• Title of article

    Intra-familial phenotypic heterogeneity in adult onset vanishing white matter disease

  • Author/Authors

    Nathalie Damon-Perriere، نويسنده , , Patrice Menegon، نويسنده , , Anne Olivier، نويسنده , , Odile Boespflug-Tanguy، نويسنده , , Florence Niel، نويسنده , , Isabelle Creveaux، نويسنده , , Vincent Dousset، نويسنده , , Bruno Brochet، نويسنده , , Cyril Goizet، نويسنده ,

  • Issue Information
    روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2008
  • Pages
    4
  • From page
    1068
  • To page
    1071
  • Abstract
    Vanishing white matter (VWM) disease, also known as childhood ataxia with central nervous system hypomyelination (CACH) syndrome, is an autosomal recessive transmitted leukodystrophy. Classically characterised by early childhood onset, adult onset formed with slower progression have been recently recognized. The course of neurological impairment is usually progressive with possible occasional episodes of acute deterioration following febrile illnesses or head trauma. Neurological features are dominated by cerebellar ataxia and spasticity with relatively preserved mental abilities. Brain MRI shows diffuse abnormal signal of the cerebral white matter and cystic degeneration. Mutations in one of the genes coding for the five subunits of the translation factor eukaryotic initiation factor 2B (eIF2B) have been identified. We report here on two sisters affected by adult onset VWM with variable phenotypic expression. The proband is remarkable by the very late age of the disease onset (age of 42). A homozygous p.Arg113His mutation in the eIF2B gene was identified. This mutation had been recurrently associated with adult onset VWM establishing phenotype–genotype correlations. We will show an important intra-familial phenotypic variability and discuss it in the light of recent molecular progresses. External precipitating factors are contributing for some of the differences observed.
  • Keywords
    LeukodystrophyVanishing white matter (VWM) diseaseChildhood ataxia with cerebralhypomyelination (CACH)Eukaryotic initiation factor 2B (eIF2B)p.Arg113His mutationCystic degeneration
  • Journal title
    Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery
  • Serial Year
    2008
  • Journal title
    Clinical Neurology and Neurosurgery
  • Record number

    464747