19 research outputs found

    Expression des métalloprotéases dans les médulloblastomes

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    BORDEAUX2-BU Santé (330632101) / SudocPARIS-BIUM (751062103) / SudocSudocFranceF

    Benign nocturnal alternating hemiplegia of childhood: two cases with positive evolution

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    Benign nocturnal alternating hemiplegia (BNAH) of childhood is distinct from the classic form of malignant alternating hemiplegia of childhood [1]. It is characterized by hemiplegic attacks occurring exclusively during sleep [2]. It can be misdiagnosed as migraine, nocturnal frontal lobe epilepsy, benign rolandic epilepsy, Panayiotopoulos syndrome, or sleep-related movement disorder [1-4]. Only nine patients have been described to date, with typically, a normal development [1,5-7]. In order to insist about the benignity of the affection, we report two cases: a new three-year-old boy suffering from BNAH and a patient already published to show positive evolution at fourteen years of age. BNAH is a rare disorder but may be underdiagnosed. Making an early diagnosis can help to describe to the parents the good prognosis without treatment

    CHN1 and duane retraction syndrome: Expanding the phenotype to cranial nerves development disease

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    Duane retraction syndrome is a congenital eye movement disorder characterized by a failure of abducens nerve to develop normally, resulting in restriction or absence of abduction, adduction, or both, and narrowing of the palpebral fissure and retraction of the globe on attempted adduction. There is a genetic heterogeneity in Duane retraction syndrome (DURS). DURS maps to chromosome 8q13 in some patients, and pathogenic variants in CHN1 and MAFB genes are known to lead to DURS. We report here a child and his father with Duane retraction syndrome, associated to swallowing difficulties and unilateral trapeze aplasia. A whole exome sequencing revealed a heterozygous missense variant in CHN1 gene. This gene encodes GTPase-activating protein and is involved in the assembly of neuronal locomotor circuits. A patient with a 8q deletion has previously been described with a Duane retraction syndrome associated to trapeze aplasia. We provide an additional description to support the role in cranial nerves development of the CHN1 gene

    Quel suivi pour les traitements innovants ?

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    Suivre les bénéfices et la tolérance d’une thérapie innovante constitue un exercice relativement récent dans le champ des maladies neuromusculaires. Fonction respiratoire, capacités musculaires et fonctionnelles, qualité de vie, effets indésirables, pour chaque paramètre à évaluer s’esquisse un panel de mesures idéales

    Expanding the Spectrum of Neurological Manifestations in Cutis Laxa, Autosomal Recessive, Type IIIA

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    International audienceCutis laxa is a heterogeneous group of diseases, characterized by abundant and wrinkled skin and a variable degree of intellectual disability. Cutis laxa, autosomal recessive, type IIIA and autosomal dominant 3 syndromes are caused by autosomal recessive or de novo pathogenic variants in ALDH18A1. Autosomal recessive variants are known to lead to the most severe neurological phenotype, and very few patients have been described.We describe a 13-month-old patient with cutis laxa, autosomal recessive, type IIIA, with an extremely severe phenotype, including novel neurological findings. This description enlarges the neurological spectrum associated to cutis laxa, autosomal recessive, type IIIA, and provides an additional description of this syndrome

    Confirmatory validation of the french version of the Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy module of the pediatric quality of life inventory (PedsQLTM3.0DMDfv)

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    Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy (DMD) is a neuromuscular disease that inevitably leads to total loss of autonomy. The new therapeutic strategies aim to both improve survival and optimise quality of life. Evaluating quality of life is nevertheless a major challenge. No DMD-specific quality of life scale to exists in French. We therefore produced a French translation of the English Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy module of the Pediatric Quality of Life Inventory (PedsQL TM DMD) following international recommendations. The study objective was to carry out a confirmatory validation of the French version of the PedsQL TM DMD for paediatric patients with DMD, using French multicentre descriptive cross-sectional data. The sample consisted of 107 patients. Internal consistency was acceptable for proxyassessments, with Cronbach's alpha coefficients above 0.70, except for the Treatment dimension. For self-assessments, internal consistency was acceptable only for the Daily Activities dimension. Our results showed poor metric qualities for the French version of the PedsQL TM DMD based on a sample of about 100 children, but these results remained consistent with those of the original validation. This confirms the interest of its use in clinical practice

    Fluxomic assay-assisted diagnosis orientation in a cohort of 11 patients with myopathic form of CPT2 deficiency

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    International audienceCarnitine palmitoyltransferase type 2 (CPT2) deficiency, a mitochondrial fatty acid oxidation disorder (MFAOD), is a cause of myopathy in its late clinical presentation. As for other MFAODs, its diagnosis may be evocated when blood acylcarnitine profile is abnormal. However, a lack of abnormalities or specificity in this profile is not exclusive of CPT2 deficiency. Our retrospective study reports clinical and biological data in a cohort of 11 patients with circulating acylcamitine profile unconclusive enough for a specific diagnosis orientation. In these patients, CPT2 gene studies was prompted by prior fluxomic explorations of mitochondrial beta-oxidation on intact whole blood cells incubated with pentadeuterated ([16-H-2(3), 15-H-2(2)])-palmitate. Clinical indication for fluxomic explorations was at least one acute rhabdomyolysis episode complicated, in 5 of 11 patients, by acute renal failure. Major trigger of rhabdomyolysis was febrile infection. In all patients, fluxomic data indicated deficient CPT2 function showing normal deuterated palmitoylcarnitine (C16-Cn) formation rates associated with increased ratios between generated C16-Cn and downstream deuterated metabolites (Sigma deuterated C2-Cn to C14-Cn). Subsequent gene studies showed in all patients pathogenic gene variants in either homozygous or compound heterozygous forms. Consistent with literature data, allelic frequency of the c.338C \textgreater T[p.Ser113Leu] mutation amounted to 68.2% in our cohort. Other missense mutations included c.149C \textgreater A[p.Pro50His] (9%), c.200C \textgreater G[p.A1a200Gly] (4.5%) and previously unreported c.1171A \textgreater G[p.ser391Gly] (4.5%) and c.1420G \textgreater C[p.Ala474Pro] (4.5%) mutations. Frameshift c.1666-1667delTT[p.Leu556val*16] mutation (9%) was observed in two patients unknown to be related
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