Publications by authors named "Record C"

Neuromuscular disorders affect almost 20 million people worldwide. Advances in molecular diagnosis have provided valuable insights into neuromuscular disorders, allowing for improved standards of care and targeted therapeutic approaches. Despite this progress, access to genomic diagnosis remains scarce and inconsistent in middle-income countries such as Brazil.

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Biallelic variants in phosphatidylinositol glycan anchor biosynthesis, class G (PIGG) cause hypotonia, intellectual disability, seizures, and cerebellar features. We present 8 patients from 6 families with a childhood-onset motor neuropathy and neurophysiology demonstrating variable motor conduction block and temporal dispersion. All individuals had a childhood onset tremor, 5 of 8 had cerebellar involvement, and 6 of 8 had childhood febrile seizures.

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Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease is a neuromuscular disorder affecting the peripheral nervous system. The diagnostic yield in demyelinating CMT (CMT1) is typically ∼80%-95%, of which at least 60% is due to the PMP22 gene duplication. The remainder of CMT1 is more genetically heterogeneous.

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Myelination is essential for neuronal function and health. In peripheral nerves, >100 causative mutations have been identified that cause Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease, a disorder that can affect myelin sheaths. Among these, a number of mutations are related to essential targets of the posttranslational modification neddylation, although how these lead to myelin defects is unclear.

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Article Synopsis
  • Whole-genome sequencing (WGS) is now a primary tool for diagnosing suspected genetic neurological disorders, although it has its strengths and limitations.
  • WGS is highly reliable for detecting single-nucleotide variants and better at identifying copy number variants and small repeat expansions, but it can miss or misinterpret large repeat expansions and other complex variants.
  • As bioinformatics and testing methods improve, effective communication between clinicians and laboratories is crucial, especially when there is uncertainty in diagnosis.
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  • * All affected individuals showed symptoms like muscle weakness and spasticity starting in childhood, with nerve conduction studies indicating axonal motor neuropathy.
  • * Research on C. elegans mutants and potential treatment options indicates that targeted therapies might help manage RTN2-related conditions despite no significant structural changes observed in patient fibroblasts.
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  • Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) is a common inherited neurological disorder with over 130 genes linked to it, and whole genome sequencing (WGS) has enhanced diagnosis but its full impact on CMT is still being evaluated.
  • In a study at a specialist inherited neuropathy center from 2009 to 2023, 1515 patients were assessed, revealing that genetic diagnoses were achieved in 76.9% of cases, particularly high in CMT1 at 96.8%.
  • The most frequent genetic cause was PMP22 duplication (CMT1A), accounting for 43.3% of diagnoses, and a subset of 233 cases were included in the UK 100,000 Genomes
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Aim: X-linked variants in Filamin A (FLNA) are associated with the Ehlers-Danlos-syndrome-variant form of periventricular heterotopia, and autosomal dominant variants in ubiquitin C-terminal hydrolase L1 (UCHL1) are associated with a late-onset spastic ataxia, peripheral neuropathy and optic atrophy. Here we present a rare case involving both a novel heterozygous whole-gene deletion of UCHL1 and a heterozygous frameshift variant in the FLNA gene resulting in a complex phenotype.

Methods: A 67-year-old female with a confirmed pathogenic variant in the FLNA gene, resulting in an enlarged aorta and joint pains, presented with a 4-year history of severe sensory ataxia, upper motor neuron signs, eye movement abnormalities and severe sensory loss.

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  • Researchers studied how lower limb MRI scans can help track changes in patients with Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease 1A (CMT1A).
  • They tested a new AI tool that automatically analyzes muscle images, making the process quicker and easier than doing it by hand.
  • The results showed that the AI tool was fast and accurate, confirming that calf muscle fat levels increased in CMT1A patients over time.
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  • Congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP) and hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathies (HSAN) are rare disorders affecting sensory and autonomic neurons, making them hard to study due to limited data.
  • A large international study identified 80 new pathogenic variants in 73 families across known CIP/HSAN-related genes, expanding knowledge on these diseases.
  • Advanced methodologies like in silico predictions and metabolic tests improved variant classification, crucial for guiding future gene-specific treatments in clinical trials.
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  • In South Africa, there is a lack of diagnostic tools for inherited neuromuscular diseases (NMD), prompting a study using next-generation sequencing to identify genetic causes in individuals with genetic neuropathy and related conditions.
  • The research involved sequencing 61 individuals, with findings showing that about 44% of genetic neuropathy cases and 48% of hereditary spastic paraplegia cases could be resolved, particularly among those with African-genetic ancestry.
  • The study highlights that while diagnostic success rates are similar to global averages, the types of mutations causing these diseases in South Africans are markedly different from those typically seen in populations from the Global North.
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Neuromuscular diseases (NMDs) affect ∼15 million people globally. In high income settings DNA-based diagnosis has transformed care pathways and led to gene-specific therapies. However, most affected families are in low-to-middle income countries (LMICs) with limited access to DNA-based diagnosis.

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  • This study focuses on non-5q spinal muscular atrophy (SMA), aiming to explore its clinical and genetic characteristics and the effectiveness of gene panels for diagnosis.
  • The research included 71 patients from various centers who underwent genetic testing, revealing a lower diagnostic success rate in those with specific types of SMA symptoms, and highlighting factors that could predict a successful diagnosis.
  • The findings indicate that while neuropathy gene panels provide some insights (about 32% success), broader genetic testing is necessary to enhance understanding and treatment for patients with this genetically diverse condition.
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  • - Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMTX1) is an X-linked genetic disorder affecting nerve function, primarily impacting males more severely, and is often caused by variants in the GJB1 gene, with many of these variants being classified as variants of uncertain significance (VUS).
  • - A large study involving 387 patients across 295 families assessed the pathogenicity of GJB1 variants, finding that 82.4% had pathogenic or likely pathogenic (P/LP) variants, and noted no significant baseline differences in symptoms between patients with P/LP variants and VUS.
  • - The research tracked disease progression over 8 years using the CMT Examination Score (CMTES) and identified that specific variants
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  • * A 61-year-old patient initially presenting with sensory ataxic neuropathy later developed severe autonomic failure and Parkinsonism, showing a complex autonomic profile that involved both sympathetic and parasympathetic functions.
  • * The patient's Parkinsonism did not respond to standard treatment (levodopa), highlighting the clinical similarities between CANVAS and MSA, although the exact connection between these two conditions is still unclear.
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Genetic pain loss includes congenital insensitivity to pain (CIP), hereditary sensory neuropathies and, if autonomic nerves are involved, hereditary sensory and autonomic neuropathy (HSAN). This heterogeneous group of disorders highlights the essential role of nociception in protecting against tissue damage. Patients with genetic pain loss have recurrent injuries, burns and poorly healing wounds as disease hallmarks.

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  • This study investigated the potential link between COVID-19 and Guillain-Barré syndrome (GBS) by analyzing GBS cases in the UK before and during the COVID-19 pandemic.
  • The researchers found that GBS incidence decreased during the pandemic and did not show a correlation with COVID-19 infection rates across different regions.
  • Although some GBS cases were associated with COVID-19, there were no significant differences in clinical features between COVID-19 positive and negative cases, suggesting no strong evidence linking the virus as a cause of GBS.
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Background: BATHE is a brief psychosocial intervention designed for physician use in patient consultations. The technique has gained some international recognition, but there is currently limited research evidence to demonstrate its acceptability and benefits to patient care. We conducted a pilot cluster randomised controlled trial and feasibility study to explore the use of BATHE as a key component of a person-focused intervention to improve the care of frequent attending patients in UK primary care.

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