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Progressive cavitating leukoencephalopathy: A novel childhood disease

Authors :
Sergio A. Facchini
Genila Bibat
Hugo W. Moser
Hugo Arroyo
Sakkubai Naidu
Richard I. Kelley
Ada Hamosh
Salvatore DiMauro
Doris D. M. Lin
Bhim Singhal
Virginia Kimonis
Peter B. Barker
Nancy Braverman
Carol Blank
Michael M. Dowling
Sérgio Rosemberg
Peter C. Burger
Agata Fiumara
Source :
Annals of Neurology. 58:929-938
Publication Year :
2005
Publisher :
Wiley, 2005.

Abstract

We report 19 patients with a previously undelineated neurodegenerative syndrome characterized by episodic acute onset of irritability or neurological deficits between 2 months and 3.5 years of age, followed by steady or intermittent clinical deterioration. Seven children died between 11 months and 14 years of age. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) shows patchy leukoencephalopathy with cavities, and vascular permeability, in actively affected regions. Early lesions affect corpus callosum and centrum semiovale, with or without cerebellar or cord involvement. After repeated episodes, areas of tissue loss coalesce with older lesions to become larger cystic regions in brain or spinal cord. Diffuse spasticity, dementia, vegetative state, or death ensues. Gray matter is spared until late in the course. In some, incomplete clinical or MRI recovery occurs after episodes. The clinical course varies from rapid deterioration to prolonged periods of stability that are unpredictable by clinical or MRI changes. Elevated levels of lactate in brain, blood, and cerebrospinal fluid, abnormal urine organic acids, and changes in muscle respiratory chain enzymes are present but inconsistent, without identifiable mitochondrial DNA mutations or deletions. Pathological studies show severe loss of myelin sparing U-fibers, axonal disruption, and cavitary lesions without inflammation. Familial occurrence and consanguinity suggest autosomal recessive inheritance of this distinct entity.

Details

ISSN :
15318249 and 03645134
Volume :
58
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Annals of Neurology
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....3d4671b5ab4af065f2e7b4195e4c62da
Full Text :
https://doi.org/10.1002/ana.20671