| Literature DB >> 35788923 |
Armand Hocquel1, Jean-Marie Ravel2,3, Laetitia Lambert3,4, Céline Bonnet2,3, Guillaume Banneau5, Bophara Kol5, Laurène Tissier5, Lucie Hopes1, Mylène Meyer1, Céline Dillier1, Maud Michaud1, Arnaud Lardin1, Anne-Laure Kaminsky1, Emmanuelle Schmitt6, Liang Liao6, François Zhu6, Bronner Myriam2, Carine Bossenmeyer-Pourié3, Antoine Verger7, Mathilde Renaud8,9,10.
Abstract
ATL1-related spastic paraplegia SPG3A is a pure form of hereditary spastic paraplegia. Rare complex phenotypes have been described, but few data concerning cognitive evaluation or molecular imaging of these patients are available. We relate a retrospective collection of patients with SPG3A from the Neurology Department of Nancy University Hospital, France. For each patient were carried out a 18F-FDG PET (positron emission tomography), a electromyography (EMG), a sudoscan®, a cerebral and spinal cord MRI (magnetic resonance imaging) with measurement of cervical and thoracic surfaces, a neuropsychological assessment. The present report outlines standardised clinical and paraclinical data of five patients from two east-France families carrying the same missense pathogenic variation, NM_015915.4(ATL1): c.1483C > T p.(Arg495Trp) in ATL1. Mean age at onset was 14 ± 15.01 years. Semi-quantitatively and in comparison to healthy age-matched subjects, PET scans showed a significant cerebellar and upper or mild temporal hypometabolism in all four adult patients and hypometabolism of the prefrontal cortex or precuneus in three of them. Sudoscan® showed signs of small fibre neuropathy in three patients. Cervical and thoracic patients' spinal cords were significantly thinner than matched-control, respectively 71 ± 6.59mm2 (p = 0.01) and 35.64 ± 4.35mm2 (p = 0.015). Two patients presented with a dysexecutive syndrome. While adding new clinical and paraclinical signs associated with ATL1 pathogenic variations, we insist here on the variable penetrance and expressivity. We report small fibre neuropathy, cerebellar hypometabolism and dysexecutive syndromes associated with SPG3A. These cognitive impairments and PET findings may be related to a cortico-cerebellar bundle axonopathy described in the cerebellar cognitive affective syndrome (CCAS).Entities:
Keywords: ATL1; Cerebellar hypometabolism; Dysexecutive syndrome; Hereditary spastic paraplegias; SPG3A; Small fibre neuropathy
Year: 2022 PMID: 35788923 DOI: 10.1007/s10048-022-00695-4
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Neurogenetics ISSN: 1364-6745 Impact factor: 2.660