AI Article Synopsis

  • - A new type of congenital muscular dystrophy was identified in four unrelated patients, characterized by symptoms like muscle weakness, increased CK levels, and issues with walking, where two patients were severely affected from infancy.
  • - The disease progressed rapidly, leading to tetraplegia, severe respiratory issues, and distinct physical features such as a round face and muscle wastage in the hands and feet; one patient died from respiratory complications.
  • - Genetic analysis revealed abnormal levels of certain muscle proteins and excluded known genetic causes, indicating that this condition is a unique form of muscular dystrophy.

Article Abstract

A novel form of congenital muscular dystrophy in four unrelated patients is proposed. Congenital hypotonia, markedly increased CK, calf pseudohypertrophy and proximal weakness were common early findings. Two cases were severely affected since infancy and never walked. The phenotypical homogeneity was not very evident until advanced stages of the disease. All the patients showed catastrophic progression of the weakness, severe restrictive respiratory insufficiency, macroglossia, peculiar extreme amyotrophy of hands and feet, and a round and 'puffy' face. All patients became tetraplegic and required mechanical ventilation. Two cases had signs of mild cardiac involvement. The only non-tracheotomised patient died of respiratory complications. No mental retardation or specific brain abnormalities were observed. All patients showed secondary deficit of laminin 2 and up-regulation of laminin 5 in muscle. Expression of -dystroglycan was severely reduced in two available muscle samples. The known loci for congenital muscular dystrophies were excluded in the only consanguineous case by linkage analysis. Clinical, immunohistochemical and genetic findings strongly suggest a distinct entity.

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http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/s0960-8966(01)00331-5DOI Listing

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