Publications by authors named "Laura Orec"

Objective: Epilepsy is common in patients with PIGN diseases due to biallelic variants; however, limited epilepsy phenotyping data have been reported. We describe the epileptology of PIGN encephalopathy.

Methods: We recruited patients with epilepsy due to biallelic PIGN variants and obtained clinical data regarding age at seizure onset/offset and semiology, development, medical history, examination, electroencephalogram, neuroimaging, and treatment.

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Introduction: Sixteen subjects with biallelic WARS2 variants encoding the tryptophanyl mitochondrial aminoacyl-tRNA synthetase, presenting with a neonatal- or infantile-onset mitochondrial disease, have been reported to date. Here we present six novel cases with WARS2-related diseases and expand the spectrum to later onset phenotypes including dopa-responsive early-onset parkinsonism and progressive myoclonus-ataxia.

Methods: Six individuals from four families underwent whole-exome sequencing within research and diagnostic settings.

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Article Synopsis
  • Large-scale statistical analyses identify disease-gene relationships but fail to accurately represent how specific genetic variations affect observable traits and disease mechanisms.
  • The study focuses on the SATB1 gene, showing that different types of variants lead to similar yet distinct neurodevelopmental disorders, revealing notable genotype-phenotype relationships.
  • Variants causing strong chromatin binding lead to severe disorders, while those causing mild effects highlight the need for detailed studies on specific mutations to better understand the complexities of genetic diseases.
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Correct diagnosis of children presenting with developmental delay and intellectual disability remains challenging due to the complex and heterogeneous etiology. High throughput sequencing technologies like exome sequencing have become more commonly available and are significantly improving genetic testing. We present two siblings - a 14-year old male and an 8-year old female patient - with a similar clinical phenotype that was characterized by combined developmental delay primarily affecting speech, mild to moderate intellectual disability, behavioral abnormalities, and autism spectrum disorder, but with no congenital anomalies.

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