14 research outputs found

    Efficacy of a specialized inpatient rehabilitation program in patients with early versus chronic epilepsy

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    Hagemann A, Lahr D, May T, et al. Efficacy of a specialized inpatient rehabilitation program in patients with early versus chronic epilepsy. Epilepsy &amp; Behavior. 2023;142: 108999.Objective: To evaluate the efficacy of a specialized inpatient rehabilitation program in patients with early in comparison with chronic epilepsy.Methods: We performed a prospective, open pre/post study using a parallel group design. Patients with early epilepsy (EE, treatment with anti-seizure medication [ASM] 5 years) completed questionnaires at the time of their admission to the rehabilitation program and at discharge. Outcome measures comprised scales from the PESOS questionnaire (PErformance, SOciodemographic aspects, Subjective estimation; e.g., emotional adaptation to epilepsy) as well as screening instruments for depression (Neurological Disorders Depression Inventory for Epilepsy, NDDI-E) and anxiety (Generalized Anxiety Disorder Scale, GAD-7). Linear mixed models (LMMs) were used to determine the effects of the program in the total group and to compare the effects between patients with EE and CE.Results: The analyses included 79 patients with EE and 157 patients with CE. Baseline comparisons revealed differences in disease-related and sociodemographic variables (e.g., patients with EE were older, those with CE had a higher seizure frequency and a higher rate of unemployment; all p .05) except for the perceived level of information, which was significantly lower in patients with EE at admission and improved to a higher extent in this group (both p < .001).Conclusion: Both patients with EE and patients with CE who are referred to a specialized comprehensive rehabilitation program benefit from the participation in this program with respect to emotional adapta-tion to epilepsy, aspects of quality of life, and level of information about epilepsy.(c) 2022 Elsevier Inc. All rights reserved

    Crystal violet decolorization assay for rapid detection of multidrug-resistant Mycobacterium tuberculosis isolates: A multicenter study

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    Background: Effective control of tuberculosis is achieved by early diagnosis and drug susceptibility testing for initiation of appropriate treatment. The performance of crystal violet decolorization assay (CVDA) for susceptibility testing of Mycobacterium tuberculosis to isoniazid (INH) and rifampicin (RIF) was compared in a multicenter study. Methods: Seventy-two M. tuberculosis isolates were tested in two phases by CVDA. Results: In Phase I, the specificity, sensitivity, positive predictive value (PPV), negative predictive value (NPV), and agreement for INH were 100%, respectively. Specificity, sensitivity, PPV, NPV, and agreement for RIF were 98.2%, 100%, 94.1%, 100%, and 98.6%, respectively. In Phase II, specificity, sensitivity, PPV, NPV, and agreement were 98%, 100%, 95.4%, 100%, and 98.6% for INH, respectively. Specificity, sensitivity, PPV, NPV, and agreement for RIF were 96.3%, 88.2%, 88.2%, 96.3%, and 94.4%, respectively. Results in the study were obtained on average 10.9 ± 3.1 days in Phase I and 9.8 ± 2.2 days in Phase II. Conclusion: CVDA can be performed for drug susceptibility testing in developed and developing countries. In addition, further studies with larger sample size are needed for evaluation of this method

    REST Final-Exon-Truncating Mutations Cause Hereditary Gingival Fibromatosis

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    Hereditary gingival fibromatosis (HGF) is the most common genetic form of gingival fibromatosis that develops as a slowly progressive, benign, localized or generalized enlargement of keratinized gingiva. HGF is a genetically heterogeneous disorder and can be transmitted either as an autosomal-dominant or autosomal-recessive trait or appear sporadically. To date, four loci (2p22.1, 2p23.3-p22.3, 5q13-q22, and 11p15) have been mapped to autosomes and one gene (SOS1) has been associated with the HGF trait observed to segregate in a dominant inheritance pattern. Here we report 11 individuals with HGF from three unrelated families. Whole-exome sequencing (WES) revealed three different truncating mutations including two frameshifts and one nonsense variant in RE1-silencing transcription factor (REST) in the probands from all families and further genetic and genomic analyses confirmed the WES-identified findings. REST is a transcriptional repressor that is expressed throughout the body; it has different roles in different cellular contexts, such as oncogenic and tumor-suppressor functions and hematopoietic and cardiac differentiation. Here we show the consequences of germline final-exontruncating mutations in REST for organismal development and the association with the HGF phenotype

    Wolff–Parkinson–White

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    Wolff-Parkinson-White (WPW) syndrome is a relatively common arrhythmia affecting ~1-3/1,000 individuals. Mutations in PRKAG2 have been described in rare patients in association with cardiomyopathy. However, the genetic basis of WPW in individuals with a structurally normal heart remains poorly understood. Sudden death due to atrial fibrillation (AF) can also occur in these individuals. Several studies have indicated that despite ablation of an accessory pathway, the risk of AF remains high in patients compared to general population.We applied exome sequencing in 305 subjects, including 65 trios, 80 singletons, and 6 multiple affected families. We used de novo analysis, candidate gene approach, and burden testing to explore the genetic contributions to WPW.A heterozygous deleterious variant in PRKAG2 was identified in one subject, accounting for 0.6% (1/151) of the genetic basis of WPW in this study. Another individual with WPW and left ventricular hypertrophy carried a known pathogenic variant in MYH7. We found rare de novo variants in genes associated with arrhythmia and cardiomyopathy (ANK2, NEBL, PITX2, and PRDM16) in this cohort. There was an increased burden of rare deleterious variants (MAF ≤ 0.005) with CADD score ≥ 25 in genes linked to AF in cases compared to controls (P = .0023).Our findings show an increased burden of rare deleterious variants in genes linked to AF in WPW syndrome, suggesting that genetic factors that determine the development of accessory pathways may be linked to an increased susceptibility of atrial muscle to AF in a subset of patients

    Functional biology of the Steel syndrome founder allele and evidence for clan genomics derivation of COL27A1 pathogenic alleles worldwide

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    Previously we reported the identification of a homozygous COL27A1 (c.2089G>C; p.Gly697Arg) missense variant and proposed it as a founder allele in Puerto Rico segregating with Steel syndrome (STLS, MIM #615155); a rare osteochondrodysplasia characterized by short stature, congenital bilateral hip dysplasia, carpal coalitions, and scoliosis. We now report segregation of this variant in five probands from the initial clinical report defining the syndrome and an additional family of Puerto Rican descent with multiple affected adult individuals. We modeled the orthologous variant in murine Col27a1 and found it recapitulates some of the major Steel syndrome associated skeletal features including reduced body length, scoliosis, and a more rounded skull shape. Characterization of the in vivo murine model shows abnormal collagen deposition in the extracellular matrix and disorganization of the proliferative zone of the growth plate. We report additional COL27A1 pathogenic variant alleles identified in unrelated consanguineous Turkish kindreds suggesting Clan Genomics and identity-by-descent homozygosity contributing to disease in this population. The hypothesis that carrier states for this autosomal recessive osteochondrodysplasia may contribute to common complex traits is further explored in a large clinical population cohort. Our findings augment our understanding of COL27A1 biology and its role in skeletal development; and expand the functional allelic architecture in this gene underlying both rare and common disease phenotypes

    Functional biology of the Steel syndrome founder allele and evidence for clan genomics derivation of COL27A1 pathogenic alleles worldwide

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    Previously we reported the identification of a homozygous COL27A1 (c.2089G>C; p.Gly697Arg) missense variant and proposed it as a founder allele in Puerto Rico segregating with Steel syndrome (STLS, MIM #615155); a rare osteochondrodysplasia characterized by short stature, congenital bilateral hip dysplasia, carpal coalitions, and scoliosis. We now report segregation of this variant in five probands from the initial clinical report defining the syndrome and an additional family of Puerto Rican descent with multiple affected adult individuals. We modeled the orthologous variant in murine Col27a1 and found it recapitulates some of the major Steel syndrome associated skeletal features including reduced body length, scoliosis, and a more rounded skull shape. Characterization of the in vivo murine model shows abnormal collagen deposition in the extracellular matrix and disorganization of the proliferative zone of the growth plate. We report additional COL27A1 pathogenic variant alleles identified in unrelated consanguineous Turkish kindreds suggesting Clan Genomics and identity-by-descent homozygosity contributing to disease in this population. The hypothesis that carrier states for this autosomal recessive osteochondrodysplasia may contribute to common complex traits is further explored in a large clinical population cohort. Our findings augment our understanding of COL27A1 biology and its role in skeletal development; and expand the functional allelic architecture in this gene underlying both rare and common disease phenotypes

    Paralog Studies Augment Gene Discovery: DDX and DHX Genes

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    Members of a paralogous gene family in which variation in one gene is known to cause disease are eight times more likely to also be associated with human disease. Recent studies have elucidated DHX30 and DDX3X as genes for which pathogenic variant alleles are involved in neurodevelopmental disorders. We hypothesized that variants in paralogous genes encoding members of the DExD/H-box RNA helicase superfamily might also underlie developmental delay and/or intellectual disability (DD and/or ID) disease phenotypes. Here we describe 15 unrelated individuals who have DD and/or ID, central nervous system (CNS) dysfunction, vertebral anomalies, and dysmorphic features and were found to have probably damaging variants in DExD/H-box RNA helicase genes. In addition, these individuals exhibit a variety of other tissue and organ system involvement including ocular, outer ear, hearing, cardiac, and kidney tissues. Five individuals with homozygous (one), compound-heterozygous (two), or de novo (two) missense variants in DHX37 were identified by exome sequencing. We identified ten total individuals with missense variants in three other DDX/DHX paralogs: DHX16 (four individuals), DDX54 (three individuals), and DHX34 (three individuals). Most identified variants are rare, predicted to be damaging, and occur at conserved amino acid residues. Taken together, these 15 individuals implicate the DExD/H-box helicases in both dominantly and recessively inherited neurodevelopmental phenotypes and highlight the potential for more than one disease mechanism underlying these disorders.status: publishe

    First epileptic seizure and epilepsies in adulthood. Abridged version ofthe S2k guideline of the German Society for Neurology in cooperationwith the German Society for Epileptology

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    Holtkamp M, May T, Berkenfeld R, et al. Erster epileptischer Anfall und Epilepsien im Erwachsenenalter. Kurzfassung S2k-Leitlinie der Deutschen Gesellschaft fĂĽr Neurologie in Zusammenarbeit mit der Deutschen Gesellschaft fĂĽr Epileptologie. Clinical Epileptology. 2024.The new S2k guideline "First epileptic seizure and epilepsies in adulthood" provides recommendations on clinically relevant issues in five major topics: management of first epileptic seizures, pharmacotherapy, epilepsy surgery, complementary and supportive treatment, and psychosocial aspects. For the topic management of first epileptic seizures, the guideline provides recommendations on identifying the two major differential diagnoses, syncope and psychogenic non-epileptic seizure. The importance of additional examinations such as EEG, MRI and cerebrospinal fluid for syndromic classification and etiological allocation is discussed. Recommendations on neuropsychological and psychiatric screening tests are also given. The topic pharmacotherapy issues recommendations on antiseizure medication in monotherapy for focal, generalized and unclassified epilepsies; patient groups with special challenges such as the aged, women of childbearing potential and people with mental retardation are emphasized. Further issues are indications for measuring serum concentrations of antiseizure medication and possible risks of switching manufacturers. In the topic epilepsy surgery, indications for presurgical assessment and the multiple therapeutic approaches, such as resection, laser ablation, and neurostimulation are presented. Recommendations on postoperative management of patients, including rehabilitation and psychosocial counselling, are given. The topic complementary and supportive therapeutic approaches comprises recommendations on the diagnostics and treatment of common psychiatric comorbidities of epilepsy, such as anxiety disorder, depression and psychosis. Another important issue is the management of psychogenic non-epileptic seizures as a neuropsychiatric differential diagnosis or comorbidity of epileptic seizures. Furthermore, recommendations on the potential role of ketogenic diet and on acupuncture, homeopathy and other complementary approaches are made. The recommendations on psychosocial aspects comprise practical issues, such as fitness to drive a car, training and occupation, medical rehabilitation, sport, transition, patients' self-help, education programs for patients and next of kin, adherence, advise on SUDEP
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