Article

Childhood chorea with cerebral hypotrophy: a treatable GLUT1 energy failure syndrome.

Department of Neurology, Hospital Universitari Sant Joan de Déu, Barcelona, Spain.
Archives of neurology (impact factor: 6.31). 11/2009; 66(11):1410-4. DOI:10.1001/archneurol.2009.236
Source: PubMed

ABSTRACT To expand the spectrum of glucose transporter type 1 deficiency syndromes with a novel clinical and radiological phenotype not associated with microcephaly.
Case report.
Two academic medical centers. Patient A 7-year-old patient followed up for 4 years.
The patient exhibited a predominant syndrome of chorea and mental retardation associated with a combination of paroxysmal ataxia, dysarthria, dystonia and aggravated intellectual disability induced by fasting or exertion. She harbored a sporadic, heterozygous amino acid insertion in the GLUT1 transporter (insY292) that, in all likelihood, impaired blood-brain glucose flux. Her brain configuration appeared hypotrophic via magnetic resonance imaging, particularly over the occipital lobes. A ketogenic diet resulted in brain growth that accompanied a favorable symptomatic outcome.
To date, glucose transporter type 1 deficiency syndrome includes several epileptic and movement disorder phenotypes caused by the clinical expressivity of the prominent cortical, basal ganglia, and cerebellar abnormalities found in the disease, but hypomorphic or novel variants are probably yet to be discovered.

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Keywords

4 years
 
7-year-old patient
 
academic medical centers
 
blood-brain glucose flux
 
Case report
 
dystonia
 
epileptic
 
favorable symptomatic outcome
 
intellectual disability induced
 
mental retardation
 
movement disorder phenotypes
 
novel clinical
 
novel variants
 
occipital lobes
 
paroxysmal ataxia
 
patient exhibited
 
predominant syndrome
 
prominent cortical
 
radiological phenotype
 
sporadic