| Literature DB >> 31270375 |
Ken Saida1, Chong Ae Kim2, José Ricardo Magliocco Ceroni2, Debora Romeo Bertola2, Rachel Sayuri Honjo2, Satomi Mitsuhashi1, Atsushi Takata1, Takeshi Mizuguchi1, Satoko Miyatake1, Noriko Miyake3, Naomichi Matsumoto4.
Abstract
Pediatric hypertension can cause hypertensive emergencies, including hemorrhagic stroke, contributing to rare but serious childhood morbidity and mortality. Renovascular hypertension (RVH) is one of the major causes of secondary hypertension in children. Grange syndrome (MIM#602531) is a rare disease characterized by multiple stenosis or occlusion of the renal, abdominal, coronary, and cerebral arteries, which can cause phenotypes of RVH and fibromuscular dysplasia (MIM#135580). We report the case of a 7-year-old girl with Grange syndrome who showed RVH and multiple seizure episodes. At 1 year of age, she experienced seizures and sequential hemiparesis caused by a left thalamic hemorrhage without cerebral vascular anomalies. Chronic hypertension was observed, and abdominal computed tomography angiography showed characteristic bilateral renal artery stenosis. Whole-exome sequencing revealed a novel homozygous pathogenic variant in the YY1AP1 gene (NM_001198903.1: c.1169del: p.Lys390Argfs*12). Biallelic YY1AP1 mutations are known to cause Grange syndrome. Unlike previously reported patients, our patient presented with intracerebral hemorrhagic stroke without anomalous brain artery or bone fragility. The phenotype in our patient may help better understand this ultra-rare syndrome. Grange syndrome should be considered in patients presenting with childhood-onset hypertension and/or hemorrhagic stroke for early clinical intervention.Entities:
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 31270375 DOI: 10.1038/s10038-019-0626-0
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Hum Genet ISSN: 1434-5161 Impact factor: 3.172