Gan Shi-Rui, Wang Jie, Figueroa Karla P, Pulst Stefan M, Tomishon Darya, Lee Danielle, Perlman Susan, Wilmot George, Gomez Christopher M, Schmahmann Jeremy, Paulson Henry, Shakkottai Vikram G, Ying Sarah H, Zesiewicz Theresa, Bushara Khalaf, Geschwind Michael D, Xia Guangbin, Subramony S H, Ashizawa Tetsuo, Kuo Sheng-Han
Department of Neurology, College of Physicians and Surgeons, Columbia University, New York, NY, USA.
Department of Neurology and Institute of Neurology, First Affiliated Hospital, Fujian Medical University, Fuzhou, China.
Tremor Other Hyperkinet Mov (N Y). 2017 Oct 9;7:492. doi: 10.7916/D8GM8KRH. eCollection 2017.
Postural tremor can sometimes occur in spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs). However, the prevalence and clinical characteristics of postural tremor in SCAs are poorly understood, and whether SCA patients with postural tremor have different ataxia progression is not known.
We studied postural tremor in 315 patients with SCA1, 2, 3, and 6 recruited from the Clinical Research Consortium for Spinocerebellar Ataxias (CRC-SCA), which consists of 12 participating centers in the United States, and we evaluated ataxia progression in these patients from January 2010 to August 2012.
Among 315 SCA patients, postural tremor was most common in SCA2 patients (SCA1, 5.8%; SCA2, 27.5%; SCA3, 12.4%; SCA6, 16.9%; p = 0.007). SCA3 patients with postural tremor had longer CAG repeat expansions than SCA3 patients without postural tremor (73.67 ± 3.12 vs. 70.42 ± 3.96, p = 0.003). Interestingly, SCA1 and SCA6 patients with postural tremor had a slower rate of ataxia progression (SCA1, β = -0.91, p < 0.001; SCA6, β = -1.28, p = 0.025), while SCA2 patients with postural tremor had a faster rate of ataxia progression (β = 1.54, p = 0.034). We also found that the presence of postural tremor in SCA2 patients could be influenced by repeat expansions of (β = -1.53, p = 0.037) and (β = 0.57, p = 0.018), whereas postural tremor in SCA3 was associated with repeat lengths in (β = 0.63, p = 0.041) and (β = -0.40, p = 0.032).
Postural tremor could be a clinical feature of SCAs, and the presence of postural tremor could be associated with different rates of ataxia progression. Genetic interactions between ataxia genes might influence the brain circuitry and thus affect the clinical presentation of postural tremor.
姿势性震颤有时可发生于脊髓小脑性共济失调(SCA)患者中。然而,SCA中姿势性震颤的患病率及临床特征尚不清楚,且伴有姿势性震颤的SCA患者的共济失调进展是否不同也不明确。
我们对从脊髓小脑性共济失调临床研究联盟(CRC-SCA)招募的315例SCA1、2、3和6型患者的姿势性震颤进行了研究,该联盟由美国12个参与中心组成,我们在2010年1月至2012年8月期间评估了这些患者的共济失调进展情况。
在315例SCA患者中,姿势性震颤在SCA2型患者中最为常见(SCA1型,5.8%;SCA2型,27.5%;SCA3型,12.4%;SCA6型,16.9%;p = 0.007)。伴有姿势性震颤的SCA3型患者的CAG重复扩增长度比不伴有姿势性震颤的SCA3型患者更长(73.67 ± 3.12 vs. 70.42 ± 3.96,p = 0.003)。有趣的是,伴有姿势性震颤的SCA1和SCA6型患者的共济失调进展速度较慢(SCA1型,β = -0.91,p < 0.001;SCA6型,β = -1.28,p = 0.025),而伴有姿势性震颤的SCA2型患者的共济失调进展速度较快(β = 1.54,p = 0.034)。我们还发现,SCA2型患者中姿势性震颤的存在可能受[基因名称1](β = -1.53,p = 0.037)和[基因名称2](β = 0.57,p = 0.018)重复扩增的影响,而SCA3型中的姿势性震颤与[基因名称3](β = 0.63,p = 0.041)和[基因名称4](β = -0.40,p = 0.032)的重复长度有关。
姿势性震颤可能是SCA的临床特征,姿势性震颤的存在可能与不同的共济失调进展速度有关。共济失调基因之间的遗传相互作用可能影响脑环路,从而影响姿势性震颤的临床表现。