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'North Sea' progressive myoclonus epilepsy: phenotype of subjects with GOSR2 mutation

Authors :
G. Christoph Korenke
Judith M.A. Verhagen
Mark A. Corbett
Bastiaan R. Bloem
Trine Prescott
Asbjørg Stray-Pedersen
John D. O'Sullivan
Jozef Gecz
Rikke S. Møller
Anna-Elina Lehesjoki
Lysa Boissé Lomax
Marta A. Bayly
Helle Hjalgrim
Michèl A.A.P. Willemsen
Irenaeus F.M. de Coo
Magnhild Rasmussen
Danya F. Vears
Luke C. Gandolfo
Erik-Jan Kamsteeg
Leanne M. Dibbens
Iris Marquardt
Annemarie M. M. Vlaar
Ines Said
Kari Modalsli Aaberg
Melanie Bahlo
Samuel F. Berkovic
Lomax, Lysa Boissé
Bayly, Marta A
Hjalgrim, Helle
Møller, Rikke S
Dibbens, Leanne M
Berkovic, Samuel F
Neurology
Clinical Genetics
Source :
Brain, 136, 1146-1154. Oxford University Press, LB, L, MA, B, Hjalgrim, H, Møller, R S, AM, V, KM, A & L, G 2013, ' 'North Sea' progressive myoclonus epilepsy: phenotype of subjects with GOSR2 mutation ', Brain, vol. 136, no. 4, pp. 1146-1154 . https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awt021, Brain, 136, 1146-54, Brain, 136, Pt 4, pp. 1146-54
Publication Year :
2013

Abstract

Item does not contain fulltext We previously identified a homozygous mutation in the Golgi SNAP receptor complex 2 gene (GOSR2) in six patients with progressive myoclonus epilepsy. To define the syndrome better we analysed the clinical and electrophysiological phenotype in 12 patients with GOSR2 mutations, including six new unrelated subjects. Clinical presentation was remarkably similar with early onset ataxia (average 2 years of age), followed by myoclonic seizures at the average age of 6.5 years. Patients developed multiple seizure types, including generalized tonic clonic seizures, absence seizures and drop attacks. All patients developed scoliosis by adolescence, making this an important diagnostic clue. Additional skeletal deformities were present, including pes cavus in four patients and syndactyly in two patients. All patients had elevated serum creatine kinase levels (median 734 IU) in the context of normal muscle biopsies. Electroencephalography revealed pronounced generalized spike and wave discharges with a posterior predominance and photosensitivity in all patients, with focal EEG features seen in seven patients. The disease course showed a relentless decline; patients uniformly became wheelchair bound (mean age 13 years) and four had died during their third or early fourth decade. All 12 cases had the same variant (c.430G>T, G144W) and haplotype analyses confirmed a founder effect. The cases all came from countries bounding the North Sea, extending to the coastal region of Northern Norway. 'North Sea' progressive myoclonus epilepsy has a homogeneous clinical presentation and relentless disease course allowing ready identification from the other progressive myoclonus epilepsies.

Details

ISSN :
00068950
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Brain, 136, 1146-1154. Oxford University Press, LB, L, MA, B, Hjalgrim, H, Møller, R S, AM, V, KM, A & L, G 2013, ' 'North Sea' progressive myoclonus epilepsy: phenotype of subjects with GOSR2 mutation ', Brain, vol. 136, no. 4, pp. 1146-1154 . https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awt021, Brain, 136, 1146-54, Brain, 136, Pt 4, pp. 1146-54
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3b028510f7deb4ff8b02189e2bd25051
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1093/brain/awt021