Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), characterized by intellectual impairment associate... more Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), characterized by intellectual impairment associated with cortical migration defects, is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutation in the fukutin gene. It is the second most common type of muscular dystrophy in Japan. Respiratory dysfunction, along with cardiomyopathy, can be life-threatening in patients with advanced-stage FCMD. However, few reports have focused on this issue. We retrospectively studied respiratory dysfunction and therapeutic management in 48 genetically diagnosed FCMD patients (mean age 11.0years; range 3.6-31.9years). Mechanical ventilation was initiated at a median age of 12.1years in 16 patients, 14 of whom received non-invasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) while the other 2 underwent tracheostomy with invasive ventilation (TIV). The two TIV cases had unexpectedly required the initiation of ventilatory support at the ages of 15.7 and 18.0years, respectively, because of unsuccessful extubation followed by serious respiratory infections, despite rather good respiratory function before these episodes. Patients carrying a compound heterozygous founder mutation or with a severe phenotype tended to need ventilatory support 2-3years earlier than homozygous patients and those with the typical or mild phenotype. Mechanical insufflation-exsufflation (MI-E) interventions were also employed in six patients with serious dysphagia and were well-tolerated in all cases. For respiratory management, it is important to regularly evaluate respiratory function in FCMD patients over 10years of age, since intellectual impairment and insomnia often mask the signs of respiratory dysfunction. Most patients, despite poor cooperation due to intellectual impairment, can tolerate NPPV and MI-E provided that a carefully worked-out plan is adopted.
Expression and localization of fukutin, a gene responsible for Fukuyama congenital muscular dystr... more Expression and localization of fukutin, a gene responsible for Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), was studied in the central nervous system by in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. In control cases, glial cells expressed fukutin and the expression continued from fetuses to adults. Double immunostaining revealed that some of these cells were astrocytes. The glia limitans was stained by immunohistochemistry. In contrast, neuronal expression was decreased with neuronal maturation. The glia limitans formed by endfeet of astrocytes is abnormal in the brain of fetal to adult FCMD cases. These findings suggest an important role of astrocytes for the genesis of FCMD brain, although immature neurons expressed fukutin. In FCMD cases, expression of fukutin looked decreased. In the brain of fetal FCMD cases, decreased expression of fukutin is considered to provoke the disruption of glia limitans. In post-natal FCMD cases, prominent superficial gliosis is observed in the ce...
Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), one of the most common autosomal recessive di... more Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), one of the most common autosomal recessive disorders in Japan (incidence is 0.7-1.2 per 10,000 births), is characterized by congenital muscular dystrophy associated with brain malformation (micropolygria) due to a defect in the migration of neurons. We previously mapped the FCMD gene to a region of less than 100 kilobases which included the marker locus D9S2107 on chromosome 9q31. We have also described a haplotype that is shared by more than 80% of FCMD chromosomes, indicating that most chromosomes bearing the FCMD mutation could be derived from a single ancestor. Here we report that there is a retrotransposal insertion of tandemly repeated sequences within this candidate-gene interval in all FCMD chromosomes carrying the founder haplotype (87%). The inserted sequence is about 3 kilobases long and is located in the 3' untranslated region of a gene encoding a new 461-amino-acid protein. This gene is expressed in various tissues...
Clincopathological features of Fukuyama type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), a combination ... more Clincopathological features of Fukuyama type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), a combination of brain malformation and muscular dystrophy with facial muscle and CNS involvement and high prevalence in Japan, are reviewed. Evidence of progressive dystrophy, negative correlations between muscle enzyme levels and age and CT numbers of muscle and age, are presented. Skeletal muscle histopathology is reviewed. Febrile illness-induced transient exacerbation of muscle weakness is reported. Characteristic brain malformations, e.g. micropolygyria, other dysgenesis, are reviewed. Their severity correlated with maximal mental and motor function. The etiology and significance of low density areas (LDA) in white matter on CT, possibly reflecting delayed or abnormal myelination, and ventricular dilatation are discussed. Spontaneous LDA improvement makes hydrocephaly unlikely. Ophthalmological differential diagnosis from Santavouri disease and Walker-Warburg syndrome, characterized by visual di...
We administered zonisamide (ZNS) to patients with West syndrome in different titration protocols ... more We administered zonisamide (ZNS) to patients with West syndrome in different titration protocols and compared their short-term therapeutic effects. We designed three protocols to raise the serum ZNS concentration (SZC): (1) increase the dose in three steps, from 3 to 10 mg/kg every 3 days, (2) increase the dose from 5 to 10 mg/kg over 3-7 days, and (3) start with 10 mg/kg and maintain this dosage for 2 weeks. The subjects were 23 infants with West syndrome, 8 of whom comprised the 1st group, 5 the 2nd group, and the remaining 10, the 3rd group. As a result, excellent and good effects were obtained in a total of seven patients (30.4%) and one patient, respectively (1/8 in the 1st step-up group, 3/5 in the 2nd step-up group, and 4/10 in the 3rd group). The maximum SZC was higher in the excellent and good effect groups (n=8; 32.0+/-8.0 microg/ml) than in the ineffective group (n=15; 22.4+/-8.2 microg/ml) (P<0.05). The period of time required for cessation of spasms appeared shorter in the 3rd group (n=4; mean=5.7 days) than in the 1st and 2nd groups (n=4; mean=10.3 days). There were few side effects except for transient hyperthermia and gastrointestinal symptoms. Our new protocol of starting with 10 mg/kg of ZNS can be introduced safely and make a therapeutic judgment feasible within 2 weeks.
Electron microscopy of the central nervous system surface structure is described in two fetuses w... more Electron microscopy of the central nervous system surface structure is described in two fetuses with Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD). In addition to relatively large surface defects, many minute defects less than several micrometers in size associated with protrusion of glial cytoplasm were observed in the cerebrum. These findings were considered to represent early changes prior to cortical dysplasia. The basement membrane adjacent to the defects showed amorphous, wavy, or whorled configurations, and gradually disappeared. The glial cytoplasmic membrane seemed to be relatively well preserved in some areas where the basement membrane disappeared. On the other hand, both the basement membrane and cytoplasmic membrane became indistinct irregularly in areas without defects, including the spinal cord; similar lesions were found in the skeletal muscle. These observations confirm previous observations concerning defects of the pial-glial barrier of the brain surface, and may suggest the involvement of abnormal basement membrane or related structures, or both, in the genesis of the brain lesions of FCMD.
To characterize and distinguish atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood among various epile... more To characterize and distinguish atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood among various epileptic syndromes, we conducted a clinical and electroencephalogram study. Seventeen children with atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood were followed at our hospital. They all underwent a video/polygraphic study of characteristic daily seizures, facilitating a diagnosis of atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood. Their clinical and electroencephalogram features were retrospectively analyzed. A video/polygraphic study indicated negative motor seizures including epileptic negative myoclonus, atonic absence seizures, or atonic seizures corresponding to spike-and-wave complexes arising from centro-parieto-temporal regions. Early in the clinical course, these seizures appeared every 4 ± 2 months, and lasted 1-3 months. Interictal sleep electroencephalograms, initially localizing in the centro-parieto-temporal regions, became widespread and displayed continuous, diffuse, spike-and-wave complexes, although the spike-wave index did not exceed 85%. Negative motor seizures responded to ethosuximide, corticotropin, and high-dose steroid, whereas other antiepileptic drugs were much less effective. All patients ultimately entered remission before age 12 years. Patients with atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood exhibited a characteristic clinical course, and responded favorably to anti-absence treatment. Atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood should be recognized as a discrete epileptic syndrome. Its early diagnosis leads to the prevention of pseudocatastrophe.
Prognostic factors for frequent seizure recurrences were studied in patients with Panayiotopoulos... more Prognostic factors for frequent seizure recurrences were studied in patients with Panayiotopoulos syndrome. The subjects were 79 children fulfilling the criteria of Panayiotopoulos syndrome who were monitored for longer than 2 years. Medical records and electroencephalograms were analyzed retrospectively. The total number of seizures in each patient at the final follow-up ranged from 1 to 22. The 79 patients were classified into three groups: typical Panayiotopoulos syndrome (seizure recurrence = 1-5 times, n = 45), borderline (6-9 times, n = 16), and atypical (>10 times, n = 18). Data analyzed included family history of seizure disorders, peri- and postnatal complications, previous seizure histories, age at epilepsy onset, clinical seizure manifestations, the frequency of status epilepticus, interictal electroencephalographic patterns, and the possible association of neurobehavioral disorders among the three groups. An association with pre-existing neurobehavioral disorders was significantly more frequent in the atypical than in the typical group (P < 0.05), but not significantly different between the typical and borderline or between the borderline and atypical patients (P> 0.05). In patients with Panayiotopoulos syndrome and pre-existing mild neurobehavioral disorders, seizures tend to be pharmacoresistant and to repeat more than 10 times. However, all patients experience seizure remission by 12 years of age, and should not be evaluated for surgery.
We prospectively studied the early-onset benign occipital seizure susceptibility syndrome to conf... more We prospectively studied the early-onset benign occipital seizure susceptibility syndrome to confirm the benign prognosis. The patients were 37 children followed for more than 2 years after meeting the following criteria on the first examination: (1) normal development before the onset of epilepsy, (2) onset between 1 and 8 years of age, (3) normal brain MRI and cranial CT findings, (4) partial seizures manifested both initial ictal vomiting and tonic eye-deviations, and (5) normal background activity with or without epileptic EEG foci regardless of location. The incidence and clinical characteristics of seizures, response to treatment, and EEG findings were analyzed. The total number of seizures ranged from one (n = 6) to 27 times, with a median of five times. Recurrent prolonged attacks resistant to antiepileptic drugs were recognized in 15 children, who had earlier onset of epilepsy and more frequent complications than the remaining 22 children. Interictal EEG revealed occipital foci in 26 children, 17 of whom later revealed a shift in predominant foci. At the final examinations, 28 patients had been seizure-free for at least 2 years. The clinical picture of this syndrome ranges from those with a few seizures to those with recurrent prolonged seizures initially resistant to antiepileptic drugs despite ultimate remission by 12 years of age.
The long-term outcomes of 25 patients with childhood moyamoya disease (18 with the transient isch... more The long-term outcomes of 25 patients with childhood moyamoya disease (18 with the transient ischemic attack [TIA] type and seven with the non-TIA type), who were monitored to adulthood (older than 20 years of age), were evaluated in terms of residual clinical symptoms, intellectual development, and activities of daily living. Surgical treatment was performed in ten patients, encephaloduroarteriosynangiosis in nine, and superficial temporal artery to middle cerebral artery anastomosis plus encephalomyosynangiosis in one. Only seven with the TIA type (three surgically and four medically treated) demonstrated good activities of daily living without TIA or headache and normal IQ. Two patients with the TIA type and three with the non-TIA type demonstrated poor outcomes. Three of these patients with poor outcomes had renal artery stenosis. Surgery was effective in nine. Since the long-term outcomes of patients with childhood moyamoya disease are generally poor, surgical treatment is believed to be an effective procedure for preventing the progression of clinical symptoms.
Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), characterized by intellectual impairment associate... more Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), characterized by intellectual impairment associated with cortical migration defects, is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutation in the fukutin gene. It is the second most common type of muscular dystrophy in Japan. Respiratory dysfunction, along with cardiomyopathy, can be life-threatening in patients with advanced-stage FCMD. However, few reports have focused on this issue. We retrospectively studied respiratory dysfunction and therapeutic management in 48 genetically diagnosed FCMD patients (mean age 11.0years; range 3.6-31.9years). Mechanical ventilation was initiated at a median age of 12.1years in 16 patients, 14 of whom received non-invasive positive pressure ventilation (NPPV) while the other 2 underwent tracheostomy with invasive ventilation (TIV). The two TIV cases had unexpectedly required the initiation of ventilatory support at the ages of 15.7 and 18.0years, respectively, because of unsuccessful extubation followed by serious respiratory infections, despite rather good respiratory function before these episodes. Patients carrying a compound heterozygous founder mutation or with a severe phenotype tended to need ventilatory support 2-3years earlier than homozygous patients and those with the typical or mild phenotype. Mechanical insufflation-exsufflation (MI-E) interventions were also employed in six patients with serious dysphagia and were well-tolerated in all cases. For respiratory management, it is important to regularly evaluate respiratory function in FCMD patients over 10years of age, since intellectual impairment and insomnia often mask the signs of respiratory dysfunction. Most patients, despite poor cooperation due to intellectual impairment, can tolerate NPPV and MI-E provided that a carefully worked-out plan is adopted.
Expression and localization of fukutin, a gene responsible for Fukuyama congenital muscular dystr... more Expression and localization of fukutin, a gene responsible for Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), was studied in the central nervous system by in situ hybridization and immunohistochemistry. In control cases, glial cells expressed fukutin and the expression continued from fetuses to adults. Double immunostaining revealed that some of these cells were astrocytes. The glia limitans was stained by immunohistochemistry. In contrast, neuronal expression was decreased with neuronal maturation. The glia limitans formed by endfeet of astrocytes is abnormal in the brain of fetal to adult FCMD cases. These findings suggest an important role of astrocytes for the genesis of FCMD brain, although immature neurons expressed fukutin. In FCMD cases, expression of fukutin looked decreased. In the brain of fetal FCMD cases, decreased expression of fukutin is considered to provoke the disruption of glia limitans. In post-natal FCMD cases, prominent superficial gliosis is observed in the ce...
Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), one of the most common autosomal recessive di... more Fukuyama-type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), one of the most common autosomal recessive disorders in Japan (incidence is 0.7-1.2 per 10,000 births), is characterized by congenital muscular dystrophy associated with brain malformation (micropolygria) due to a defect in the migration of neurons. We previously mapped the FCMD gene to a region of less than 100 kilobases which included the marker locus D9S2107 on chromosome 9q31. We have also described a haplotype that is shared by more than 80% of FCMD chromosomes, indicating that most chromosomes bearing the FCMD mutation could be derived from a single ancestor. Here we report that there is a retrotransposal insertion of tandemly repeated sequences within this candidate-gene interval in all FCMD chromosomes carrying the founder haplotype (87%). The inserted sequence is about 3 kilobases long and is located in the 3' untranslated region of a gene encoding a new 461-amino-acid protein. This gene is expressed in various tissues...
Clincopathological features of Fukuyama type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), a combination ... more Clincopathological features of Fukuyama type congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), a combination of brain malformation and muscular dystrophy with facial muscle and CNS involvement and high prevalence in Japan, are reviewed. Evidence of progressive dystrophy, negative correlations between muscle enzyme levels and age and CT numbers of muscle and age, are presented. Skeletal muscle histopathology is reviewed. Febrile illness-induced transient exacerbation of muscle weakness is reported. Characteristic brain malformations, e.g. micropolygyria, other dysgenesis, are reviewed. Their severity correlated with maximal mental and motor function. The etiology and significance of low density areas (LDA) in white matter on CT, possibly reflecting delayed or abnormal myelination, and ventricular dilatation are discussed. Spontaneous LDA improvement makes hydrocephaly unlikely. Ophthalmological differential diagnosis from Santavouri disease and Walker-Warburg syndrome, characterized by visual di...
We administered zonisamide (ZNS) to patients with West syndrome in different titration protocols ... more We administered zonisamide (ZNS) to patients with West syndrome in different titration protocols and compared their short-term therapeutic effects. We designed three protocols to raise the serum ZNS concentration (SZC): (1) increase the dose in three steps, from 3 to 10 mg/kg every 3 days, (2) increase the dose from 5 to 10 mg/kg over 3-7 days, and (3) start with 10 mg/kg and maintain this dosage for 2 weeks. The subjects were 23 infants with West syndrome, 8 of whom comprised the 1st group, 5 the 2nd group, and the remaining 10, the 3rd group. As a result, excellent and good effects were obtained in a total of seven patients (30.4%) and one patient, respectively (1/8 in the 1st step-up group, 3/5 in the 2nd step-up group, and 4/10 in the 3rd group). The maximum SZC was higher in the excellent and good effect groups (n=8; 32.0+/-8.0 microg/ml) than in the ineffective group (n=15; 22.4+/-8.2 microg/ml) (P<0.05). The period of time required for cessation of spasms appeared shorter in the 3rd group (n=4; mean=5.7 days) than in the 1st and 2nd groups (n=4; mean=10.3 days). There were few side effects except for transient hyperthermia and gastrointestinal symptoms. Our new protocol of starting with 10 mg/kg of ZNS can be introduced safely and make a therapeutic judgment feasible within 2 weeks.
Electron microscopy of the central nervous system surface structure is described in two fetuses w... more Electron microscopy of the central nervous system surface structure is described in two fetuses with Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD). In addition to relatively large surface defects, many minute defects less than several micrometers in size associated with protrusion of glial cytoplasm were observed in the cerebrum. These findings were considered to represent early changes prior to cortical dysplasia. The basement membrane adjacent to the defects showed amorphous, wavy, or whorled configurations, and gradually disappeared. The glial cytoplasmic membrane seemed to be relatively well preserved in some areas where the basement membrane disappeared. On the other hand, both the basement membrane and cytoplasmic membrane became indistinct irregularly in areas without defects, including the spinal cord; similar lesions were found in the skeletal muscle. These observations confirm previous observations concerning defects of the pial-glial barrier of the brain surface, and may suggest the involvement of abnormal basement membrane or related structures, or both, in the genesis of the brain lesions of FCMD.
To characterize and distinguish atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood among various epile... more To characterize and distinguish atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood among various epileptic syndromes, we conducted a clinical and electroencephalogram study. Seventeen children with atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood were followed at our hospital. They all underwent a video/polygraphic study of characteristic daily seizures, facilitating a diagnosis of atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood. Their clinical and electroencephalogram features were retrospectively analyzed. A video/polygraphic study indicated negative motor seizures including epileptic negative myoclonus, atonic absence seizures, or atonic seizures corresponding to spike-and-wave complexes arising from centro-parieto-temporal regions. Early in the clinical course, these seizures appeared every 4 ± 2 months, and lasted 1-3 months. Interictal sleep electroencephalograms, initially localizing in the centro-parieto-temporal regions, became widespread and displayed continuous, diffuse, spike-and-wave complexes, although the spike-wave index did not exceed 85%. Negative motor seizures responded to ethosuximide, corticotropin, and high-dose steroid, whereas other antiepileptic drugs were much less effective. All patients ultimately entered remission before age 12 years. Patients with atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood exhibited a characteristic clinical course, and responded favorably to anti-absence treatment. Atypical benign partial epilepsy of childhood should be recognized as a discrete epileptic syndrome. Its early diagnosis leads to the prevention of pseudocatastrophe.
Prognostic factors for frequent seizure recurrences were studied in patients with Panayiotopoulos... more Prognostic factors for frequent seizure recurrences were studied in patients with Panayiotopoulos syndrome. The subjects were 79 children fulfilling the criteria of Panayiotopoulos syndrome who were monitored for longer than 2 years. Medical records and electroencephalograms were analyzed retrospectively. The total number of seizures in each patient at the final follow-up ranged from 1 to 22. The 79 patients were classified into three groups: typical Panayiotopoulos syndrome (seizure recurrence = 1-5 times, n = 45), borderline (6-9 times, n = 16), and atypical (>10 times, n = 18). Data analyzed included family history of seizure disorders, peri- and postnatal complications, previous seizure histories, age at epilepsy onset, clinical seizure manifestations, the frequency of status epilepticus, interictal electroencephalographic patterns, and the possible association of neurobehavioral disorders among the three groups. An association with pre-existing neurobehavioral disorders was significantly more frequent in the atypical than in the typical group (P < 0.05), but not significantly different between the typical and borderline or between the borderline and atypical patients (P> 0.05). In patients with Panayiotopoulos syndrome and pre-existing mild neurobehavioral disorders, seizures tend to be pharmacoresistant and to repeat more than 10 times. However, all patients experience seizure remission by 12 years of age, and should not be evaluated for surgery.
We prospectively studied the early-onset benign occipital seizure susceptibility syndrome to conf... more We prospectively studied the early-onset benign occipital seizure susceptibility syndrome to confirm the benign prognosis. The patients were 37 children followed for more than 2 years after meeting the following criteria on the first examination: (1) normal development before the onset of epilepsy, (2) onset between 1 and 8 years of age, (3) normal brain MRI and cranial CT findings, (4) partial seizures manifested both initial ictal vomiting and tonic eye-deviations, and (5) normal background activity with or without epileptic EEG foci regardless of location. The incidence and clinical characteristics of seizures, response to treatment, and EEG findings were analyzed. The total number of seizures ranged from one (n = 6) to 27 times, with a median of five times. Recurrent prolonged attacks resistant to antiepileptic drugs were recognized in 15 children, who had earlier onset of epilepsy and more frequent complications than the remaining 22 children. Interictal EEG revealed occipital foci in 26 children, 17 of whom later revealed a shift in predominant foci. At the final examinations, 28 patients had been seizure-free for at least 2 years. The clinical picture of this syndrome ranges from those with a few seizures to those with recurrent prolonged seizures initially resistant to antiepileptic drugs despite ultimate remission by 12 years of age.
The long-term outcomes of 25 patients with childhood moyamoya disease (18 with the transient isch... more The long-term outcomes of 25 patients with childhood moyamoya disease (18 with the transient ischemic attack [TIA] type and seven with the non-TIA type), who were monitored to adulthood (older than 20 years of age), were evaluated in terms of residual clinical symptoms, intellectual development, and activities of daily living. Surgical treatment was performed in ten patients, encephaloduroarteriosynangiosis in nine, and superficial temporal artery to middle cerebral artery anastomosis plus encephalomyosynangiosis in one. Only seven with the TIA type (three surgically and four medically treated) demonstrated good activities of daily living without TIA or headache and normal IQ. Two patients with the TIA type and three with the non-TIA type demonstrated poor outcomes. Three of these patients with poor outcomes had renal artery stenosis. Surgery was effective in nine. Since the long-term outcomes of patients with childhood moyamoya disease are generally poor, surgical treatment is believed to be an effective procedure for preventing the progression of clinical symptoms.
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