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1/136. Acute inflammatory neuropathy in charcot-marie-tooth disease.

    The authors report an association between acute inflammatory neuropathy and previously undiagnosed Charcot-Marie-Tooth 1A disease in a 15-year-old girl. sural nerve biopsy study showed hypertrophic neuropathy with endoneurial infiltrates of macrophages and lymphocytes. This association may be coincidental, but a particular susceptibility to damage of these peripheral nerves cannot be excluded. This report confirms the importance of pes cavus as a sign of long-standing sensorimotor neuropathy.
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2/136. charcot-marie-tooth disease type I diagnosed in a 5-year-old boy after vincristine neurotoxicity, resulting in maternal diagnosis.

    charcot-marie-tooth disease type 1, also known as hereditary motor sensory neuropathy type 1, is an uncommon autosomal dominant disease that causes destruction of peripheral nerves with a varied clinical course, but often leads to muscle weakness. If the peroneal muscle is involved, the patient may develop a characteristic slapping gait. The dose-limiting side effect of the chemotherapeutic agent vincristine is usually its neurotoxicity. We report the case of a 5-year-old patient with leukemia who developed an acute polyneuropathy after treatment with vincristine. charcot-marie-tooth disease type 1 was diagnosed in the patient and, subsequently, in his mother only after vincristine toxicity was observed.
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3/136. Clinical and electrophysiological study in French-Canadian population with charcot-marie-tooth disease type 1A associated with 17p11.2 duplication.

    BACKGROUND: The aim of the present study was to examine the frequency and the phenotypic manifestations in a French-Canadian population with a chromosome 17p11.2 duplication (Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1A, CMT-1A). methods: Molecular analysis were performed by Southern blot using pVAW409R3a probe. Clinical evaluation was carried out according to the scale defined by the European HMSN Consortium. RESULTS: The frequency of duplication was found to be similar in the adult (70.8%) and pediatric (72.7%) populations. Onset of symptoms occurred before 20 years of age in 85.7% of adult cases and before the age of 5 in 80% of the pediatric cases. The classical CMT syndrome was observed in 77% of the cases and the syndrome was associated with additional features in 15% of cases in the adult population. All the children presented with classical CMT syndrome with no additional features. There was a significant correlation between the disability score and the duration of the disease but no correlation was found between median nerve conduction velocity and the functional handicap, the age at onset or the duration of the disease. In one family, there was a very conspicuous anticipation over five observed generations. CONCLUSION: This study reveals that the age at onset, the clinical and electrophysiological variability as well as the functional disability variations in a French-Canadian population did not differ from those reported in other populations.
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ranking = 2.0559698658406
keywords = median nerve, nerve, median
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4/136. Demyelinating X-linked charcot-marie-tooth disease: unusual electrophysiological findings.

    X-linked charcot-marie-tooth disease (CMT-X) is caused by mutations of connexin-32 (Cx-32), which encodes a gap-junction protein. Whether the neuropathy is primarily demyelinative or axonal remains to be established. We report findings of prominent demyelination in a 71-year-old woman with late-onset disease. Electrophysiological studies revealed a nonuniform slowing of motor conduction velocities and dispersion of compound action potentials indicative of a demyelinating process which was confirmed by nerve biopsy. Such electrophysiological features are unusual in hereditary neuropathies and are more commonly found with acquired chronic demyelinating neuropathies. A systematic search confirmed the molecular genomic diagnosis of CMT-X, illustrating the value of such tests in sporadic cases. Severity of clinical symptoms and signs may vary with age and sex of the patient. The pathology of CMT-X in other reported cases has been variably interpreted as axonal, demyelinating, or showing both features. Our observations emphasize the demyelinative nature.
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5/136. A novel mutation (D305V) in the early growth response 2 gene is associated with severe Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1 disease.

    Hereditary motor and sensory neuropathies (HMSN) comprises a wide clinical spectrum of related disorders with defects in peripheral nerve myelination. Charcot-Marie-Tooth type 1 (CMT1) is the most common form and is usually a mild disease with onset in the first or second decade; however there is a interfamilial and intrafamilial clinical variation, ranging from asymptomatic expression to severe muscular weakness and atrophy. Recently point mutations in the early growth response 2 gene (EGR2/Krox-20) have been associated with hereditary myelinopathies. We investigated for mutations at the EGR2 gene a patient with severe CMT1 phenotype. Direct sequencing of EGR2 gene showed a heterozygous A T transversion at nucleotide 1064 that predicts an Asp305Val substitution within the first zinc-finger domain. The finding of a novel EGR2 mutation associated with a different phenotype confirms that peripheral neuropathies represent a continuum spectrum of related disorders due to an underlying defect in myelination.
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6/136. Peripheral myelin modification in CMT1B correlates with MPZ gene mutations.

    Morphological modifications were investigated in the peripheral nerve of three unrelated patients with CMT1B. In two patients, molecular genetic analysis showed an Arg98His mutation in the extracellular domain of MPZ, associated with irregularly uncompacted lamellae. This observation confirms previous studies of a well-defined correlation between mutations and morphological phenotypes. In the third patient, a de novo Asp109Asn mutation was associated with abnormally thick myelin sheaths. This adds to the known list of MPZ gene mutations associated with this morphological phenotype.
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7/136. Myelinated fibers in charcot-marie-tooth disease type 1B with Arg98His mutation of Po protein.

    This study was undertaken to characterize the clinical, electrophysiologic, and histopathologic features of five presumably unrelated Japanese patients with Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease type 1B and Arg98His substitution of Po protein and, in particular, to correlate Arg98His substitution to the ultrastructural abnormalities of the myelin sheath. Systematic morphometric studies of the sural nerve, where the CMT type 1B gene abnormality is expressed, have not been performed, especially on the basis of the type of mutation causing CMT type 1B. Electrophysiologic evaluation of limb nerves and morphometric analysis of sural nerves obtained at biopsy were performed. Ultrastructural myelin abnormalities were precisely examined. Clinical symptoms appeared from the second to the fifth decade. All probands presented with gait disturbance. Motor and sensory conduction velocities in the median and ulnar nerves ranged from 10 to 30 m/s. Segmental demyelination and remyelination and marked loss of myelinated fibers were the main findings. On electron microscopy, widening between major dense lines was found between the paired intraperiod lines, where the extramembranous portion of the Po protein resides. This widening is probably directly related to Arg98His substitution. Focal uncompaction of major dense lines coexisted with this widening. This uncompaction, which directly decreases the number of myelin lamellae, may be a secondary effect of Arg98His substitution on the intramembranous domain of Po protein. In conclusion, myelin changes at both extracellular and cytoplasmic appositions of Schwann cell membranes were found in association with Arg98His substitution of Po protein. This study contributes to a better understanding of myelin abnormalities in patients with CMT type 1B and Arg98His or other similar extramembranous amino acid substitutions of Po protein.
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ranking = 2.0224521875136
keywords = nerve, median
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8/136. Nerve decompression at the wrist in patients with charcot-marie-tooth disease.

    Studies evaluating the effects of nerve release in patients with charcot-marie-tooth disease have been extremely limited to date. This series attempts to evaluate the clinical and electrophysiologic effect of nerve release at the wrist in a series of patients with this disease. Five patients with documented charcot-marie-tooth disease of the upper extremity were followed clinically and had nerve conduction testing both before and after surgery. This study shows that there was an improvement in both sensory and motor testing after release in a significant proportion of patients (p < 0.05). All patients documented improvement in their sensory latency response postoperatively (100 percent) and most showed improvement in motor latency responses (87 percent). More importantly, however, there seems to be an even greater clinical improvement in preoperative complaints (e.g., paresthesia and pain) in the majority of the extremities that underwent surgery with all patients experiencing initial relief and the majority showing no recurrence (63 percent) at last follow-up. From these results, this relief can be variable, but has lasted for a significant duration postoperatively in the majority, necessitating careful consideration for surgery as a legitimate option for patients with Charcot-Marie-Tooth.
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9/136. Cranial nerve involvement in CMT disease type 1 due to early growth response 2 gene mutation.

    Mutations in the gene coding for the Schwann cell transcription factor early growth response 2 (EGR2), which seems to regulate myelinogenesis and hindbrain development, have been observed in few cases of inherited neuropathy. The authors describe a unique combination of cranial nerve deficits in one member of a Charcot-Marie-Tooth 1 family carrying an EGR2 mutation (Arg381His). This finding further supports the role of EGR2 in cranial nerve development.
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10/136. Fulminant case of hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsy.

    Hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsy (HNPP) is typified as isolated nerve palsies caused by trivial compression or trauma. It rarely presents in two extremities and even more infrequently affects all four limbs simultaneously. We present a patient who concurrently experienced right shoulder, left hand, and bilateral foot weakness mimicking several multifocal conditions. electromyography suggested HNPP and subsequent nerve biopsy and genetic testing were confirmatory. The case demonstrates that HNPP can present in a fulminant manner and should be included in the differential diagnosis of acute multiple mononeuropathies. The possible causes for such a rapid clinical course in our patient are discussed.
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