Insight of autonomic dysfunction in CLN3 disease: a study on episodes resembling paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity (PSH).

Orphanet J Rare Dis

Department of Children and Adolescence, Centre for Rare Diseases, Aarhus University Hospital, Palle Juul-Jensens Boulevard 99, 8200, Aarhus, Denmark.

Published: October 2024

AI Article Synopsis

  • The study investigates autonomic activity in adolescents with Juvenile Ceroid Lipofuscinosis (CLN3-disease) experiencing recurrent non-epileptic episodes resembling paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity (PSH).
  • Researchers monitored heart rate variability (HRV) over a week and focused on HRV parameters before, during, and after PSH-like episodes in seven Danish patients aged 15 and older.
  • Results indicated a significant drop in parasympathetic activity just before PSH-like episodes and maintained low levels during and shortly after the episodes, while sympathetic activity remained unchanged, suggesting sympathetic overactivity during these events.

Article Abstract

Background: Recurrent non-epileptic episodes resembling paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity (PSH) have been observed in adolescents with Juvenile Ceroid Lipofuscinosis (CLN3-disease) and a possible association to an autonomic dysfunction has been suggested. The objective of the present study was to investigate the dynamics of the autonomic activity up to, during, and in the time after individual attacks. We include all seven suitable CLN3 patients in Denmark ≥ 15 years of age. HRV parameters were assessed from continuous heart rate monitoring during seven consecutive days and a particular focus of HRV parameters was obtained in close temporal context to clinically recurrent PSH-like episodes. In addition, the likelihood of PSH was assessed by caregiver's description and by video documentation.

Results: Respectively eight and five episodes were recorded in two patients (18 and 20 years of age). The episodes were all safely superior to the cut off values of the clinical assessment score to be considered PSH-like episodes. During all 13 episodes, HRV revealed a statistically significant decrease in root mean square of successive differences (RMSSD) and standard deviation of the Poincaré-Plot interval (SD1) in the minutes prior to the clinical onset of the episodes, both indicating a sudden decrease in parasympathetic activity in advance of the onset. The reduced activity remained low during the episodes, and 15-30 min following the attack cessation, the parasympathetic activity had returned to pre-attacks levels. The sympathetic HRV parameters were unchanged resulting in a sympathetic overactivity during the episodes. In a third participant (32 years of age), in whom severity of PSH-like episodes had been gradually reduced during the last years, five episodes were registered. A similar temporally related reduction of the parasympathetic activity was found, but because the sympathetic activity decreased as well, no sympathetic dominance developed, which most reasonable is the reason to the clinically reduced expression of the episodes.

Conclusion: The documented transient withdrawal of parasympathetic activity leading to a paroxysmal unbalanced sympathetic hyperactivity most probably accounts for the PSH-like episodes occurring in post-adolescent CLN3 patients. The findings shed new light on both aetiology and possible preventative and therapeutic measures.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC11465670PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1186/s13023-024-03336-1DOI Listing

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Insight of autonomic dysfunction in CLN3 disease: a study on episodes resembling paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity (PSH).

Orphanet J Rare Dis

October 2024

Department of Children and Adolescence, Centre for Rare Diseases, Aarhus University Hospital, Palle Juul-Jensens Boulevard 99, 8200, Aarhus, Denmark.

Article Synopsis
  • The study investigates autonomic activity in adolescents with Juvenile Ceroid Lipofuscinosis (CLN3-disease) experiencing recurrent non-epileptic episodes resembling paroxysmal sympathetic hyperactivity (PSH).
  • Researchers monitored heart rate variability (HRV) over a week and focused on HRV parameters before, during, and after PSH-like episodes in seven Danish patients aged 15 and older.
  • Results indicated a significant drop in parasympathetic activity just before PSH-like episodes and maintained low levels during and shortly after the episodes, while sympathetic activity remained unchanged, suggesting sympathetic overactivity during these events.
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