Publications by authors named "Thiago Bortholin"

The Sotos syndrome is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by haploinsufficiency of gene, with some individuals affected by epilepsy and, rarely, drug-resistant seizures. A 47-years-old female patient with Sotos syndrome was diagnosed with focal-onset seizures in left temporal lobe, left-side hippocampal atrophy, and neuropsychological testing with decreased performance in several cognitive domains. Patient was treated with left-side temporal lobe resection and developed complete awake seizure control in 3-years of follow-up, with marked improvement in quality-of-life.

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Leigh syndrome represents a complex inherited neurometabolic and neurodegenerative disorder associated with different clinical, genetic and neuroimaging findings in the context of bilateral symmetrical lesions involving the brainstem and basal ganglia. Heterogeneous neurological manifestations such as spasticity, cerebellar ataxia, dystonia, choreoathetosis and parkinsonism are associated with multisystemic and ophthalmological abnormalities due to >75 different monogenic causes. Here, we describe the clinical and genetic features of a Brazilian cohort of patients with Leigh Syndrome in which muscle biopsy analysis showed mitochondrial DNA defects and determine the utility of whole exome sequencing for a final genetic diagnostic in this cohort.

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Genetic leukoencephalopathies represent an expanding group of inherited disorders associated with involvement of brain white matter. Cystic degeneration has been previously described with some acquired or inherited leukoencephalopathies. We describe a 6-month-old Brazilian boy with a 2-month history of severe and rapidly progressive developmental and psychomotor regression and seizures.

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Axonal Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMT) represents an expanding group of inherited motor and sensory neuropathies in clinical practice. SACS-gene related disorders have been associated with complex neurological phenotypes of early-onset cerebellar ataxia, spastic-ataxia, spastic paraplegia, demyelinating neuropathy and variable ophthalmological, cognitive and psychiatric disturbances, but never related to pure axonal neuropathy phenotypes. Two unrelated Brazilian men with early-onset axonal CMT-like presentations associated with SACS gene mutations are presented.

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Introduction: Hereditary Spastic Paraplegia (HSP) represents a complex and heterogeneous group of rare neurodegenerative disorders that share a common clinical feature of weakness and lower limb spasticity that can occur alone or in combination with a constellation of other neurological or systemic signs and symptoms. Although the core clinical feature of weakness and lower limb spasticity is virtually universal, the genetic heterogeneity is almost uncountable with more than 70 genetic forms described so far. We performed review of medical records from twenty-one patients from seventeen Brazilian families with complex phenotype of HSP.

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Hereditary spastic paraplegia comprises a wide and heterogeneous group of inherited neurodegenerative and neurodevelopmental disorders resulting from primary retrograde dysfunction of the long descending fibers of the corticospinal tract. Although spastic paraparesis and urinary dysfunction represent the most common clinical presentation, a complex group of different neurological and systemic compromise has been recognized recently and a growing number of new genetic subtypes were described in the last decade. Clinical characterization of individual and familial history represents the main step during diagnostic workup; however, frequently, few and unspecific data allows a low rate of definite diagnosis based solely in clinical and neuroimaging basis.

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