Infantile‐onset parkinsonism, dyskinesia, and developmental delay: do not forget polyglutamine defects!

Author:

Baide‐Mairena Heidy12ORCID,Coget Arthur3,Leboucq Nicolas3,Procaccio Vincent4,Blanluet Maud4,Meyer Pierre15,Malinge Marie‐Claire4,François‐Heude Marie‐Céline1,Moreno Mathis1,Geneviève David67,Marelli Cecilia89,Roubertie Agathe110ORCID

Affiliation:

1. Département de Neuropédiatrie Hôpital Gui de Chauliac Montpellier France

2. Universitat Autònoma de Barcelona Barcelona Spain

3. Service de Neuroradiologie Hôpital Gui de Chauliac Montpellier France

4. MitoLab, UMR CNRS 6015 – INSERM U1083, MitoVasc Institute, Angers University Hospital Angers France

5. Phymedexp, Montpellier University, Inserm, CNRS Montpellier France

6. Montpellier University, Inserm U1183 Montpellier France

7. Reference Center for Malformative Syndrome, Genetic Department, Montpellier Hospital Montpellier France

8. Expert Centre for Neurogenetic Diseases and Adult Mitochondrial and Metabolic Diseases, Department of Neurology Montpellier University Hospital Montpellier France

9. MMDN University of Montpellier, EPHE, INSERM Montpellier France

10. Institut des Neurosciences de Montpellier, INSERM U 1298 Montpellier France

Abstract

AbstractWe present the phenotype of an infant with the largest ATN1 CAG expansion reported to date (98 repeats). He presented at 4 months with developmental delay, poor eye contact, acquired microcephaly, failure to thrive. He progressively developed dystonia‐parkinsonism with paroxysmal oromandibular and limbs dyskinesia and fatal outcome at 17 months. Cerebral MRI disclosed globus pallidus T2‐WI hyperintensities and brain atrophy. Molecular analysis was performed post‐mortem following the diagnosis of dentatorubral–pallidoluysian atrophy (DRPLA) in his symptomatic father. Polyglutamine expansion defects should be considered when neurodegenerative genetic disease is suspected even in infancy and parkinsonism can be a presentation of infantile‐onset DRPLA.

Publisher

Wiley

Subject

Neurology (clinical),General Neuroscience

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