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CAG repeat length and clinical features in three Italian families with spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2): early impairment of Wisconsin Card Sorting Test and saccade velocity
Authors:A. Gambardella  G. Annesi  F. Bono  P. Spadafora  P. Valentino  A. A. Pasqua  R. Mazzei  R. Montesanti  F. L. Conforti  R. L. Oliveri  M. Zappia  U. Aguglia  A. Quattrone
Affiliation:(1) Institute of Neurology, School of Medicine of Catanzaro, Catanzaro, Italy, IT;(2) Institute of Experimental Medicine and Biotechnoloy of the National Research Council, Piano Lago di Mangone – Cosenza, Italy, IT
Abstract:We report on the clinical, neuropsychological, neurophysiological, computerized eye movement, magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and molecular findings from 17 individuals affected with spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2) belonging to three families. The average age at onset of the symptoms was 35.6, 11.9 (mean, SD) years. The mean age at onset of the symptoms in the parents was 44.8, 8.2 years, and in the offspring it was 28.7, 7.2 years. In 12 parent-child pairs, the mean anticipation was –15.75, 9.1 years (range –8.1 to –23.3 years, t = –4.9, P = < 0.002). The mutated SCA2 alleles ranged from 38 to 42 CAG repeats, while the normal alleles ranged from 22 to 24 repeats, with 97% of the alleles having 22 repeats. Small differences in the number of CAG repeats influenced the age at onset and rate of progression of the disease considerably. Indeed, patients presenting with their first symptom at an age of 35 years or later with a slower course of the disease harboured between 38 and 39 repeats. In contrast, patients carrying ≥ 40 CAG repeats manifested the disease prior to 30 years of age and had a faster disease progression toward incapacity. The presenting symptom was always gait ataxia. Slow saccades occured from the beginning of the disease despite normal delay, accuracy and smooth pursuit eye movements. The neuropsychological study showed early and selective impairment of conceptual reasoning ability, as detected by the Wisconsin Card Sorting Test (WCST). It is noteworthy that a significant mutual relationship was observed between performance on the WCST and saccade velocity. All of these findings favour the hypothesis that the disease process of SCA2 in regions other than the cerebellum and brain stem affects severely and early those cortical structures involved in the control of both visually guided saccades and WCST performance. Received: 13 October 1997 Received in revised form: 23 February 1998 Accepted: 20 March 1998
Keywords:Autosomal dominant diseases  Cerebellar ataxia  Spinocerebellar ataxia type 2 (SCA2)  Saccades  Trinucleotide
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