| Literature DB >> 26839702 |
Jeanette Koht1, Sven Olav Løstegaard2, Iselin Wedding3, Marie Vidailhet4, Malek Louha5, Chantal Me Tallaksen3.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Benign hereditary chorea is a rare disorder which is characterized by early onset, non-progressive choreic movement disturbance, with other hyperkinetic movements and unsteadiness also commonly seen. Hypothyroidism and lung disease are frequent additional features. The disorder is caused by mutations of the NKX2-1 gene on chromosome 14. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Ataxia; BHC; Benign hereditary chorea; Dystonia; Myoclonus; NKX2-1 gene
Year: 2016 PMID: 26839702 PMCID: PMC4736661 DOI: 10.1186/s40673-016-0041-7
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Cerebellum Ataxias ISSN: 2053-8871
Differential diagnoses for benign hereditary chorea
| Diagnosea | Gene | Genetic cluese | Main clinical features |
|---|---|---|---|
| Benign hereditary chorea (BHC) |
| AD, early onset | Hypotonia, chorea, lung and thyroid symptoms |
| Myoclonus dystonia (DYT11) |
| AD, maternal imprinting | Myoclonus of short duration (<150 ms), dystonia |
| BHC like disorder |
| AD | Paroxysmal choreic/dystonic movements, facial myokymia |
| Huntington’s diseaseb |
| AD, anticipation | Chorea, athetosis, worsen over time, psychiatric symptoms and dementia |
| Huntington’s disease - like disorder 1–4c |
| AD/AR | Chorea, athetosis, worsen over time, psychiatric symptoms and dementia |
| Other Huntington's - like disorders |
| AR | Cerebellar ataxia, behavioral problems, dementia, white matter lesions, hypogonadotropic hypogonadism, in some families chorea and athetosis |
| Ataxia telangiectasia |
| AR | Oculomotor apraxia, telangiectasia, dystonia |
| AOA1 (Ataxia with oculomotor apraxia 1) |
| AR | Early-onset cerebellar signs, sensory neuropathy, cognitive decline, and oculomotor deficits |
| Friedreich ataxia |
| AR | Sensory disturbances, spaticity, hyporeflexia, rare presentations with chorea and myoclonus |
| Hereditary ataxias (SCA1,2,3,6,7,17, DRPLA) |
| AD | Progressive ataxia, cerebellar (and brainstem) atrophy |
| Glucose transporter type 1 deficiency |
| AD | Chorea and often mental retardation associated with a combination of paroxysmal ataxia, dystonia and/or epilepsy |
| Neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA)d |
| AR/X-linked/AD | Typical MRI findings, dystonia, progression, cognitive decline |
aThere are many acquired conditions mimicking BHC in addition to this list
bIn Huntington’s disease the juvenile forms often present with dystonia or parkinsonism
cHuntington disease like (HDL) 1–4; unknown gene in HDL3 (questioned entity), HDL4 the same as SCA17. HDL1 also known as inherited prion disease
dMutations in ten genes can cause NBIA. Mutations in PANK2 is the most common
eMany of these disorders appear sporadic due to reduced penetrance/age-dependent penetrance, variable expressivity and de-novo mutations
Fig. 1The clinical spectrum of Benign Hereditary Chorea
Fig. 2The pedigree of the family
Clinical data of the affected family members
| SARA score | Hyperkinetic movementsa | Thyroidea | Lungs | MMS | IQ | Verbal IQ (percentile) | Performance IQ (percentile) | |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| II:4 | 12.5 | Dystonia | Normal values, treated earlier | Asthma | NA | NA | ||
| II:7 | 10.5 | Dystonia, mild ataxia | Hypothyreoses, treated | Asthma | NA | NA | ||
| III:6 | 6 | Myoclonus, mild ataxia | Compensated valuesb | Asthma | 30/30 | 99 | 41th | 59th |
| III:7 | 7 | Dystonia | Compensated valuesb | Frequent infections | NA | NA | ||
| III:8 | 5 | Dystonia, stuttering, tics, | Normal values | No lung problems | NA | NA | ||
| IV:1 | 5.5 | Normal values | Asthma | 0/30 | 90 | 14th | 95th | |
| IV:2 | 5 | Normal values | Asthma | 30/30 | 81 | NA | NA | |
| IV:3 | 7 | Compensated valuesb | Asthma | 30/30 | 86 | 30th | 68th |
aIn addition to chorea
bNormal fT4, but elevated TSH
Fig. 3A typical Archimedes spiral drawing by one of the affected subjects