Unlabelled: Kleine-Levin syndrome (KLS) is a rare disorder characterized by episodic bouts of severe hypersomnia associated with cognitive and behavioral abnormalities and normal alertness and functioning in between episodes. The pathophysiology is unclear but may involve neurotransmitter abnormalities, hypothalamic/thalamic dysfunction, viral/autoimmune etiology, or circadian abnormalities. No single treatment has been shown to be reliably efficacious; lithium has demonstrated the most consistent efficacy, although many do not respond and its use is limited by side effects.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPrimary coenzyme Q10 (CoQ) deficiency is a group of inborn errors of metabolism caused by defects in CoQ biosynthesis. Biallelic pathogenic variants in COQ7, encoding mitochondrial 5-demethoxyubiquinone hydroxylase, have been reported in nine patients from seven families. We identified five new patients with COQ7-related primary CoQ deficiency, performed clinical assessment of the patients, and studied the functional effects of current and previously reported COQ7 variants and potential treatment options.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFUnlabelled: Recently, patient advocacy groups started using the name Gould syndrome to describe clinical features of COL4A1 and COL4A2 mutations. Gould syndrome is increasingly identified in genetic screening panels, and because it is a rare disease, there is a disproportionate burden on families to understand the disease and chart the course for clinical care. Among the chief concerns for caregivers of children with Gould syndrome are the challenges faced because of epilepsy, including severe manifestations such as infantile spasms.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFBackground: Seizures are an under-reported feature of the SATB2-associated syndrome phenotype. We describe the electroencephalographic findings and seizure semiology and treatment in a population of individuals with SATB2-associated syndrome.
Methods: We performed a retrospective review of 101 individuals with SATB2-associated syndrome who were reported to have had a previous electroencephalographic study to identify those who had at least one reported abnormal result.
Objective: Genome sequencing (GS) is promising for unsolved leukodystrophies, but its efficacy has not been prospectively studied.
Methods: A prospective time-delayed crossover design trial of GS to assess the efficacy of GS as a first-line diagnostic tool for genetic white matter disorders took place between December 1, 2015 and September 27, 2017. Patients were randomized to receive GS immediately with concurrent standard of care (SoC) testing, or to receive SoC testing for 4 months followed by GS.
Background: Dynamin 1 is a protein involved in the synaptic vesicle cycle, which facilitates the exocytosis of neurotransmitters necessary for normal signaling and development in the central nervous system. Pathogenic variants in DNM1 have been implicated in global developmental delay (DD), severe intellectual disability (ID), and notably, epileptic encephalopathy. All previously reported DNM1 pathogenic variants causing this severe phenotype occur in the GTPase and Middle domains of the dynamin 1 protein.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFObjective: To describe the neurologic and neuroimaging manifestations associated with Cantú syndrome.
Methods: We evaluated 10 patients with genetically confirmed Cantú syndrome. All adult patients, and pediatric patients who were able to cooperate and complete the studies, underwent neuroimaging, including vascular imaging.
Background: Human herpesvirus 6 is a significant cause of the febrile illness roseola infantum in young children. Infection with human herpesvirus 6 typically causes a self-limited febrile illness but occasionally is associated with central nervous system manifestations, including febrile seizures and encephalitis. Host factors associated with severe manifestations of human herpesvirus 6-associated neurological disease remain poorly characterized.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFMyoclonus is a brief, rapid, involuntary muscle jerk originating in the central nervous system that can be physiological or a symptom of disease. We report a group of five children with excessive myoclonic jerks, only during sleep, and abnormal EEG during the events. Although only one third of the events had EEG epileptiform correlate, the presence of myoclonus without epileptiform EEG correlate has been described in patients with benign myoclonic epilepsy of infancy.
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