Publications by authors named "Sato Suzuki-Muromoto"

Background: Acute necrotizing encephalopathy (ANE) is a severe encephalopathy associated with acute viral infection. While most ANE cases are sporadic, pathogenic variants in the gene RAN binding protein 2 (RANBP2) have been identified as a major cause of familial or recurrent ANE (ANE1). Although sporadic ANE predominantly affects Asian children, ANE1 is very rare in east Asia.

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Objective: To understand the clinical characteristics of familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM) caused by a PRRT2 mutation and to examine the efficacy of preventive treatment.

Methods: Using the literature, we investigated clinical details of FHM in 3 generations of patients with a PRRT2 mutation and compared them with those in 17 patients with the same mutation from 6 families.

Results: In most of the affected patients, the onset was observed during the teen years.

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The genotype-phenotype correlation in BRAF variant in cardio-facio-cutaneous (CFC) syndrome is not clearly defined. Here we report a case with a severe clinical phenotype and a novel BRAF variant, p.Leu485del.

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Article Synopsis
  • Cerebral palsy, a common neurodevelopmental disorder leading to movement disabilities, can sometimes be mistaken for genetic diseases, especially in full-term infants with nonspecific brain MRI results.
  • In a study of 107 full-term cerebral palsy patients, researchers found that 52.9% exhibited pathogenic genetic variants, indicating that genetic conditions might be misdiagnosed as cerebral palsy when MRI shows no specific issues.
  • The findings highlight the importance of genetic testing in these cases, as many patients could actually have underlying genetic disorders rather than cerebral palsy.
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Here we report a Japanese patient with new compound heterozygous truncating variants in the PCDH12 gene. As compared to the previously reported families who had congenital microcephaly, intrauterine growth retardation, intracranial calcification, and neonatal seizure associated with dysplasia of the midbrain-hypothalamus-optic tract, the present patient showed no midbrain-hypothalamus dysplasia or congenital/postnatal microcephaly, but dyskinetic cerebral palsy and severe intellectual disability as well as multifocal epilepsy. To understand phenotypic spectrum associated with PCDH12 variants, more reports are needed.

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Arthrogryposis multiplex congenita (AMC) is characterized by heterogeneous multiple congenital contractures appearing at birth. Mutations in X-linked zinc-finger gene ZC4H2 were recently identified in some families and individuals with variable forms of AMC associated with dysmorphic signs, intellectual disability and spastic paresis. We present a non-consanguineous Japanese female presenting AMC with severe intellectual disability and spastic quadriplegia who also had progressive brain atrophy.

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Objective: Several studies have suggested that objective deficits in the processing of abstract information in conjunction with an enhanced ability to process concrete information is a definitive characteristic of autism spectrum disorder (ASD). However, this cognitive imbalance is not necessarily clear in high-functioning autistic individuals who do not display absolute differences relative to typically developing (TD) populations. Thus, the purpose of this study was to identify this cognitive tendency in high-functioning autistic individuals using intra-individual cognitive comparisons.

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We report a patient with Muenke syndrome who had repetitive apneic spell followed by focal status epilepticus in the early infancy. Ictal EEG showed focal spikes bursts originated from the left hemisphere and sifted to the right hemisphere, during which he had migrating tonic seizures from right side of the body to the left side of the body. Brain MRI showed abnormal development of bilateral hippocampus, which was characterized as abnormal folding of hippocampal gyri.

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Objective: To evaluate the effects and tolerability of vigabatrin (VGB) in children with tuberous sclerosis (TS) with infantile spasms or tonic seizures. Methods: We examined the impact of VGB on a series of 17 children with TS visiting Tohoku University Hospital in Japan during April 2010 and May 2015. To minimize potential adverse effects, VGB was given to the patients for limited 6 months with titration from 30 mg/kg/day as an initial dose.

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Article Synopsis
  • A 24-year-old woman with 3p deletion syndrome was studied, having developed cerebellar hemangioblastoma at age 16, alongside physical and cognitive impairments.
  • * The genetic analysis revealed a de novo deletion on chromosome 3p, affecting the von Hippel-Lindau (VHL) gene, linked to tumor development.
  • * Even after surgery for the hemangioblastoma, no other tumors related to VHL disease were found by age 24, marking this as a unique case in medical literature.
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