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1.
We report a case of congenital muscular dystrophy with secondary merosin deficiency, structural involvement of the central nervous system and mental retardation in an 8-year-old girl from a consanguineous family. She had early-onset hypotonia, generalized muscle wasting, with weakness especially of the neck muscles, joint contractures, mental retardation and high creatine kinase. Muscle biopsy showed dystrophic changes with partial deficiency of the laminin 2 chain. Cranial magnetic resonance imaging revealed multiple small cysts in the cerebellum, without cerebral cortical dysplasia or white matter changes. The laminin 2 chain (6q2), Fukuyama type congenital muscular dystrophy (9q31–q33) and muscle–eye–brain disease (1p32–p34) loci were all excluded by linkage analysis. We suggest that this case represents a new entity in the nosology of congenital muscular dystrophy.  相似文献   

2.
Two siblings with a congenital muscular dystrophy and severe mental retardation which was not due to dystrophin, merosin, or adhalin deficiency are described. These cases overlap with congenital muscular dystrophy of the Fukuyama-type but are less severe. Atypical features include limited facial involvement, retained ambulation, and severe retrocollis.  相似文献   

3.
We report three Tunisian patients affected by congenital muscular dystrophy with mental retardation and cerebellar cysts on cranial magnetic resonance imaging. The clinical features were characterized by hypotonia at birth, joint contractures associated with severe psychomotor retardation, absence of speech, inability to walk in three patients, but calf hypertrophy was noted only in two patients. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed several cerebellar cysts and vermis hypoplasia in all of the patients. Abnormality of the white matter was present in two patients. The pattern of gyration was normal in all cases. Serum creatine kinase was elevated in all three cases and their muscle biopsy showed dystrophic changes compatible with congenital muscular dystrophy. The immunohistochemical analysis of the skeletal muscle revealed partial merosin deficiency, more pronounced for the N-terminal antibody. Linkage analysis excluded congenital muscular dystrophy loci on chromosomes 6q22, 9q31, 1p32 and 1q42. These patients constituted a particular form of congenital muscular dystrophy with a combination of severe motor delay, mental retardation, partial merosin deficiency and cerebellar cysts. Two patients showed white matter abnormalities on magnetic resonance imaging and hypertrophy of the calves. These cases, in addition to those reported previously, confirmed the large phenotypic variability in the group of secondary merosin deficiency congenital muscular dystrophy.  相似文献   

4.
Twelve patients from 11 Israeli families with congenital muscular dystrophy were evaluated between 1991 and 2001. There were six males and six females, of whom six were merosin negative and six were merosin positive. Serum creatine kinase levels were highly elevated in the merosin-negative group. Four of the children were cognitively normal but nonambulant. Two had unusual clinical findings of severe cognitive and motor developmental dysfunction. Four infants in the merosin-positive group who had normal serum creatine kinase levels had early-onset severe motor weakness and died within the first year of life owing to ventilatory insufficiency. The other two were ambulant and had normal cognitive development and elevated serum creatine kinase levels. Noteworthy, two of the six children with merosin-negative congenital muscular dystrophy had cognitive impairment, and four of the six children with merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy had a severe form of the disease with ventilatory insufficiency and death during infancy.  相似文献   

5.
We present the results of a collaborative study on the association of congenital muscular dystrophy with central nervous system anomalies revealed by CT scan investigation of 10 patients. In seven children, an abnormal hypodensity of the cerebral white matter is found; in four of these patients, this radiological anomaly is either isolated, or associated with a moderate intellectual impairment; in one case, severe mental retardation and ocular changes had occurred; in the other two cases, the muscular disease was progressing slowly, in association with microcephaly, epilepsy, and moderate mental retardation. Three children were afflicted with a severe early encephalopathy and congenital muscular dystrophy, and presented signs of cortical and subcortical atrophy on CT scan. Two of these patients corresponded to different types of cerebro-ocular dysplasia-muscular dystrophy syndromes, and the third patient of Fukuyama's congenital muscular dystrophy. These observations are discussed and compared with those reported in the literature. The authors emphasize the need to investigate possible cerebral CT scan anomalies in congenital muscular dystrophies, and to look for muscular changes in some prenatal encephalopathies.  相似文献   

6.
The aim of the study was to evaluate whether children with merosin-positive or merosin-deficient congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD) show any cognitive impairment and whether this is related to brain abnormalities on magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). Twenty-two patients (age range: 5.8-15.3 years) were assessed by the Wechsler Intelligence Scales. Twelve were merosin-positive and ten merosin-deficient. One child had severe mental retardation and could not be tested. The full scale IQ in the remaining 21 ranged from 51 to 134, the verbal IQ ranged from 78 to 136 and the performance from 51 to 136. Of the twelve children with normal merosin one had a mild delay (IQ < 75) and two were borderline (IQ 75-95). Of the ten children with merosin-deficiency, one showed severe mental retardation and could not be tested, one showed a mild delay and two had borderline results. While the children with merosin deficiency with the typical diffuse white matter changes on MRI had normal scores, the children who in addition had cerebellar hypoplasia had lower performance IQ. The child with cortical dysplasia had severe mental retardation. Our results suggest that the spectrum of cognitive abilities in CMD is very wide even within genetically homogeneous conditions.  相似文献   

7.
This study evaluates whether abnormalities of visual function are present in children with congenital muscular dystrophy and whether these, if present, are associated with merosin status or magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) findings. Twenty children (age range 5-17 years) with a diagnosis of classical congenital muscular dystrophy were assessed on visual acuity, stereopsis, and visual fields and the results compared with merosin status and MRI findings. Visual-evoked potential results were available for 14 of 20 children. All 20 children revealed normal results on all the clinical tests assessing visual function, irrespective of their merosin status or of MRI findings. Visual-evoked potentials were normal in the children with merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy but were abnormal in those with merosin deficiency. Unlike the other forms of congenital muscular dystrophy, which are associated with structural brain changes and eye involvement, visual function was always normal in the classical form of congenital muscular dystrophy. Interestingly, visual function was normal also in the group of children with merosin-deficient congenital muscular dystrophy who manifested white matter changes involving the occipital lobes on MRI and abnormal visual evoked potentials. Further studies are needed to specify the nature of the white matter changes observed with MRI and the reason for the dissociation between clinical and neurophysiologic findings.  相似文献   

8.
We describe two Scottish siblings affected by a form of congenital muscular dystrophy characterised by a severe clinical phenotype, similar to that observed in the 6q-linked merosin-deficient CMD but in whom brain MRI and cognitive development were normal. The maximal function achieved in the 2 siblings was sitting independently. Serum CK were grossly elevated and the skin and muscle biopsies showed a severe reduction of merosin in both. The normal brain MRI and normal cognitive development distinguish this form from Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy, muscle-eye-brain disease or other forms of CMD with secondary partial merosin deficiency and abnormal brain MRI and/or mental retardation. Linkage analysis excluded all the known loci for CMD. We propose that this may represent a novel variant of CMD.  相似文献   

9.
Several studies have suggested the presence of central nervous system involvement manifesting as cognitive impairment in diseases traditionally confined to the peripheral nervous system. The aim of this review is to highlight the character of clinical, genetic, neurofunctional, cognitive, and psychiatric deficits in neuromuscular disorders. A high correlation between cognitive features and cerebral protein expression or function is evident in Duchenne muscular dystrophy, myotonic dystrophy (Steinert disease), and mitochondrial encephalomyopathies; direct correlation between tissue-specific protein expression and cognitive deficits is still elusive in certain neuromuscular disorders presenting with or without a cerebral abnormality, such as congenital muscular dystrophies, congenital myopathies, amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, adult polyglucosan body disease, and limb-girdle muscular dystrophies. No clear cognitive deficits have been found in spinal muscular atrophy and facioscapulohumeral dystrophy.  相似文献   

10.
We report a pair of siblings with non-Fukuyama type, merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy, born to unrelated parents. Patient 1 was a 16-year-old girl with myopathy, cardiomyopathy, severe mental retardation and epilepsy. Patient 2 was a younger brother of patient 1, a 10-year-old boy with myopathy, severe mental retardation and epilepsy. Their serum selenium levels were decreased to 25 micrograms/l and 55 micrograms/l, respectively (normal 97-147 micrograms/l). Their muscle biopsy findings were similar to those seen in selenium deficient myopathy, showing abnormal mitochondrial distribution and giant mitochondria. After oral administration of selenium for 3 months, their gait disturbance apparently improved, which was confirmed by a gait analysis system. Why their gait improved remain unclear, but a defect in selenium metabolism may play a role in the development of congenital muscular dystrophy and mental retardation.  相似文献   

11.
《Brain & development》1996,18(1):53-58
We report clinical and pathological findings in 9 children affected by congenital muscular dystrophy with normal or borderline intelligence and hypodensity of cerebral white matter (CMD-HWM), also frequently called ‘occidental or western form of cerebro-muscular dystrophy’ (OCMD). Our patients have uniform, distinct, clinical presentation that includes: normal or subnormal intelligence, severe, slowly progressive motor disability, high rate of facial involvement and dysmorphic aspect, increased creatine kinase levels and variable degrees of abnormal, radiographic, cerebral white matter pattern. By comparing our cases with previous reports we suggest that this subtype of CMD is not uncommon in Brazil and it is represented by a particularly severe and homogeneous clinical picture with important motor disability. The immunohistochemical staining for merosin, performed on the muscle biopsy of 6 among 9 patients, showed that all are merosin negative.  相似文献   

12.
At least six different forms of congenital muscular dystrophy are associated with structural changes of the central nervous system, and three of these have been mapped: merosin-deficient congenital muscular dystrophy on chromosome 6q2, Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy on chromosome 9q31, and muscle eye brain disease on chromosome 1p32. Walker-Warburg syndrome, congenital muscular dystrophy with calf hypertrophy, pontocerebellar hypoplasia, and normal eyes, and congenital muscular dystrophy with severe mental retardation and cerebellar cysts are nosologically distinct and have been excluded from the known congenital muscular dystrophy loci with structural changes of the central nervous system. Here, we describe a novel congenital muscular dystrophy syndrome which is phenotypically distinct from the recognized forms of congenital muscular dystrophy with brain involvement. Two siblings, a boy and a girl, were born to consanguineous parents from Sicily. Both children were born with adducted thumbs and toe contractures. They were floppy from birth, walked late, showed profound generalized muscle weakness including facial muscles, elevated creatine kinase levels of 200-700U/l, and histological changes compatible with muscular dystrophy. In addition, both showed ptosis, external ophthalmoplegia, mild mental retardation, and mild cerebellar hypoplasia on MRI. Immunocytochemistry showed normal expression of muscle membrane proteins including laminin alpha 2, laminin beta 2, and alpha-dystroglycan. Linkage analysis excluded the candidate loci on chromosomes 6q2, 9q31, and 1q32. The gene locus for congenital muscular dystrophy 1B, MDC 1B, on chromosome 1q42 was also excluded. Adducted thumbs are a distinct clinical sign that has not been reported in congenital muscular dystrophy before and should facilitate recognition of further patients with this disorder.  相似文献   

13.
Classical merosin (2 laminin)-positive congenital muscular dystrophy is a heterogeneous subgroup of disorders; a few cases characterized by severe mental retardation, brain involvement and no ocular abnormalities were called Fukuyama-like congenital muscular dystrophy. We report a family of healthy non-consanguineous parents, with four affected siblings, of which one died at the age of 7 months due to an intercurrent illness, who presented congenital hypotonia, severe mental retardation, microcephaly, delayed psychomotor development, generalized muscular wasting and weakness with mild facial involvement, calf pseudohypertrophy, joint contractures and areflexia. Muscle biopsy disclosed severe muscular dystrophy. Immunostaining for laminin 2 80 kDa and clone Mer3/22B2 monoclonal antibodies, 1 and 1 chain was preserved. Magnetic resonance imaging findings were consistent with pontocerebellar hypoplasia, bilateral opercular abnormalities and focal cortical dysplasia as well as minute periventricular white matter changes. Clusters of small T2-weighted focal hyperintensities in both cerebellar hemispheres consistent with cysts were observed in two of the three siblings studied with magnetic resonance imaging. Ophthalmologic and cardiologic examination was normal. Haplotype analysis using microsatellite markers excluded the Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy, LAMA2 and muscle-eye-brain disease loci. Thus, a wider spectrum of phenotypes, gene defects and protein deficiencies might be involved in congenital muscular dystrophy with brain abnormalities.  相似文献   

14.
We describe a child who presented at birth with arthrogryposis. Following a muscle biopsy a diagnosis of congenital muscular dystrophy was made and a skin biopsy 12 years later confirmed the presence of merosin. Her clinical picture was unusual, however, for merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy. She had extreme wasting and weakness of her arms and legs. In contrast, she had good neck and trunk control, and no facial or respiratory muscle weakness. We have used magnetic resonance imaging to examine the pattern of muscle involvement in this case. No recognizable muscle could be identified in the limbs. In contrast, the axial muscles were preserved. This striking pattern of virtual absence of muscles in the limbs with sparing of the axial muscle suggests that a gene responsible for the migration and/or proliferation of limb muscle precursor cells may be involved in the disease process. It is recognized that merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy is a heterogeneous disease. Magnetic resonance imaging is a useful tool for examining in detail the pattern of muscle involvement and identifying individual phenotypes. Understanding more about which muscles are affected in children with congenital myopathies may provide information on the underlying pathological process and help in the search for candidate proteins and genes.  相似文献   

15.
Children with merosin-deficient congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD) have striking white matter changes on T-2 weighted brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI). There have been occasional cases with structural abnormalities, mainly involving the occipital cortex. We report our brain imaging findings in 14 children with merosin-deficient CMD. Ten cases had a severe reduction or absence of merosin on immunocytochemistry and four cases had partial reduction. All 14 cases had white matter changes, which appeared after the first 6 months of life and persisted with time. The changes were diffuse and the oldest child scanned (14 years) also showed involvement of the U fibres. Five children with total absence of merosin also had structural abnormalities. One child had moderate mental retardation and epilepsy, mainly characterised by complex partial seizures, with atypical absences, which had been difficult to treat. Brain MRI showed marked occipital agyria and pontocerebellar hypoplasia. The gyral pattern of the rest of the brain looked normal. The four other cases, all with normal intelligence, also had cerebellar hypoplasia with variable involvement of the pons. They did not, however, have neuronal migration defects. It is recognised that several forms of congenital muscular dystrophy, namely Fukuyama CMD, muscle-eye-brain disease and Walker-Warburg syndrome, have structural brain abnormalities and associated severe mental retardation. Our cases demonstrate that a range of structural malformations can also be found in a significant number of children with merosin-deficient CMD.  相似文献   

16.
We report three patients with sporadic merosin-positive congenital muscular dystrophy (CMD) with torticollis and/or developmental dislocation of the hip in early childhood. Diagnosis of merosin-positive CMD was based on their clinical and dystrophic muscle biopsy findings. At the age 13 months, patient 1 was found to have developmental dislocation of both hips, which was surgically treated at 5 years. Patient 2 had severe torticollis and contracture of both hip joints which had been present since the neonatal period, and underwent repair of the torticollis at 2 years. Patient 3 was found to have developmental dislocation of the left hip at one month of age. Although she had generalized muscle hypotonia she learned to walk at 23 months. She had no facial muscle involvement nor contracture of joints, but had hyperlaxity of distal joints. Her muscle biopsy showed complete collagen VI deficiency immunohistochemically. In contrast to merosin-deficient CMD, merosin-positive CMD appears to be a group of heterogeneous diseases. Since collagen VI was reported to be defective in Ullrich's disease, patient 3 may be diagnosed as having Ullrich's disease but had no typical clinical characteristics of the disease. Further study is needed to identify the pathogenetic mechanism of congenital muscular dystrophy with early joint abnormalities to determine whether there is a primary abnormality of the connective tissue including collagen VI.  相似文献   

17.
OBJECTIVES: To report the spectrum of brain magnetic resonance imaging findings in 13 patients with congenital muscular dystrophy and FKRP gene mutations and to explore possible genotype-phenotype correlations. DESIGN: We retrospectively reviewed brain magnetic resonance imaging in patients with congenital muscular dystrophy and FKRP gene mutations. PATIENTS: Thirteen patients with congenital muscular dystrophy and mutations in the FKRP gene. RESULTS: Five of the 13 patients had the typical phenotype originally described for congenital muscular dystrophy (MDC1C) with normal intelligence and normal brain magnetic resonance imaging while 3 other patients had isolated cerebellar cysts and mental retardation without any other sign of posterior fossa of supratentorial abnormalities. In the remaining 5 patients cerebellar cysts were associated with structural brain changes involving the posterior fossa and the cortex, ranging from focal unilateral periventricular nodular heterotopia to marked cerebellar dysplasia and pontine hypoplasia. In 2 of these 5 patients the severity and distribution of changes resembled muscle-eye-brain disease in 1 patient who had mild Walker-Warburg syndrome. The distribution of FKRP gene mutations identified in this group of patients did not reveal any obvious association with the severity of central nervous system involvement. CONCLUSIONS: The severity of central nervous system involvement observed in our patients in contrast broadly reflected the severity of the disruption of alpha-dystroglycan glycosylation. In particular, dystroglycan expression was almost absent in the patients with muscle-eye-brain diseaselike phenotype and less severely reduced in the patients with congenital muscular dystrophy (MDC1C) with or without cerebellar cysts. This study further highlights the central role that dystroglycan has in neuronal migration.  相似文献   

18.
We report the first Japanese female patient with Walker-Warburg syndrome. She had generalized muscle hypotonia with hydrocephalus due to Dandy-Walker malformation and bilateral microphthalmia with opaque corneas. She had severe motor and mental retardation. Muscle histology reflected advanced changes of muscular dystrophy. We discuss the relationship between Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy and Walker-Warburg syndrome, both of which fall within a spectrum of developmental abnormalities with a common cause. In Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy, ocular abnormalities are less severe.  相似文献   

19.
We describe four Italian patients (aged 3, 4, 12, and 13 years ) affected by a novel autosomal form of recessive congenital muscular dystrophy. These patients were from three non-consanguineous families and presented an almost identical phenotype. This was characterized by hypotonia at birth, joint contractures associated with severe psychomotor retardation, absent speech, inability to walk and almost no interest in their surroundings. In addition, all patients had a striking enlargement of the calf and quadriceps muscles. Ophthalmologic examination revealed no structural ocular abnormalities in any of the children; one patient had severe myopia. In all cases a magnetic resonance imaging of the brain showed an abnormal posterior cranial fossa with enlargement of the cisterna magna and variable hypoplasia of the vermis of the cerebellum. Abnormality of the white matter was also present in all patients, in the form of patchy signal most evident in the periventricular areas. Serum CK was grossly elevated in all. The muscle biopsy from all cases showed dystrophic changes compatible with congenital muscular dystrophy. Immunofluorescence studies showed mild to moderate partial deficiency of laminin 2 chain. Linkage analysis in the only informative family excluded the known loci for congenital muscular dystrophy, including laminin 2 chain on chromosome 6q2, the Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy locus on 9q3 and the muscle-eye-brain disease on chromosome 1p3. We propose that this represent a novel severe variant of congenital muscular dystrophy, with associated central nervous system involvement.  相似文献   

20.
Muscular dystrophies are composed of a variety of genetic muscle disorders linked to different chromosomes and loci and associated with different gene mutations that lead to progressive muscle atrophy and weakness. Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy is frequently associated with partial and generalized epilepsy and congenital brain anomalies, including cobblestone complex and other neuronal migration defects. We report generalized convulsive epilepsy in a boy with normal brain magnetic resonance imaging and Duchenne muscular dystrophy with deletion of dystrophin gene, and we report absence epilepsy with normal brain magnetic resonance imaging in another boy with limb girdle muscular dystrophy with partial calpain deficiency. We, therefore, review coexisting muscular dystrophies and epilepsy in children. In addition to Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy, partial or generalized epilepsy has also been reported in the following types of muscular dystrophies, including Duchenne/Becker dystrophy, facioscapulohumeral dystrophy, congenital muscular dystrophy with partial and complete deficiency of laminin alpha2 (merosin) chain, and limb girdle muscular dystrophy with partial calpain deficiency.  相似文献   

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