Szymańska Krystyna, Szczałuba Krzysztof, Lugowska Agnieszka, Obersztyn Ewa, Radkowski Marek, Nowakowska Beata A, Kuśmierska Katarzyna, Tryfon Jolanta, Demkow Urszula
Department of Clinical and Experimental Neuropathology, Mossakowski Medical Research Centre, Polish Academy of Sciences, 02-106 Warsaw, Poland ; Department of Child Psychiatry, Medical University of Warsaw, 00-576 Warsaw, Poland.
GenCentrum (Regional Center for Clinical Genetics and Modern Technologies), 25-375 Kielce, Poland.
Biomed Res Int. 2014;2014:424796. doi: 10.1155/2014/424796. Epub 2014 May 13.
Inherited encephalopathies include a broad spectrum of heterogeneous disorders. To provide a correct diagnosis, an integrated approach including genetic testing is warranted. We report seven patients with difficult to diagnose inborn paediatric encephalopathies. The diagnosis could not be attained only by means of clinical and laboratory investigations and MRI. Additional genetic testing was required. Cytogenetics, PCR based tests, and array-based comparative genome hybridization were performed. In 4 patients with impaired language abilities we found the presence of microduplication in the region 16q23.1 affecting two dose-sensitive genes: WWOX (OMIM 605131) and MAF (OMIM 177075) (1 case), an interstitial deletion of the 17p11.2 region (2 patients further diagnosed as Smith-Magenis syndrome), and deletion encompassing first three exons of Myocyte Enhancer Factor gene 2MEF2C (1 case). The two other cases represented progressing dystonia. Characteristic GAG deletion in DYT1 consistently with the diagnosis of torsion dystonia was confirmed in 1 case. Last enrolled patient presented with clinical picture consistent with Krabbe disease confirmed by finding of two pathogenic variants of GALC gene and the absence of mutations in PSAP. The integrated diagnostic approach including genetic testing in selected examples of complicated hereditary diseases of the brain is largely discussed in this paper.