Back to Search Start Over

Milder phenotypes of glucose transporter type 1 deficiency syndrome

Authors :
Geetha, Anand
Anuruddha, Padeniya
Donncha, Hanrahan
Hans, Scheffer
Zenobia, Zaiwalla
Debbie, Cox
Nicholas, Mann
John, Hewertson
Sue, Price
Andrea, Nemeth
Todor, Arsov
Ingrid, Scheffer
Sandeep, Jayawant
Michael, Pike
Tony, McShane
Source :
Developmental medicine and child neurology. 53(7)
Publication Year :
2011

Abstract

Glucose transporter type 1 deficiency syndrome (GLUT1DS) is a treatable condition resulting from impaired glucose transport into the brain. The classical presentation is with infantile-onset epilepsy and severe developmental delay. Non-classical phenotypes with movement disorders and early-onset absence epilepsy are increasingly recognized and the clinical spectrum is expanding. The hallmark is hypoglycorrhachia (cerebrospinal fluid [CSF] glucose2.2 mmol/l) in the presence of normoglycaemia with a CSF/blood glucose ratio of less than 0.4. GLUT1DS is due to a mutation in the solute carrier family 2, member 1 gene (SLC2A1). We present five individuals (four males, one female), all of whom had a mild phenotype, highlighting the importance of considering this diagnosis in unexplained neurological disorders associated with mild learning difficulties, subtle motor delay, early-onset absence epilepsy, fluctuating gait disorders, and/or dystonia. The mean age at diagnosis was 8 years 8 months. This paper also shows phenotypical parallels between GLUT1DS and paroxysmal exertion-induced dyskinesia.

Details

ISSN :
14698749
Volume :
53
Issue :
7
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Developmental medicine and child neurology
Accession number :
edsair.pmid..........832c6e5e1465465662683615f7388082