Literature DB >> 28440863

Finger extension weakness and downbeat nystagmus motor neuron disease syndrome: A novel motor neuron disorder?

Aline Delva1, Nimish Thakore2, Erik P Pioro2, Koen Poesen3,4, Rachel Saunders-Pullman5, Inge A Meijer5, Janet C Rucker5, John T Kissel6, Philip Van Damme1,7,8.   

Abstract

INTRODUCTION: Disturbances of eye movements are infrequently encountered in motor neuron diseases (MNDs) or motor neuropathies, and there is no known syndrome that combines progressive muscle weakness with downbeat nystagmus.
METHODS: To describe the core clinical features of a syndrome of MND associated with downbeat nystagmus, clinical features were collected from 6 patients.
RESULTS: All patients had slowly progressive muscle weakness and wasting in combination with downbeat nystagmus, which was clinically most obvious in downward and lateral gaze. Onset was in the second to fourth decade with finger extension weakness, progressing to other distal and sometimes more proximal muscles. Visual complaints were not always present. Electrodiagnostic testing showed signs of regional motor axonal loss in all patients. DISCUSSION: The etiology of this syndrome remains elusive. Because finger extension weakness and downbeat nystagmus are the discriminating clinical features of this MND, we propose the name FEWDON-MND syndrome. Muscle Nerve 56: 1164-1168, 2017.
© 2017 The Authors Muscle & Nerve Published by Wiley Periodicals, Inc.

Entities:  

Keywords:  FEWDON-MND; downbeat nystagmus; finger extension; motor neuron disease; muscle wasting

Mesh:

Year:  2017        PMID: 28440863      PMCID: PMC5656559          DOI: 10.1002/mus.25669

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Muscle Nerve        ISSN: 0148-639X            Impact factor:   3.217


amyotrophic lateral sclerosis antinuclear antigen cerebrospinal fluid distal hereditary motor neuropathy finger extensor weakness and downbeat nystagmus motor neuron disease syndrome glutamic acid decarboxylase multifocal motor neuropathy motor neuron disorder spinomuscular atrophy vestibule‐ocular reflex Disturbances of eye movements are rarely encountered in motor neuron diseases (MNDs) or motor neuropathies.1, 2, 3 Limited upgaze, saccadic intrusions, and slow saccades have been reported, most commonly seen in MND patients with bulbar onset or frontal impairment.4, 5, 6, 7, 8, 9 Nystagmus is extremely rare in MNDs.4, 10 In 2006, we first reported 3 cases with the exceptional combination of a motor neuron syndrome and downbeat nystagmus.11 Here we describe 3 additional cases with the same condition and provide follow‐up information on the previously reported cases, confirming that this is a novel clinical disease entity, an MND with distal upper extremity extensor muscle weakness and downbeat nystagmus.

METHODS

A retrospective chart review was performed on the identified cases. Clinical parameters and the results of investigations were collected and analyzed. The study was approved by institutional ethics committees, and the patients provided written informed consent.

RESULTS

Detailed descriptions of the clinical presentations and the results of investigations of 3 novel patients and follow‐up information on 2 of the 3 earlier reported patients11 are given in the Supporting Information online. The combination of a slowly progressive motor syndrome with prominent early finger extensor weakness and the eventual development of downbeat nystagmus characterize this syndrome. The core clinical characteristics and investigation results of the 6 patients are presented in Table 1.
Table 1

Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients with FEWDON‐MND syndrome

Patient 1Patient 2Patient 3Patient 4Patient 5Patient 6
SexWMWWWM
Age at onset (years)233730163840
Duration of disease at last follow‐up (years)3291643218
Finger extension weakness++++++
Other areas of weakness (always less obvious than the finger extension weakness)Elbow and wrist flexors, wrist extensors, hip flexorsNeck flexors and extensors, wrist and hand flexors and extensors, finger flexorsArm abductors and extensors, wrist extensors, finger flexors and abductors, hip flexors and extensors, foot extensorsWrist extensor, leg musclesWrist and elbow extensorsWrist extensors, shoulder girdle muscles
Deep tendon reflexesBrisk in UL and LLAbsent in UL, brisk in LLBrisk in LLNormal in UL, reduced in LLBrisk in UL and LLAbsent in UL and reduced in LL
Unsteady gait+++
Muscle cramps++++
Downbeat nystagmus++++++
CSF examinationNormalNPNormalNormalNormalNP
ANA (titer)NegativeNegativeNegativePositive (1:40)Positive (1:640)Positive (1:40)
Anti GAD antibodiesNegativeNegativeNegativePositiveNegativeNP
MRI brainNormalNormalNormalNonspecific white matter lesionsMild cerebral and cerebellar atrophyNonspecific white matter lesions
EMG: positive sharp waves or fibrillation potentials1 region (cervical)1 region (cervical)2 regions (cervical, thoracic)2 regions (cervical, lumbosacral)2 regions (cervical, thoracic)1 region (cervical)
Quantitative analysis of eye movementsDownbeat nystagmus, impaired smooth pursuit, VOR suppression, OKN with saccadic intrusionsNPNPDownbeat nystagmus, alternating skew deviationDownbeat nystagmus, bursts of horizontal saccadic oscillations, impaired smooth pursuitNP
Initial diagnosisALSMMN, ALSALSSMAdHMNMND

+, present; −, absent; ALS amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; ANA, antinuclear antigen; GAD, glutamic acid decarboxylase; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; dHMN, distal hereditary motor neuropathy; EMG, electromyography; FEWDON‐MND syndrome, finger extensor weakness and downbeat nystagmus syndrome; LL, lower limb; M, man; MMN, multifocal motor neuropathy; MND, motor neuron disease; NP, not performed; OKN, optokinetic nystagmus; SMA, spinomuscular atrophy; UL, upper limb; VOR, vestibule‐ocular reflex; W, woman

Demographic and clinical characteristics of patients with FEWDON‐MND syndrome +, present; −, absent; ALS amyotrophic lateral sclerosis; ANA, antinuclear antigen; GAD, glutamic acid decarboxylase; CSF, cerebrospinal fluid; dHMN, distal hereditary motor neuropathy; EMG, electromyography; FEWDON‐MND syndrome, finger extensor weakness and downbeat nystagmus syndrome; LL, lower limb; M, man; MMN, multifocal motor neuropathy; MND, motor neuron disease; NP, not performed; OKN, optokinetic nystagmus; SMA, spinomuscular atrophy; UL, upper limb; VOR, vestibule‐ocular reflex; W, woman The age at onset was during adolescence or early adulthood in all patients. All patients presented with unilateral finger extension paresis, slowly spreading to other muscle groups in the arms but also with progression to the legs. Over time, all patients developed gait difficulties, with reduced stability during walking. Over more than 30 years of follow‐up, none of the patients experienced functionally important bulbar or respiratory involvement, pseudobulbar affect, or cognitive impairment. Symptoms were always purely motor; none of the patients reported sensory symptoms or pain. Disease progression was slow in all patients. All patients with current follow‐up information (5/6) were still alive after a disease duration ranging from 3 to 43 years. Family history was negative for MNDs in all patients. Ocular manifestations of the syndrome were asymptomatic or absent in early disease stages in 3/6 patients. The other 3 patients noticed oscillopsia or mild diplopia, which coincided with the onset of muscle weakness. After a disease duration ranging from less than 1 year to 7 years, 5/6 patients reported visual symptoms, and only 1 patient remained asymptomatic. The most distinctive feature of the disease was downbeat nystagmus in all patients (see Supporting Information video). Most accompanying oculomotor findings were also attributable to cerebellar dysfunction and included skew deviation, comitant esophoria, saccadic dysmetria, abnormal smooth pursuit, impaired suppression of the vestibulo‐ocular reflex (VOR), and gaze‐evoked nystagmus. Less localizing was the presence of excessive saccadic intrusions in 2 patients. Muscle weakness was most pronounced in distal arm and leg muscles, with extensor muscles generally more affected than flexor muscles. In 4 patients, the disease progressed to involve proximal musculature as well. The weakest muscles were usually atrophic with visible fasciculations, suggesting lower motor neuron involvement. Many patients had brisk reflexes at least in some body regions, sometimes with a slight increase in muscle tone, but manifest upper motor neuron involvement with spasticity or extensor plantar responses was not encountered. No signs of upper or lower motor neuron involvement were seen in the bulbar region except for patient 3 with tongue fasciculations. Results of the sensory exam were normal for all patients. There was no truncal or appendicular ataxia. Electrodiagnostic testing confirmed lower motor neuron involvement, with signs of denervation (positive sharp waves and fibrillation potentials) and fasciculation potentials, in combination with signs of reinnervation (large amplitude‐long duration motor unit potentials with reduced recruitment) in multiple regions. Eye movement recordings were performed in 3 patients. Downbeat nystagmus was confirmed in all patients. Other clinical findings are detailed in Table 1. Laboratory investigations did not reveal consistent abnormalities. Aside from variably increased antinuclear antigen (ANA) titers in 3 patients, low level of antiglutamic acid decarboxylase (GAD) and antigliadin antibodies in 1 patient, and antithyroglobulin/thyroperoxidase antibodies in another patient, autoimmune screening results were normal. Genetic testing for spinal muscular atrophy (SMA; assessing SMN1), amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS; assessing C9ORF72, superoxide dismutase 1, TAR DNA‐binding protein 43, fused in sarcoma, senataxin), Kennedy disease, and episodic ataxia type 2 (each performed in some of the patients) did not reveal pathogenic mutations. Cerebrospinal fluid (CSF) was normal in each of 4 patients in whom it was tested, without evidence of pleocytosis, elevated protein, or intrathecal antibody synthesis. In 1 patient, CSF neurofilaments (phosphoneurofilament heavy and neurofilament light chain) were measured and were below the cutoff for ALS.12 Results of MRI of the brain were normal in 3 patients (Table 1). Fluorodeoxyglucose‐positron emission tomography was performed in 1 patient, revealing mild hypometabolism in the motor cortex, as can be seen in ALS.13, 14, 15 A trial with plasma exchange (patient 1) and intravenous immunoglobulins (patient 2) did not alter the disease course.

DISCUSSION

We describe a novel motor syndrome, characterized by progressive muscle weakness with onset in finger extensor muscles and a downbeat nystagmus. In published reports of series of patients with downbeat nystagmus, a concomitant motor syndrome is not mentioned.16, 17 As an acronym that captures the core clinical features for finger extensor weakness and downbeat nystagmus motor neuron disease, we suggest FEWDON‐MND syndrome. With only 6 reported patients to date, the incidence is anticipated to be low. However, increased awareness of this clinical disease entity may lead to identification of additional patients and research into its pathophysiology. The differential diagnosis of FEWDON‐MND syndrome is broad. The initial diagnoses included ALS, SMA, multifocal motor neuropathy (MMN), and distal hereditary motor neuropathy (dHMN). MNDs or motor neuropathies often have onset in the distal upper extremities. However, onset with finger and wrist extensor muscle weakness is not frequent. MMN can start with finger extension weakness18; however, none of the patients had signs of demyelination on electrodiagnostic testing or positive monosialotetrahexosylganglioside (GM1) antibodies. Low‐titer GAD antibodies were found in 1 patient. GAD antibodies can present with ataxia or eye movement disorders, including downbeat nystagmus. However, in 5 of our patients, those antibodies were negative. In addition, muscle paresis is not described in patients with GAD antibodies.19 Downbeat nystagmus has not been reported in the setting of MND.20, 21 Although downbeat nystagmus is at times clinically obvious, its presence may be more subtle. By definition, it should be present in central fixation; however, as was seen in all of our patients, it is enhanced and most clinically obvious in downward and lateral gaze (so‐called “side‐pocket” nystagmus).3 Provocative maneuvers such as horizontal and vertical head shaking, hyperventilation, and supine and supine head‐hanging positions22, 23, 24, 25 can increase the sensitivity of detection of downbeat nystagmus. Several mechanisms related to impairment of the cerebellum or its inputs have been shown to result in downbeat nystagmus. These include asymmetry of vertical VOR, dysfunction of otolith‐ocular reflex regulation, altered vestibulocerebellar or neural integrator function, and impaired smooth pursuit.3 They are not mutually exclusive and several may be involved, even in an individual patient. The gravitational dependence of the downbeat nystagmus in our patient 3 suggests a component of impairment of otolith‐ocular reflexes in this patient,22 although it is clear that additional characterization of the downbeat nystagmus in this condition is required. The etiology of FEWDON‐MND syndrome remains unknown. We believe that infectious or postinfectious mechanisms, nutritional deficiency, intoxication, neoplastic or paraneoplastic mechanisms, and central nervous manifestation of internal organ dysfunction are unlikely. An immune‐mediated or genetic origin seems most likely at this stage. Over the past decade, several neuroimmunological diseases linked to autoantibodies against neuronal proteins have been identified.26 Whether FEWDON‐MND syndrome is a neuroimmunological condition remains unknown. Arguments favoring this hypothesis are the presence of elevated ANA titers, GAD antibodies, antigliadin, and antithyroglobulin/thyroperoxidase antibodies in some patients. Ataxia associated with GAD antibodies can present with downbeat nystagmus.19 However, these antibodies were present in only 1 patient in low titer, and none of the patients with FEWDON‐MND syndrome had ataxia. No support for an autoimmune hypothesis was found by examination of CSF. In addition, therapeutic trials with immune‐modulating therapies, such as intravenous immunoglobulins or plasma exchange, did not affect the disease course. A genetic origin of FEWDON‐MND syndrome is also possible. Family history was negative for disease for all patients, but this would still be compatible with an autosomal recessive inheritance pattern with a rare carrier frequency or with sporadic or de novo mutations. Next‐generation sequencing efforts on DNA samples from the patients and their parents are underway to explore a putative genetic cause. Additional supporting information may be found in the online version of this article. Supporting Information Video 1. In central position, there are tiny oscillations, difficult to characterize. In lateral gaze, there is downbeat nystagmus, along with gaze‐evoked nystagmus in right, left and upgaze. In central position, there was obvious downbeat nystagmus when the patient was supine. In addition, smooth pursuit was abnormal, mainly vertically (shown in video) and a skew deviation was present (not shown in video). This combination suggests cerebellar localization, as was suggested by eye movements in the first 2 original patients in 2006. Click here for additional data file.
  25 in total

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