AI Article Synopsis

  • * Generally considered a static condition, SLS usually leads only to worsening ambulation over time, but cases of significant neurological degeneration are rare.
  • * The report discusses a young child who experienced a rapidly progressive neurological decline potentially linked to a rotavirus infection, highlighting that some SLS patients may face a neurodegenerative outcome.

Article Abstract

Sjögren-Larsson syndrome (SLS) is a rare neurologic disorder caused by pathogenic sequence variants in and characterized by ichthyosis, spasticity, intellectual disability, and a crystalline retinopathy. Neurologic symptoms develop in the first 2 years of life. Except for worsening ambulation due to spastic diplegia and contractures, the neurologic disease has been considered static and a neurodegenerative course is distinctly unusual. We describe a young child with Sjögren-Larsson syndrome who exhibited an early and severely progressive neurologic phenotype that may have been triggered by a febrile rotavirus infection. Together with 7 additional published cases of these atypical patients, we emphasize that a neurodegenerative course can be an extreme outcome for a minority of patients with Sjögren-Larsson syndrome.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC8458237PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1177/08830738211029390DOI Listing

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