigo, facial dyskinesias/hyposthesias |
| Others | Pyramidal signs | Ataxia, weight loss, hepatomegaly, jaundice | None | Pyramidal signs, rabdomyolisis, dysautonomia, generalized seizures |
| Plasma Lactate (RR 0,7 – 2,4 mmol/L) | 8.6 | 2.3 | 1.6 | 1.2 |
| Plasma Pyruvate (RR 0,03-0,1 mmol/L) | 0.14 | 0.1 | 0.21 | 0.13 |
| Lactate/Pyruvate ratio (RR 11–30) | 19.1 | 23.4 | 11.5 | 18.2 |
| Alpha Alanine (RR 167 – 439 μmol/L) | 637 | 355 | 300 | 370 |
| CSF Lactate (RR 1,1 – 2,2 mmol/L) | 7.1 | 1.7 | Not performed | 1.8 |
| Organic acid analysis in urine | High excretion of alpha-ketoglutarate (11463 mmol/mol creatinine) | High excretion of 2-hydroxy acids, isobutyric, 2-hydroxy-isovaleric acid, 2,4-dihydroxybutyric | Normal | Normal |
BTBGD: Biotin-thiamine responsive basal ganglia disease.
Figure 1Axial T2 FSE demonstrated bilateral and symmetrical involvement of the putamina and medial thalamic nuclei in patients 1 (P.1), 2 (P.2), 3 (P.3) and 4 (P.4). In patients 2, 3 and 4, the head of the caudates were also affected.
Figure 2Axial T2 FSE of patient 3 (P.3) at the level of the basal ganglia and of patient 1 at the level of the peri-rolandic region (P.1) and the basal ganglia (P.1) before and after treatment. There is a dramatic improvement of the lesions after thiamine supplementation.
Figure 3Box-plot representations of the whole-blood TDP concentrations divided into two intervals: > 5 years (n = 67): 90.3 nmol/L (38.8-188.4) (median, range); < 5 years (n = 39): 68.8 (34.2-114.8) (median, range). The Mann–Whitney U test showed significantly different values for TDP when comparing both groups (U = 731, p > 0.001). The TDP values of patients 1(*), 2 (‡) and 3 (§) under thiamine treatment are also represented in the figure. The length of the boxes indicates the interquartile space (P25-P75), the horizontal line represents the median (P50), and the bars indicate the range.
Figure 4The upper figure shows a distribution of the age at onset in all reported patients with ThTR2 deficiency and the related clinical phenotypes. The lower figure shows a schematic representation of all reported SLC19A3 mutations and the related clinical phenotypes.
The clinical and radiological features of patients with thiamine transporter-2 deficiency reported in the literature
| Patients | 69 | Dead patients | 23 |
| Age (years ± SD) | 3.5 ± 4.3 | ||
| Male/Female | 36/33 | Tetraparesia/Dystonia | 32 |
| Trigger events | 40 | Cognitive impairment | 23 |
| Dysphagia | 13 | ||
| Encephalopathy/Lethargy | 57 | Epilepsy | 11 |
| Seizure | 47 | Dysarthria | 10 |
| Generalized and focal dystonia | 38 | Respiratory support | 4 |
| Dysarthria/Anarthria | 28 | Ataxia | 3 |
| Ataxia | 25 | | |
| Dysphagia | 21 | ||
| Pyramidal signs | 19 | Caudate | 55 |
| Abnormal ocular movement | 17 | Putamen | 55 |
| Developmental delay | 12 | Thalami | 31 |
| Opisthotonus | 11 | Cerebellum | 22 |
| Rigidity/Rigid akinetic syndrome | 11 | Brainstem | 19 |
| Tremor | 4 | Subcortical WM | 16 |
| Chorea | 2 | Cerebral cortex | 13 |
| Jitteriness | 2 | Globus pallidus | 8 |
| Dystonic status | 2 | Medulla | 3 |
| Dysautonomia | 2 | Lactate on spectroscopy | 6 |
| Ptosis | 2 | ||
The table shows a list of signs and symptoms at onset and at follow-up, as well as MRI abnormalities. Seizures include myoclonic jerks, epileptic spams, focal and generalized seizure, epilesia partialis continua and status epilepticus. Abnormal ocular movements include nystagmus, oculogyric crisis, oculomotor nerve palsy, ophtalmoplegia and sunset phenomenon. Symptoms reported only once: rhabdomyolisis, facial dyskinesia. SD: Standard Deviation.