| Literature DB >> 26090078 |
Abstract
Hereditary ataxia is a heterogeneous disorder characterized by progressive ataxia combined with/without peripheral neuropathy, extrapyramidal symptoms, pyramidal symptoms, seizure, and multiple systematic involvements. More than 35 autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxias have been designated as spinocerebellar ataxia, and there are 55 recessive ataxias that have not been named systematically. Conducting genetic sequencing to confirm a diagnosis is difficult due to the large amount of subtypes with phenotypic overlap. The prevalence of hereditary ataxia can vary among countries, and estimations of prevalence and subtype frequencies are necessary for planning a diagnostic strategy in a specific population. This review covers the various hereditary ataxias reported in the Korean population with a focus on the prevalence and subtype frequencies as the clinical characteristics of the various subtypes.Entities:
Keywords: Cerebellar ataxia; Korea; Prevalence; Spinocerebellar ataxias
Year: 2015 PMID: 26090078 PMCID: PMC4460542 DOI: 10.14802/jmd.15006
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Mov Disord ISSN: 2005-940X
SCA: distinguishing features and molecular genetics
| Disorder | Distinguishing features | Gene/locus | Protein or types of mutation |
|---|---|---|---|
| SCA1 | Pyramidal signs, peripheral neuropathy | CAG repeat, ataxin-1 | |
| SCA2 | Slow saccades; less often myoclonus, areflexia | CAG repeat, ataxin-2 | |
| SCA3 | Slow saccades, persistent stare, extrapyramidal signs, peripheral neuropathy | CAG repeat, ataxin-3 (MJD1) | |
| SCA4 | Sensory neuropathy | 16q22.1 | |
| SCA5 | Early onset but slow progression | Beta III spectrin | |
| SCA6 | May have very late onset, mild, may lack family history, nystagmus | CAG repeat, alpha 1A P/Q calcium channel subunit | |
| SCA7 | Macular degeneration | CAG repeat, ataxin-7 | |
| SCA8 | Mild disease | CTG*CAG repeat | |
| SCA9 | Not assigned | ||
| SCA10 | Generalized or complex partial seizures | ATTCT repeat, ataxin-10 | |
| SCA11 | Mild disease | Tau tubulin kinase-2 | |
| SCA12 | Tremor, dementia | CAG repeat in 5ʼ region, protein phosphatase 2A | |
| SCA13 | Mental retardation | Voltage gated potassium channel KCNC3 | |
| SCA14 | Intermittent myoclonus with early onset disease | Protein kinase C gamma | |
| SCA15/16 | Slowly progressive | Inositol 1,4,5-triphosphate receptor 1 | |
| SCA17 | Gait ataxia, dementia | CAG repeats, TATA binding protein | |
| SCA18 | Pyramidal signs, weakness, sensory axonal neuropathy | 7q22-q32 | |
| SCA19/22 | Predominantly cerebellar syndrome, sometimes with cognitive impairment or myoclonus | Voltage-gated potassium channel Kv4.3 | |
| SCA20 | Palatal tremor and dysphonia | 11q12 | |
| SCA21 | Extrapyramidal signs | 7p21.3-p15.1 | |
| SCA23 | Distal sensory deficits | Prodynorphin | |
| SCA24 | Recessive inheritance; redesignated as SCAR4 | 1p36 | |
| SCA25 | Sensory neuropathy, facial tics, gastrointestinal symptoms | 2p21-p13 | |
| SCA26 | Pure cerebellar ataxia | 19p13.3 | |
| SCA27 | Cognitive impairment | Fibroblast growth factor 14 | |
| SCA28 | Ophthalmoparesis and ptosis | Catalytic subunit of the mitochondrial AAA protease | |
| SCA29 | Early onset, non-progressive ataxia; may be an allelic variant of SCA15 | 3p26 | |
| SCA30 | Slowly progressive, relatively pure ataxia | 4q34.3-q35.1 | |
| SCA31 | Decreased muscle tone | (TGGAA) n repeat | |
| SCA32 | Cognitive impairment, affected males with azoospermia and testicular atrophy | 7q32-q33 | |
| SCA33 | Not assigned | ||
| SCA34 | Skin lesions consisting of papulosquamous erythematous ichthyosiform plaques | 6p12.3-q16.2 | |
| SCA35 | Late onset, slowly progressive gait and limb ataxia | Transglutaminase 6 | |
| SCA36 | Late onset, truncal ataxia, dysarthria, variable motor neuron disease, and sensorineural hearing loss | GGCCTG repeat | |
| SCA37 | Late onset, falls, dysarthria, clumsiness, abnormal vertical eye movements | 1p32 | |
| SCA38 | Adult onset, axonal neuropathy | ||
| SCA40 | Adult onset, brisk reflexed, spasticity |
SCA: spinocerebellar ataxias, CAG: coronary angiography.
Reports of cerebellar ataxia with an autosomal recessive inheritance pattern in Korea
| Disease | Gene/product | Case | Clinical manifestations | Mutation confirmed |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| FRDA | Heo et al. [ | Optic atrophy as the initial clinical manifestation | No | |
| Lee et al. [ | Hearing difficulty, gait ataxia, scoliosis, proprioceptive loss | No | ||
| AT | Jeong et al. [ | Early onset ataxia, oculomotor apraxia, polyneuropathy, telangiectasia | Yes | |
| Huh et al. [ | Early onset ataxia, oculomotor apraxia, telangiectasia | Yes | ||
| Song et al. [ | Early onset ataxia, frequent infections, telangiectasia | No | ||
| Kang et al. [ | Early onset ataxia, oculomotor apraxia, dysarthria, telangiectasia | No | ||
| CTX | Hwang et al. [ | Ataxia, xanthomas, dementia, cranial nerve palsy, pyramidal signs, cataracts | No | |
| Suh et al. [ | Xanthomas, cataract, osteopenia, mental retardation, ataxia, neuropathy | Yes | ||
| ARSACS | Unpublished | Early onset ataxia, spasticity, distal amyotrophy with foot deformity | Yes | |
| FXTAS | Ehm et al. [ | Gait ataxia, parkinsonism, mood disorder, high signal in MCP | Yes |
FRDA: Friedreich’s ataxia, AT: ataxia telangiectasia, CTX: cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis, ARSACS: autosomal recessive spastic ataxia of Charlevoix-Saguenay, FXTAS: Fragile X-associated tremor/ataxia syndrome.
Clinical, laboratory and radiological clues for the diagnosis of autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxias
| Diagnosis | Gene/protein | Age of onset | Clinical, laboratory, and radiologic clues for diagnosis |
|---|---|---|---|
| Friedreich ataxia | 1st–2nd decade | Areflexia with Babinski reflex, skeletal deformity, cardiomyopathy, DM, sensory neuropathy, no cerebellar atrophy on brain MRI | |
| Ataxia with vitamin E deficiency | 2–50 years | Decreased vitamin E, retinitis pigmentosa, no cerebellar atrophy on brain MRI, sensory neuropathy | |
| Abetalipoproteinemia | From birth | Abnormal in lipoprotein, no cerebellar atrophy on brain MRI, decreased vitamin E, sensory neuropathy | |
| Mitochondrial recessive ataxia syndrome | Childhood to young adult | Neuropathy, deafness, epilepsy, dysarthria, nystagmus | |
| Ataxia telangiectasia | < 5 years | Telangiectasia, chorea, dystonia, immunodeficiency, increased α-fetoprotein, sensorimotor neuropathy | |
| AOA 1 | Infancy | Oculomotor apraxia, chorea, dystonia, sensorimotor neuropathy, decreased albumin level, increased LDL cholesterol level | |
| AOA 2 | 7–25 years | Oculomotor apraxia, axonal sensorimotor neuropathy, increased serum α-fetoprotein | |
| ARSACS | Childhood | Spastic ataxia, sensorimotor neuropathy, hypertrophic myelinated fibers in the fundus, linear hypointensities in the Pons | |
| CTX | Childhood to young adult | Xanthomas, spastic ataxia, mental retardation, white matter change, premature cataract, sensorimotor neuropathy | |
| Refsum disease | Pex7, Pex10, | 10–20 years | Sensorimotor neuropathy, retinopathy, deafness, ichthyosis, no cerebellar atrophy on brain MRI |
AOA 1: ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 1, LDL: low-density lipoprotein, AOA 2: ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 2, ARSACS: autosomal recessive spastic ataxia of Charlevoix-Saguenay, CTX: cerebrotendinous xanthomatosis.