| Literature DB >> 32832197 |
Daniel Martinez-Ramirez1, Ruth H Walker2,3, Mayela Rodríguez-Violante4, Emilia M Gatto5.
Abstract
Background: Movement disorders are often a prominent part of the phenotype of many neurologic rare diseases. In order to promote awareness and diagnosis of these rare diseases, the International Parkinson's and Movement Disorders Society Rare Movement Disorders Study Group provides updates on rare movement disorders.Entities:
Keywords: Rare disease; inherited disease; orphan disease; treatment
Year: 2020 PMID: 32832197 PMCID: PMC7413136 DOI: 10.5334/tohm.548
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y) ISSN: 2160-8288
Figure 1Adult-onset choreas.
HD: Huntington disease; HDL: Huntington-disease like; SCA: spinocerebellar ataxia; DRPLA: dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy; SLE: systemic lupus erythematosus; APS: antiphospholipid syndrome; NMDAR: n-methyl-d-aspartic acid receptor.
Adapted from: Hermann A, Walker RH. Diagnosis and treatment of chorea syndromes. Current neurology and neuroscience reports 2015;15:514.
Figure 2Early/Childhood-onset choreas.
HDL: Huntington-disease like; AOA: ataxia with oculomotor apraxia; ASO: antistreptolysin O; SPG: spastic paraplegia.
Adapted from: Hermann A, Walker RH. Diagnosis and treatment of chorea syndromes. Current neurology and neuroscience reports 2015;15:514.
Characteristics of inborn errors of metabolism and mitochondrial cytopathies where chorea is the predominant movement disorder.
| Type of Metabolic Disorder | Conditions; | Region; Age | Inheritance Pattern | Mov Disord | Key Findings | Seizures | Ataxia | Pyramidal signs | DD | Other Sx | I and L | Tx |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Organic acidemias | Glutaric aciduria type 1; | Neonatal | AR | Choreo-athetosis | Macrocephaly | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | L: urinary glutaric acid, 3-hydroxyglutaric acid, glutaconic acid. | Low lysine diet and oral carnitine supplementation |
| Propionic acidemia; | Amish, Inuit of Greenland and Saudi Arabian populations; Neonatal or infancy | AR | Choreoathetosis | Poor feeding | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Hepatomegaly | L: Plasma amino acids, acylcarnitines, and urinary organic acids, and orotic acid. I: Lesions in the bilateral lenticular and caudate nuclei | Protein-restricted diet; Treat metabolic acidosis, hypoglycemia, hyperammonemia | |
| Methylmalonic acidemia; | First year | AR | Choreoathetosis | Encephalopathy | Yes | No | No | Yes | Dysphagia | L: Elevated blood and urine levels of ammonia, glycine, methylmalonic acid, propionic acid. | Protein-restricted diet, cyanocobalamin, and levo-carnitine supplementation | |
| OPA3-related 3-methylglutaconic aciduria (Costeff syndrome); | Iraqi-Jewish descent; Before age ten years | AR | Choreoathetosis | Optic atrophy | No | Yes | No | No | No | L: Urinary excretion of 3-methylglutaconic acid | Supportive | |
| Amino acid metabolism | Nonketotic hyperglycinemia; | Neonatal, infancy, adulthood | AR | Chorea | Lethargy, coma | Yes | No | Yes | Yes | Breathing/swallowing disorders | I: Elevated glycine levels in CSF and plasma. | Sodium benzoate |
| Homocystinuria; | 1st or 2nd decade | AR | Chorea | Ectopia lentis, severe myopia | Yes | No | No | Yes | No | L: Increased serum levels of homocysteine and methionine | Vitamin B6 | |
| Purine metabolism | Lesch-Nyhan disease; | 3 to 6 mo. | X-linked | Choreoathetosis | Self-injurious behavior | No | No | Yes | Yes | Hypotonia | L: Urinary urine-to-creatine ratio greater than 2.0 | Allopurinol |
| Creatine metabolism | Cerebral creatine deficiency syndrome 2 (GAMT deficiency); | Early infancy to 3 yrs. | AR | Choreoathetosis | Hyperactivity, autism, self-injurious behavior | Yes | Yes | No | No | No | I: Hyperintensities in basal ganglia | Creatine monohydrate supplementation |
| Glucose transport | GLUT1 deficiency; | Infancy | AD; AR | Chorea | Paroxysmal episodes of mov disord or epilepsy | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Microcephaly | L: Low CSF:serum glucose ratio | Ketogenic diet |
| Lipid storage | Niemann Pick Type C; | Infancy, children, adults | AR | HD phenocopy in adult onset | Vertical supranuclear gaze palsy | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Hypotonia | I: cerebellar atrophy or periventricular hyperintensities | Symptomatic |
| Other | Sulfite oxidase deficiency; | Infancy | AR | Choreoathetosis | Ectopia lentis | Yes | Yes | No | Yes | Hypotonia | L: Increase sulfite levels in urine | Low sulfur amino acid diet |
| Mitochondrial cytopathies | Leigh syndrome and Leigh-like syndromes; | First mo. to yrs. of life | X-linked, AR | Choreoathetosis | Ophthalmologic abnormalities | No | Yes | No | Yes | Hypotonia | L: Increased blood lactate levels. | Biotin, thiamine, Coenzyme Q10 supplements |
| Pyruvate carboxylase deficiency; | First yr. | AR | Choreoathetosis | Microcephaly | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Hypotonia | L: Elevated blood levels of ammonia, pyruvate, lactate, acetoacetate and beta-hydroxybutyrate. | Cofactor supplementation with thiamine and lipoic acid and administration of dichloroacetate | |
| Pyruvate dehydrogenase complex deficiency; | Infancy | X-linked | Choreoathetosis | Poor feeding | Yes | Yes | Yes | Yes | Microcephaly | L: Elevated blood levels of lactate and pyruvate | Cofactor supplementation with thiamine, carnitine, and lipoic acid. | |
Mov Dis: Movement Disorders; Sx: Symptoms; DD: Developmental delay; I: Imaging; L: Laboratory; AR: Autosomal recessive; AD: Autosomal dominant; CSF: cerebrospinal fluid; WM: white matter; FP: frontoparietal.
* Only the disorders of metabolism where chorea is the predominant movement disorder are included.
* Wilson’s disease is described under autosomal recessive hereditary choreas.
Causes of acquired choreas.
| Etiology | Disease |
|---|---|
| Pharmacological | Acute drug-induced, Tardive chorea, Alcohol, Other toxins |
| Vascular | Stroke, Subdural or Extradural Hematomas, Small vessel disease |
| Hematological | Polycythemia vera, Essential thrombocythemia, Transitional myeloproliferative disease |
| Autoimmune | SLE, APS, NMDAR encephalitis, Behcet’s disease, Sjögren syndrome, Celiac disease, IgLON5, D2R, GABAaR, and Neurexin-3 alpha |
| Endocrine/Metabolic | Hyperthyroidism, Hypocalcemia, Hyper/Hyponatremia, Hyperglycemia, Hypomagnesemia, Uremia, Non-wilsonian hepatolenticular degeneration, Kernicterus |
| Nutritional | Vitamin B12 and B1 deficiency |
| Demyelinating disorders | Multiple Sclerosis, ADEM, Central pontine and extrapontine myelinolysis |
| Neoplastic | Primary or Secondary |
| Paraneoplastic | Anti-CRMP5, Anti-Hu, Anti-Ma, Anti-P/Q and N-type V-G calcium channel, Anti-NMDAR, Anti-LGI1, Anti-Caspr2 |
| Infectious/Parainfectious | Sydenham’s chorea, Bacterial, Viral, Spirochetal |
| Brain hypoxia | Cardiac arrest, Respiratory insufficiency, Anesthetic complication, Hypothermia, CO Poisoning, Post pump chorea |
| Other | Mastocytosis, Chorea gravidarum, Cerebral palsy |
SLE: systemic lupus erythematosus; APS: anti-phospholipid syndrome; NMDAR: anti-n-methyl-d-aspartate receptor; ADEM: acute disseminated encephalomyelitis.
Characteristics of adult-onset autosomal dominant hereditary choreas.
| Disease; | Region; Age | Mov Disord | Key Findings | Other Sx | NPsych | CI/Dem | I and L |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Huntington’s disease; | 20–40 yrs.* | Chorea | – | Hung-up knee jerk reflex | Yes | Yes | I: Striatal volume loss |
| C9orf72 expansions; | Caucasian; 40–50 yrs. | HD phenocopy | – | – | Yes | Yes | I: Generalized cerebral atrophy |
| Spinocerebellar ataxia 17; | Caucasian and Asian; 20–40 yrs. | HD phenocopy | Ataxia predominates | Pyramidal signs | Yes | Yes | I: caudate or cerebellar atrophy |
| Huntington disease-like 2; | African ancestry; 40–50 yrs. | HD phenocopy | – | – | Yes | Yes | I: Similar to HD |
| Dentatorubropallidoluysian atrophy; | Japanese; 30 yrs. | HD phenocopy | – | Ataxia | Yes | Yes | I: White matter lesions and cerebellar/brainstem atrophy |
| Neuroferritinopathy; | Cumbrian region of northern England; 40 yrs. | HD phenocopy | Oromandibular chorea predominate | Spasticity | Yes | Yes | I: Iron accumulation or cystic changes in basal ganglia or cortical regions with pallidal necrosis and edema in later stages |
| Familial prion disease (Huntington disease-like 1); | 20–40 yrs. | HD phenocopy Myoclonus | Rapidly progressive | Seizures | Yes | Yes | – |
| Spinocerebellar ataxias types 1, 2, 3, 7, 12, 48; | European, Cuban, Indian (SCA 2); 30 yrs.* | HD phenocopies | Ataxia | Pyramidal signs | No | Yes | I: Pontine and cerebellar atrophy; T2 hyperintensities in dentate nuclei extending to middle cerebellar peduncle (SCA48) |
| Primary familial brain calcification; | 30–40 yrs. | Akinetic syndrome, tremor, chorea, dystonia | – | – | Yes | Yes | I: Caudate, brainstem, thalami, cerebellum, white matter, cortical calcifications |
Mov Dis: Movement Disorders; Sx: Symptoms; NPsych: Neuropsychiatric features; CI/Dem: Cognitive impairment or dementia; I: Imaging; L: Laboratory; HD: Huntington’s disease.
* Inversely related to the size of the repeat expansion
Characteristics of adult-onset autosomal recessive hereditary choreas.
| Disease; | Region; Age | Mov Disord | Key Findings | Other Sx | NPsych | Ci/Dem | I and L |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Chorea-acanthocytosis; | 20–40 yrs. | Generalized chorea, dystonia, tics, parkinsonism | Self-injurious orofacial dyskinesia | Sp & Sw and problems | Yes | Yes | I: Caudate atrophy |
| Aceruloplasminemia; | 40–50 yrs. | Chorea | Retinal degeneration | Ataxia | Yes | Yes | I: Symmetrical iron deposition in the basal ganglia, thalamus, red nuclei, and dentate nuclei |
| Wilson’s disease; | 6–50 yrs. | Dystonic/choreic syndrome | Kayser-Fleischer rings | Ataxic syndrome | Yes | Yes | I: “Face of the giant panda” in midbrain |
Mov Dis: Movement Disorders; Sx: Symptoms; NPsych: Neuropsychiatric features; CI/Dem: Cognitive impairment or dementia; I: Imaging; L: Laboratory; Sp: Speech; Sw: Swallowing.
Characteristics of childhood-onset autosomal dominant hereditary choreas.
| Disease; | Region; Age | Mov Disord | Key Findings | Other Sx | NPsych | CI/Dem | I and L |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| ADCY5 mutation; | 0–20 yrs. | Chorea, myoclonus, dystonia | Episodic exacerbations of dyskinesia upon awakening or when falling asleep | Delayed milestones and axial hypotonia | No | No | – |
| Benign Hereditary Chorea; | 1–20 yrs. | Chorea with mild progression | Pulmonary and thyroid problems | Short stature | No | No | – |
| Tuberous sclerosis; | 10 yrs. | Chorea | Benign tumors | Behavioral symptoms | Yes | Yes | I: Subependymal nodules and cortical/subcortical tubers |
Mov Dis: Movement Disorders; Sx: Symptoms; NPsych: Neuropsychiatric features; CI/Dem: Cognitive impairment or dementia; I: Imaging; L: Laboratory.
Characteristics of childhood-onset autosomal recessive hereditary choreas.
| Disease; | Region; Age | Mov Disord | Key Findings | Other Sx | NPsych | CI/Dem | I and L |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| Friedreich’s ataxia; | 10–15 yrs. | Chorea is rare | Ataxia | Peripheral neuropathy | No | No | NCS: Abnormal sensory nerve action potentials |
| Ataxia telangiectasia; | 1–4 yrs. | Choreoathetosis | Prominent ataxia | Peripheral neuropathy | No | No | I: cerebellar atrophy |
| Ataxia with oculomotor apraxia types 1 and 2; | 2–10 yrs. (AOA1) | Chorea, dystonia | Oculomotor apraxia | Axonal sensorimotor neuropathy | No | Yes | I: Cerebellar atrophy |
| Xeroderma pigmentosum; | 1–2 yrs. | Chorea in advanced stages | Cutaneous photosensitivity | Ataxia | No | Yes | – |
| Huntington disease-like 3; unknown | Saudi Arabian; 3–4 yrs. | Chorea, dystonia | – | Ataxia | No | Yes | I: Frontal and caudate atrophy |
| Spastic ataxia type 2 (SPG58); | 10–20 yrs. | Chorea | Spastic gait | Hyperreflexia and spasticity | No | Yes | I: Demyelination and cerebellar atrophy |
| PDE10A mutation; | 5–15 yrs. | Chorea | Diurnal fluctuations | – | No | No | I: Symmetrical T2-hyperintense striatal lesions |
| GPR88 mutation; | Palestinian; 8–9 yrs. | Chorea | – | Developmental delay | No | Yes | – |
| Hereditary Epileptic-Dyskinetic Encephalopathies; | Neonatal to 8 yrs. | Chorea, dystonia, ballism, stereotypies | Early-onset, drug-resistant seizures | Developmental delay | No | Yes | I: corpus callosum hypoplasia, delayed myelination, simplified gyration ( |
Mov Dis: Movement Disorders; Sx: Symptoms; NPsych: Neuropsychiatric features; CI/Dem: Cognitive impairment or dementia; I: Imaging; L: Laboratory.
Characteristics X-linked hereditary choreas.
| Disease; | Region; Age | Mov Disord | Key Findings | Other Sx | NPsych | CI/Dem | I and L |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| McLeod syndrome; | Before 40 yrs. | Chorea, dystonia, parkinsonism | Areflexia | Cardiomyopathy | Yes | No | L: Elevated serum liver enzymes and creatine kinase |
| Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease; | Neonatal to 5 yrs. | Choreoathetosis | Pendular nystagmus | Ataxia | No | Yes | I: Hypomyelination of corona radiata, optical radiations, internal capsule |
Mov Dis: Movement Disorders; Sx: Symptoms; NPsych: Neuropsychiatric features; CI/Dem: Cognitive impairment or dementia; I: Imaging; L: Laboratory