Publications by authors named "Alfonso Verdu"

Spinal muscular atrophy and progressive myoclonic epilepsy (SMAPME, OMIM#159950) is a rare autosomal recessive disorder characterized by the combination of progressive myoclonic epilepsy and muscular weakness due to lower motor neuron disease. Mutations in ASAH1, previously associated only to Farber disease, have been recently described in seven patients with SMAPME. A homozygous c.

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Purpose: Pyridoxine-dependent epilepsy seizure (PDE; OMIM 266100) is a disorder associated with severe seizures that can be controlled pharmacologically with pyridoxine. In the majority of patients with PDE, the disorder is caused by the deficient activity of the enzyme α-aminoadipic semialdehyde dehydrogenase (antiquitin protein), which is encoded by the ALDH7A1 gene. The aim of this work was the clinical, biochemical, and genetic analysis of 12 unrelated patients, mostly from Spain, in an attempt to provide further valuable data regarding the wide clinical, biochemical, and genetic spectrum of the disease.

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Lesch-Nyhan disease is a neurogenetic disorder caused by deficiency of the enzyme hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase. The classic form of the disease is described by a characteristic syndrome that includes overproduction of uric acid, severe generalized dystonia, cognitive disability and self-injurious behaviour. In addition to the classic disease, variant forms of the disease occur wherein some clinical features are absent or unusually mild.

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The authors report the case of an infant suffered from early infantile epileptic encephalopathy with suppression-burst, or Ohtahara syndrome, a severe form of epilepsy in early childhood. The patient was treated with vigabatrin causing a favourable response. This unusual outcome may be related with the normality of neuroimaging and metabolic studies, as happens with idiopathic West syndrome cases.

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Mutations in BCS1L, a respiratory chain complex III assembly chaperone, constitute a major cause of mitochondrial complex III deficiency and are associated with GRACILE and Björnstad syndromes. Here we describe a 4-year-old infant with hyperlactacidemia, mild liver dysfunction, hypotonia, growth and psychomotor retardation, dysmorphic features and mitochondrial complex III deficiency. Respiratory chain enzyme activities showed an isolated complex III defect in muscle and fibroblasts.

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A case of 2-methyl-3-hydroxybutyryl-coenzyme A dehydrogenase deficiency, an X-linked defect of isoleucine degradation, is reported. A 10-month-old male infant with developmental regression, visual impairment, movement disorder, and seizures, he suffered acute deterioration with multiorganic failure after a respiratory infection. Laboratory studies revealed hyperlactacidemia and increased excretion of 2-methyl-3-hydroxybutyric acid (2M3HBA) and tiglylglycine (TG).

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Two previously healthy girls presented acute encephalopathy due to varicella, with severe alteration of the conscious level and seizures. Both patients improved progressively after 15 days, with complete clinical recovery.

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Lesch-Nyhan disease (LND) is caused by deficiency of the purine salvage enzyme hypoxanthine-guanine phosphoribosyltransferase (HPRT). Affected individuals exhibit over-production of uric acid, along with a characteristic neurobehavioural syndrome that includes mental retardation, recurrent self-injurious behaviour and motor disability. Prior studies involving relatively small numbers of patients have provided different conclusions on the nature of the motor disorder.

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The authors report an infant with congenital hemiplegia associated to heterozygosity for factor V Leiden. Prenatal stroke in the left cerebral hemisphere was diagnosed by ultrasonography at the 28th week of pregnancy, and followed up until birth. Although neonatal neurologic examination was normal, a moderate right hemiparesis developed along the 1st months of life.

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Arachnoid cysts are a relatively common incidental finding on neuroimaging studies of the brain. Although most cases are sporadic, there have been some reports of arachnoid cysts in several members of the same family. This report describes two additional families with three members affected in each one.

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An infant with Dandy-Walker malformation and prenatally diagnosed tetrasomy 9p is reported. Chromosomal analysis of primary amniocyte culture revealed true mosaicism for two cell lines: 50% of the cells had an isochromosome 9p (pter-q13::q13-pter), and the other 50% showed a normal female karyotype (46,XX). After birth the same chromosomal abnormality was found in 75% of peripheral blood lymphocytes.

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