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Frequency analysis and clinical characterization of different types of spinocerebellar ataxia in Serbian patients.
Authors:Natasa T Dragasevi?  Biljana Culjkovi?  Christine Klein  Aleksandar Risti?  Milica Keckarevi?  Ivan Topisirovi?  Slobodanka Vukosavi?  Marina Svetel  Norman Kock  Elka Stefanova  Stanka Romac  Vladimir S Kosti?
Institution:Institute of Neurology CCS, Medical School, University of Belgrade, Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro.
Abstract:The relative frequencies of different spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) vary widely among different ethnic groups, presumably due to a founder effect. We investigated the relative prevalence of SCA1-3, 6-8, 12, 17; dentate-rubro-pallidoluysian atrophy; and Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA) in Serbian patients with adult-onset (>20 years of age) hereditary and sporadic SCAs, and compared clinical features of patients with genetically confirmed SCAs. A total of 108 patients from 54 families (38 apparently dominant ADCA] and 16 apparently recessive) with adult-onset hereditary ataxia and 75 apparently sporadic patients were assessed. Of 38 families with ADCA, 13 (34%) were positive for an expansion in an SCA1 and 5 families (13%) for an expansion in an SCA2 allele. In 20 families (53%), no expansions have been identified in any of the analyzed genes. Gaze palsy, spasticity, and hyperreflexia were significantly more common in SCA1, whereas slow saccades, hypotonia, hyporeflexia, and dystonia prevailed in SCA2 patients. Among the 16 families with an apparently recessive mode of ataxia inheritance, 4 (25%) were identified as having the FRDA mutation. Ataxia-causing mutations were identified in 8 (10.6%) of patients with apparently sporadic adult-onset ataxia.
Keywords:autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxia  SCA1  SCA2
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