| Literature DB >> 29788902 |
Inger Marie Skogseid1, Oddveig Røsby2, Ane Konglund3, James P Connelly4, Bård Nedregaard5, Greg Eigner Jablonski6,7, Nadja Kvernmo8, Asbjørg Stray-Pedersen7,9,10, Joel C Glover11,12.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Dystonia-deafness syndrome is a well-known clinical entity, with sensorineural deafness typically manifesting earlier than dystonia. ACTB p.Arg183Trp heterozygosity has been reported in six patients to cause combined infant-onset deafness and dystonia manifesting in adolescence or young adulthood. Three of these have received beneficial pallidal stimulation. Brain imaging to assess striatal function has not been reported previously, however. Nor has a comprehensive hypothesis been presented for how the pleiotropic manifestations of this specific beta-actin gene mutation originate developmentally. CASEEntities:
Keywords: ACTB p.Arg183Trp; Dopaminergic dysfunction; Dystonia-deafness syndrome; Pallidal deep brain stimulation; Striatal neuronal dysfunction
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2018 PMID: 29788902 PMCID: PMC5964724 DOI: 10.1186/s11689-018-9235-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurodev Disord ISSN: 1866-1947 Impact factor: 4.025
Clinical symptoms/development by body region and age, and supplementary diagnostics (except brain imaging)
| Body region | Symptom | Age (years) |
|---|---|---|
| CNS | ||
| Sensory-motor | Hypotonic, weak sucking reflex, torticollis | Neonatal |
| Delayed early motor development––(independent sitting at 11 months, walking at 21 months) | Infancy | |
| Dystonia | ||
| Lower limbs (gait dystonia) | 12–13 | |
| Upper limbs (jerky action tremor) | 14 | |
| Axial (trunk opistotonus, retro- and torticollis, tongue protrusion, jaw opening, face grimacing) | 15–16 | |
| Cognitive/emotional | Delayed eye contact | Infancy |
| Spoken language with few-word sentences, reduced vocabulary. Sign language good | Childhood | |
| “ADHD”––diagnosis | 6–7 | |
| Learning difficulties. Reduced social skills | 9–10 | |
| Anxiety, rage outbreaks, hyperimpulsivity | 18–19 | |
| Auditory system | Bilateral deafness | Infancy |
| Cranio-facial | Dysmorphic facial features coarser with age Hypertelorism/broad nasal root/flat malar region in infancy, changing to prominent/long nose with thick nares and high nasal root. Mild ptosis bilaterally Dysplastic, simple ears. High palate | Progression with age |
| Gastro-intestinal | Esophageal reflux/vomiting. Constipation, enemas | Infancy |
| Musculo-skeletal | Contractures PIP-joint dig. III-V ri. hand + dig.IV-V le | 12–13 |
| Anteverted scapulae, thoracic kyphosis | 14 | |
| Supplementary diagnostics | ||
| Cranium | No abnormalities on CT or MRI | |
| Thorax | X-ray, ECG, echocardiography: normal | |
| Abdomen | Ultrasound, CT: distended duodenum, dilated colon, constipation | |
| Urinary tract | Ultrasound, including the kidneys: normal | |
Fig. 1Brain CT (2009) and preoperative brain MRI (2013), fused with postoperative CT. Preoperative MRI (b–f) did not show evidence of cortical developmental malformations, corpus callosum defects, or any other inborn brain structure anomalies. The maturation of the brain including myelination is normal. Comparison of an axial CT from 2009 (a) and MRI T2 from 2013 (b) shows enlargement of the lateral ventricles, indicating some supratentorial volume loss over time. A mid-sagittal T1 (2D TSE) image from 2011 (c) shows normal configuration and no certain volume loss of the brain stem or cerebellum, and the preoperative MRI series (2013) did not disclose convincing signs of infratentorial volume loss (not shown due to more distorted images). Images d–f show preoperative T1-3D MPRAGE* (2013) fused with postoperative CT images (2015), showing the position of the DBS electrodes visualized as red dots (image fusion performed using software from NordicICE, NordicNeuroLab, Bergen, Norway). Images d and e show the electrodes in the posterior third and most ventral part of the internal globus pallidum. Image f shows the right electrode tip touching upon the optic tract (orange arrow) (*3D T1 MPRAGE was used for fusion with postoperative CT instead of T2 (which better visualizes the basal ganglia), because the cochlea implants inflicted heavy susceptibility artifacts on the T2 images with pronounced focal signal loss, as well as distortion. Also, the CT alignment/co-registration with the large (whole head) field of view 3D T1 MPRAGE series was accurate, whereas the CT alignment with the (reduced field of view) T2 images was not.)
Striatal uptake on radiotracer imaging in our patient compared with mean uptake in normal databases
| Brain radiotracer modality | Putamen | Caudate nucleus | ||||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Right | Left | Right | Left | |||||
| % | SD | % | SD | % | SD | % | SD | |
| DAT-SPECT | 72 | − 2.6 | 74 | − 2.3 | 80 | − 1.7 | 82 | − 1.5 |
| Epidepride-SPECT | 65 | − 4.9 | 76 | − 3.4 | 81 | − 2.7 | 86 | − 1.9 |
| FDG-PET | − 4.2 | − 3.6 | − 3.2 | − 3.7 | ||||
Numbers represent percent of uptake (%) and standard deviation (SD) compared with mean uptake in normal databases for the three radiotracers. DAT (dopamine transporter)-SPECT (123I-ioflupane single-photon emission computed tomography) uptake was compared with a commercial database (DaTQuant, GE) that included an extrapolation for age. SPECT with 123I-epidepride (which binds to dopamine type 2-receptors) was compared with a non-age-matched database (older patient group, because this modality is very rarely used in the patient’s age group; local data, Hermes BRASS). 18Fluoro-Deoxy-Glucose (FDG)–PET was compared with an age-matched database (local data, PMOD PNEURO)
Fig. 2Brain radiotracer imaging of pre- and postsynaptic striatal dopamine transmission and glucose uptake. Upper images show emissions only, and lower images are fused with MRI (T1 series, 2013). a 123I-ioflupane SPECT-images, with the ligand binding to the dopamine transporter-protein (DaT) of the striatal terminals of the substantia nigra dopamine producing cells (presynaptic). Visual assessment and comparison with a normal database shows reduced binding at around two standard deviations from the database mean, and more pronounced reduction posteriorly in the putamen. b 123I-epidepride-SPECT images, with the ligand binding to dopamine type 2-receptors (postsynaptic), show significantly reduced binding in the putamen bilaterally compared to non-age-matched (older) normal database mean and less pronounced reduction in the caudate nuclei. Arrows indicate right putamen. c 18Fluoro-deoxy-glucose PET-images, which reflect the glucose uptake of viable brain cells. Uptake in both striata is lower than in the thalami and the majority of the cortex, compared with age-matched normal images, in keeping with generally reduced striatal uptake