1. Leigh syndrome: an adult presentation of a paediatric disease.
- Author
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Watson-Fargie T, Marshall V, Fullerton NE, Leach V, Pilz D, Hemingbrough CVY, Hopton S, Taylor RW, Ng YS, Schaefer A, Gorman GS, and Farrugia ME
- Subjects
- Male, Adult, Humans, Child, Mutation, Brain pathology, Muscle, Skeletal pathology, Ataxia, Leigh Disease genetics
- Abstract
A previously healthy 27-year-old man was admitted to the acute neurology ward with events involving his face, throat and upper limb, which video telemetry later confirmed were refractory focal seizures. He also had progressive pyramidal features, dysarthria and ataxia. MR scans of the brain identified progressive bilateral basal ganglia abnormalities, consistent with Leigh syndrome. However, extensive laboratory and genetic panels did not give a unifying diagnosis. A skeletal muscle biopsy showed no histopathological abnormalities on routine stains. Sequencing of the entire mitochondrial genome in skeletal muscle identified a well-characterised pathogenic variant (m.10191T>C in MT-ND3 ; NC_012920.1) at 85% heteroplasmy in skeletal muscle. We discuss the clinical and molecular diagnosis of an adult presenting with Leigh syndrome, which is more commonly a paediatric presentation of mitochondrial disease, and how early recognition of a mitochondrial cause is important to support patient care., Competing Interests: Competing interests: None declared., (© Author(s) (or their employer(s)) 2024. No commercial re-use. See rights and permissions. Published by BMJ.)
- Published
- 2024
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