| Literature DB >> 35897042 |
Ilaria Filareto1, Giulia Cinelli1, Ilaria Scalabrini1, Elisa Caramaschi2, Patrizia Bergonzini2, Elisabetta Spezia2, Alessandra Todeschini3, Lorenzo Iughetti4,5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Leukoencephalopathy with vanishing white matter (VWM) is an autosomal recessive neurological disease. The physiopathology of disease is still little understood, but it seems to involve impairment in maturation of astrocytes; as a consequence white matter is more prone to cellular stress. Disease is caused by mutations in five genes encoding subunits of the translation initiation factor eIF2B. We know five different types of VWM syndrome classified based different ages of onset (prenatal, infantile, childhood, juvenile and adult onset). CASEEntities:
Keywords: Leukoencephalopathy; Status epilepticus; Vanishing white matter disease
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2022 PMID: 35897042 PMCID: PMC9327270 DOI: 10.1186/s13052-022-01325-3
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Ital J Pediatr ISSN: 1720-8424 Impact factor: 3.288
Fig. 1In the Fig. 1 is reported the evolution of the EEG anomalies. At four months of life (A) the electroencephalogram reveals recurrent slow waves localized in right temporal hemispheres and asynchronous in the left temporo-occipital area. The EEG at eight months of life (B) shows worsening of the background activity by sub continuous presence of focal anomalies, independent over the two hemispheres with recurrent electroclinical episodes characterized by theta-delta activity on the central temporal regions of the right hemisphere and, asynchronously, on the frontal and central regions of the left hemisphere. The EEG at ten months of life (C) reveal worsening of underlying activity with electrical disorder and sub-continuous irritant activity especially in in the right temporal zone
Fig. 2A and B showed T2 sequences -MRI at three months of life; C and D were the T2 sequences- MRI performed at ten months of life: in A and B white matter appears extensively hyperintense with absence of regular myelination. At ten months of life (C and D) T2-MRI shows increased hyperintensity of both cortical and deep white matter with significant dilatation of the ventricular system
Fig. 3A shows T1 sequences -MRI at three months of life; B represents the T1 sequences- MRI performed at ten months of life. Both images reveal hypointensity of white matter in T1 sequences. C e D were performed before death and showed alteration of the signal and complete involvement of the bulb
Pediatric case reports on vanishing white matter disease with onset in the first two years of lives
| AUTHOR /YEAR | ONSET AGE | TRIGGER | SYMPTOMS | SEIZURES | MRI | MUTATION | OUTCOMES |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
11-mo (oldest sister) | Upper respiratory tract infection | Loss of motor abilities, nystagmus, tetraplegia, intermittent dystonia, opisthotonus, seizures, and feeding difficulties | Not described | Generalized hypo-intensity of the white matter in T1-weighted images, which turned hyperintense in T2-weighted section | EIF2B5- 3q27 cr | Death at 18-mo | |
| 15- mo | Not reported, first investigation after brother’s death | Worsening in psychomotor development from 2-mo, progressive psychomotor deterioration, generalized seizures | Generalized seizures | Diffuse involvement of hemispheric and cerebellar white matter, external capsules, corpus callosum and pons | UK | At 2 years 8 months of age bedridden without contact with surroundings | |
| 8-mo | Not reported | Hypotonia, loss of head control, hypertonia of limbs | EEG showed generalized slow waves, seizures not described | Diffuse involvement of the supratentorial white matter hypointensity on T1-weighted images and hyperintensity on T2-weighted images | UK | Progression of hypertonia, loss of visual contact, deceleration of head circumference in the next 2 years | |
| 15-mo | Febrile illness with vomiting, worsening after head injury | Ataxia, spasticity, seizures | Not described | hypointensity of cerebral white matter | UK | Not reported | |
| 18-mo | Febrile illness 5-mo before | Spasticity of limbs with dystonic posture, regression of milestones | Absent | Extensive white matter rarefaction in FLAIR images involving posterior limb of internal capsule, corpus callosum and cerebellar white matter | EIF2B5 compound heterozygous mutation | Not reported | |
| 10-mo | Not reported | Seizures, Physical and mental deterioration, | clonic convulsions with facials twitches | progressive dilatation of the lateral ventricles and vanishing white matter | EIF2B2 | Death at 4 years old | |
| 4-mo | Vaccination three days before | Intractable seizures, lethargy, vomiting, rapid neurological deterioration | Refractory complex-partial seizures, several status epilepticus, EEG with high voltage multifocal spikes | Diffuse bilateral symmetrical abnormal signal of the deep WM characterized by a FLAIR hypointensity | EIF2B5 compound heterozygous mutation | Bedridden, spastic quadriplegic, home oxygen therapy and nasoduodenal feeding at 25-mo | |
| 3-mo | Not reported | Refractory generalized tonic, myoclonic seizures, psychomotor development deteriorated | EEG with voltage suppression in both hemispheres and sharp spike-slow-wave complexes in the right hemisphere | cerebral and cerebellar WM involvement with progression to cerebellar atrophy and cystic degenerations in cerebral WM | EIF2B4 homozygous mutation | severe mental and motor retardation after 8-mo | |
| 13-mo | Fever illness | Hypotonia, drowsiness, focal seizures, cognitive and motor deterioration | Not described | Generalized WM hypointensity | EIF2B5 Homozygous mutation exon 2 | Death at six years due to respiratory failure | |
4-mo (older brother) | Finding of prenatal ventriculomegaly | Generalized seizures, poor head control, severe extremity spasticity with scissoring lower-extremity posture and hyperreflexia | Generalized seizures, no more description | First performed at 3-mo: diffusely abnormal cerebral WM signal with antero-temporal and parieto-occipital cysts | EIF2B3 Homozygous mutation | neurologic status declined, death at 8.5 months of respiratory arrest | |
| Prenatal (younger brother) | Prenatal bilateral ventriculomegaly and intrauterin growth retardation | spasticity, encephalopathy | Not reported | Fetal MRI: diffusely abnormal cerebral WM | EIF2B3 Homozygous mutation | failure to thrive and death by 8 months of age from respiratory arrest | |
| 5-mo | Illness fever with conjunctivitis two day before | Refuse breastfeeding, lethargy, hypotonia, seizures, neurological regression | Tonic–clonic refractory seizures with masticatory movements, | Abnormal diffuse and symmetric signal affecting the WM | EIF2B5 homozygous mutation | Coma state after acute infection with epileptic state ending with death at 11-mo | |
| 4-mo | Not reported | Poor weight gain, refractory epilepsy, hypotonia, microcephaly, dense cataract, global developmental delay | frequent seizures with staring, clonic movements of the left side limbs and truncal hypotonia | Abnormal diffuse signal affecting the WM with early cistic degeneration | EIF2B2 homozygous mutation | Seizures under control at 12 months with multiple AED, home oxygen therapy and mechanical ventilation throught T-tube | |
| 2-mo | Vaccination, viral infections | Epilepsy, development deteriorated, feeding difficulties | complex partial seizures secondarily generalized, masticatory movements | Reduction of WM in the cerebral hemispheres, in ponto-mensencephalic tegmentum and complete involvement of the bulb | EIF2B2 homozygous mutation | Death |