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Intraretinal hemorrhages and detailed retinal phenotype of three patients with Alagille syndrome.

Authors :
Law, Christine
Pattathil, Niveditha
Simpson, Hailey
Ward, Michael J.
Lampen, Shaun
Kamath, Binita
Aleman, Tomas S.
Source :
Ophthalmic Genetics. Oct2024, Vol. 45 Issue 5, p522-531. 10p.
Publication Year :
2024

Abstract

Purpose: To explore patterns of disease expression in Alagille syndrome (ALGS). Methods: Patients underwent ophthalmic examination, optical coherence tomography (OCT) imaging, fundus intravenous fluorescein angiography (IVFA), perimetry and full-field electroretinograms (ffERGs). An adult ALGS patient had multimodal imaging and specialized perimetry. Results: The proband (P1) had a heterozygous pathogenic variant in JAG1; (p.Gln410Ter) and was incidentally diagnosed at age 7 with a superficial retinal hemorrhage, vascular tortuosity, and midperipheral pigmentary changes. The hemorrhage recurred 15 months later. Her monozygotic twin sister (P2) had a retinal hemorrhage at the same location at age 11. Visual acuities for both patients were 20/30 in each eye. IVFA was normal. OCT showed thinning of the outer nuclear in the peripapillary retina. A ffERG showed normal cone-mediated responses in P1 (rod-mediated ERGs not documented), normal ffERGs in P2. Coagulation and liver function were normal. An unrelated 42-year-old woman with a de-novo pathogenic variant (p. Gly386Arg) in JAG1 showed a similar pigmentary retinopathy and hepatic vascular anomalies; rod and cone function was normal across large expanses of structurally normal retina that sharply transitioned to a blind atrophic peripheral retina. Conclusion: Nearly identical recurrent intraretinal hemorrhages in monozygotic twins with ALGS suggest a shared subclinical microvascular abnormality. We hypothesize that the presence of large areas of functionally and structurally intact retina surrounded by severe chorioretinal degeneration, is against a predominant involvement of JAG1 in the function of the neurosensory retina, and that instead, primary abnormalities of chorioretinal vascular development and/or homeostasis may drive the peculiar phenotypes. [ABSTRACT FROM AUTHOR]

Details

Language :
English
ISSN :
13816810
Volume :
45
Issue :
5
Database :
Academic Search Index
Journal :
Ophthalmic Genetics
Publication Type :
Academic Journal
Accession number :
179967450
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1080/13816810.2024.2362214