Background: Gain-of-function mutations in the ATP-sensitive potassium channel can cause permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus (PNDM) or neonatal diabetes accompanied by a constellation of neurological symptoms (iDEND syndrome). Studies of a mouse model of iDEND syndrome revealed that cerebellar Purkinje cell electrical activity was impaired and that the mice exhibited poor motor coordination. In this study, we probed the hand-eye coordination of PNDM and iDEND patients using visual tracking tasks to see if poor motor coordination is also a feature of the human disease.
Methods: Control participants (n = 14), patients with iDEND syndrome (n = 6 or 7), and patients with PNDM (n = 7) completed three computer-based tasks in which a moving target was tracked with a joystick-controlled cursor. Patients with PNDM and iDEND were being treated with sulphonylurea drugs at the time of testing.
Results: No differences were seen between PNDM patients and controls. Patients with iDEND syndrome were significantly less accurate than controls in two of the three tasks. The greatest differences were seen when iDEND patients tracked blanked targets, i.e. when predictive tracking was required. In this task, iDEND patients incurred more discrepancy errors (p = 0.009) and more velocity errors (p= 0.009) than controls.
Conclusions: These results identify impaired hand-eye coordination as a new clinical feature of iDEND. The aetiology of this feature is likely to involve cerebellar dysfunction. The data further suggest that sulphonylurea doses that control the diabetes of these patients may be insufficient to fully correct their neurological symptoms.
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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3633835 | PMC |
http://journals.plos.org/plosone/article?id=10.1371/journal.pone.0062646 | PLOS |
Front Neurol
March 2023
Department of Pediatrics, Shengjing Hospital of China Medical University, Shenyang, Liaoning, China.
Neonatal diabetes mellitus (NDM) is a rare type of monogenic diabetes. At present, most published studies have focused on the types of gene mutations associated with NDM and the therapeutic effect of sulfonylureas (SUs) on the disease; few studies on NDM-associated intracranial hemorrhage (ICH) exist. In addition, p.
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Diabetes
February 2021
Department of Molecular Genetics, Madras Diabetes Research Foundation, ICMR Advanced Centre for Genomics of Type 2 Diabetes, Affiliated to University of Madras, Chennai, India.
Background: There are very few reports pertaining to Indian patients with neonatal diabetes mellitus (NDM). Activating or gain of function mutations of K channel genes namely KCNJ11 and ABCC8 are most predominant cause of permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus (PNDM).
Objectives: To identify the genotype-phenotype correlation of K channel gene defects in a large series of (n = 181) Indian PNDM patients.
Neonatal diabetes is a rare form of monogenic diabetes characterised by persistent hyperglycaemia during the first 6-9 months of age. About half of the cases of neonatal diabetes are transient forms resulting from mutations in the genes in the imprinted region of chromosome 6q24 and the other half are permanent forms. Activating mutations in the potassium ATP (KATP) channels encoded by the genes KCNJ11 and ABCC8 are responsible for the majority of permanent neonatal diabetes mellitus (PNDM).
View Article and Find Full Text PDFPediatr Diabetes
November 2017
Department of Pediatric Endocrinology and Metabolism, Children's Medical Center, Osaka City General Hospital, Osaka, Japan.
Background: There are few reports pertaining to Asian patients with neonatal diabetes mellitus (NDM) caused by activating mutations in the ATP-sensitive potassium channel genes (KATP-NDM).
Objectives: To elucidate the characteristics of Japanese patients with KATP-NDM.
Methods: By the amplification and direct sequencing of all exons and exon-intron boundaries of the KCNJ11 and ABCC8 genes, 25 patients with KATP-NDM were identified from a total of 70 patients with NDM.
Diabetes Care
June 2014
Endocrinology Department, Hospital Sant Joan de Déu, University of Barcelona, Barcelona, Spain
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