Elzbieta Jurkiewicz

Institute of Mother and Child, Warsaw, Masovian Voivodeship, Poland

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Publications (28)38.37 Total impact

  • Article: Absence of an orphan mitochondrial protein, c19orf12, causes a distinct clinical subtype of neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation.
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    ABSTRACT: The disease classification neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA) comprises a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of progressive neurodegenerative disorders characterized by brain iron deposits in the basal ganglia. For about half of the cases, the molecular basis is currently unknown. We used homozygosity mapping followed by candidate gene sequencing to identify a homozygous 11 bp deletion in the orphan gene C19orf12. Mutation screening of 23 ideopathic NBIA index cases revealed two mutated alleles in 18 of them, and one loss-of-function mutation is the most prevalent. We also identified compound heterozygous missense mutations in a case initially diagnosed with Parkinson disease at age 49. Psychiatric signs, optic atrophy, and motor axonal neuropathy were common findings. Compared to the most prevalent NBIA subtype, pantothenate kinase associated neurodegeneration (PKAN), individuals with two C19orf12 mutations were older at age of onset and the disease progressed more slowly. A polyclonal antibody against the predicted membrane spanning protein showed a mitochondrial localization. A histopathological examination in a single autopsy case detected Lewy bodies, tangles, spheroids, and tau pathology. The mitochondrial localization together with the immunohistopathological findings suggests a pathomechanistic overlap with common forms of neurodegenerative disorders.
    The American Journal of Human Genetics 10/2011; 89(4):543-50. · 10.60 Impact Factor
  • Article: Leukoencephalopathy with brain stem and spinal cord involvement and lactate elevation in the first Polish patient.
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    ABSTRACT: Leukoencephalopathy with brain stem and spinal cord involvement and elevated white matter lactate (LBSL) is a very rare autosomal recessive mitochondrial disorder. Clinically patients have slowly progressive ataxia, pyramidal syndrome and dorsal column dysfunction. The disease is defined on the basis of characteristic abnormalities observed on magnetic resonance imaging such as inhomogeneous, spotty involvement of the cerebral white matter, selective involvement of brain stem and spinal cord tracts as well as lactate elevation in the affected white matter on spectroscopy. We present the first identified Polish patient suffering from LBSL confirmed molecularly.
    Brain & development 01/2011; 33(9):713-7. · 1.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: Magnetic resonance imaging in the evaluation of the fetal spinal canal contents.
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    ABSTRACT: Ultrasonography (US) remains the first method in the evaluation of fetal central nervous system (CNS) abnormalities but in case of the spinal canal and cord it is often insufficient since the bony structures may obscure these structures. Prenatal magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) is therefore the final noninvasive tool for the assessment of these malformations allowing for correction of sonographic findings, revealing the full extent of complex lesions and choosing the candidates for in utero treatment. The authors present the most frequent anomalies of spinal canal and spinal cord in the consecutive phases of pregnancy, illustrated with their own MR images, with reference to the literature and own experience. In 58 out of 252 fetuses examined due to suspicion of CNS anomalies (23.0%) the spinal canal and spinal cord abnormalities were found on MRI. The cases of diastematomyelia, myelomeningocele, tethered cord, caudal regression syndrome, anterior meningocele, cystic sacrococcygeal teratoma and syringohydromyelia are demonstrated.
    Brain & development 02/2010; 33(1):10-20. · 1.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: Intracerebroventricular Transplantation of Cord Blood-Derived Neural Progenitors in a Child With Severe Global Brain Ischemic Injury
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    ABSTRACT: Transplantation of neural stem/precursor cells has recently been proposed as a promising, albeit still controversial, approach to brain repair. Human umbilical cord blood could be a source of such therapeutic cells, proven beneficial in several preclinical models of stroke. Intracerebroventricular infusion of neutrally committed cord blood-derived cells allows their broad distribution in the CNS, whereas additional labeling with iron oxide nanoparticles (SPIO) enables to follow the fate of engrafted cells by MRI. A 16-month-old child at 7 months after the onset of cardiac arrest-induced global hypoxic/ischemic brain injury, resulting in a permanent vegetative state, was subjected to intracerebroventricular transplantation of the autologous neutrally committed cord blood cells. These cells obtained by 10-day culture in vitro in neurogenic conditions were tagged with SPIO nanoparticles and grafted monthly by three serial injections (12 × 106 cells/0.5 ml) into lateral ventricle of the brain. Neural conversion of cord blood cells and superparamagnetic labeling efficiency was confirmed by gene expression, immunocytochemistry, and phantom study. MRI examination revealed the discrete hypointense areas appearing immediately after transplantation in the vicinity of lateral ventricles wall with subsequent lowering of the signal during entire period of observation. The child was followed up for 6 months after the last transplantation and his neurological status slightly but significantly improved. No clinically significant adverse events were noted. This report indicates that intracerebroventricular transplantation of autologous, neutrally committed cord blood cells is a feasible, well tolerated, and safe procedure, at least during 6 months of our observation period. Moreover, a cell-related MRI signal persisted at a wall of lateral ventricle for more than 4 months and could be monitored in transplanted brain hemisphere.
    Cell Medicine. 01/2010; 1(2):71-80.
  • Article: Trilateral retinoblastoma: an institutional experience and review of the literature.
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    ABSTRACT: Retinoblastoma is the most common pediatric intraocular neoplasm. The association of uni- or bilateral retinoblastoma with synchronic or metachronic ectopic midline intracranial tumor [trilateral retinoblastoma (TRB)] is uncommon. MR examinations of 202 children with retinoblastoma treated at our institute were retrospectively reviewed. MR images and clinical data of children with TRB were evaluated for the patient's age at diagnosis of the intracranial tumor and intraocular lesions, tumor size, signal characteristics, and further course in follow-up MR examinations. There were three patients with TRB in our group of patients. All three children had had a negative family history. Two of them had a primary midline intracranial tumor and intraocular lesions at the time of the first diagnosis. In the third case, the first diagnosis was intracranial midline primitive neuroectodermal tumor. Diagnosis of lesions in both eyes was confirmed in ophthalmologic examination 1 month later. In one case, the intracranial tumor was in the pineal region and, in the other two cases, in the sellar and suprasellar regions. There was no evidence of leptomeningeal spread of the tumors in any patient. Patients with uni- and bilateral intraocular tumors should receive brain screening by MR imaging. We also recommend that patients under the age of 4 years with midline tumors should be carefully diagnosed for ocular neoplasms.
    Child s Nervous System 08/2009; 26(1):129-32. · 1.54 Impact Factor
  • Article: MRI findings in the young infant with brainstem disconnection and extracerebral features. Report of one case and review of the literature.
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    ABSTRACT: We present the young infant with the extremely rare brain abnormality-brainstem disconnection. Additionally, several extracerebral abnormalities were diagnosed: bilateral anotia, micrognatia, hypertelorism, scoliosis, ribs and vertebral anomalies. MR brain examination precisely demonstrated absence of the pons, with disruption between midbrain and hypoplastic medulla oblongata. The thin strands connecting the medulla with the midbrain and medulla with both cerebellar hemispheres were revealed. The large hamartoma of the tuber cinereum was found. In this study we review case reports published previously.
    Brain & development 06/2009; 32(6):495-8. · 1.74 Impact Factor
  • Article: Severe encephalopathy with brain atrophy and hypomyelination due to adenylosuccinate lyase deficiency--MRI, clinical, biochemical and neuropathological findings of Polish patients.
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    ABSTRACT: Adenylosuccinate lyase (ADSL) deficiency is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by mutation in the ADSL gene. The disease was identified in 1984 by Jaeken and van der Berghe as the first inborn defect of purine biosynthesis. Affected children revealed encephalopathy with epilepsy and marked psychomotor retardation. A neurological examination showed hypotonia, followed sometimes after years by spasticity. The diagnosis is based on detection in the urine and CSF succinyladenosine (S-Ado) and succinylaminoimidazole carboxamide ribotide (SAICAr). We present brain MR examinations of seven patients with ADSL deficiency in the correlation with their clinical findings. In all cases lack of myelination or of delayed myelination of cerebral white matter was seen. Additionally cerebral and cerebellar atrophy was observed. Neuropathological findings revealed damage of all cellular elements of brain tissue and are cause of observed MR changes. Hypo/dysmyelination seemed to be secondary to damage of oligodendroglia and axons of damaged neuronal cells.
    Folia neuropathologica / Association of Polish Neuropathologists and Medical Research Centre, Polish Academy of Sciences. 01/2009; 47(4):314-20.
  • Article: Clinical, biochemical, neuropathological and molecular findings of the first Polish case of adenylosuccinase deficiency.
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    ABSTRACT: Adenylosuccinase (ADSL) deficiency is an autosomal recessive disorder affecting mainly the nervous system. The disease causes psychomotor retardation, frequently with autistic features and epilepsy. ADSL deficiency may be diagnosed by detection of two abnormal metabolites in body fluids--succinyladenosine (S-Ado) and succinylaminoimidazole carboxamide riboside (SAICAr). It is assumed that the former metabolite is neurotoxic. We present clinical, biochemical and neuropathological findings of a child affected by a severe form of ADSL deficiency. She had progressive neurological symptoms that started immediately after birth and died at 2.5 months of age. Macroscopically the brain showed signs of moderate atrophy. Histological examination of all grey matter structures showed widespread damage of neurons accompanied by microspongiosis of neuropile. Cerebral white matter showed lack of myelination in the centrum semiovale and diffuse spongiosis of neuropile. Myelination appropriate for the age was visible in posterior limb of internal capsule, in striatum, thalamus and in brain stem structures but diffuse destruction of myelin sheets was seen with severe marked astroglial reaction with signs of destruction of the cells and their processes. Ultrastructural examination showed enormous destruction of all cellular elements, but astonishingly mitochondria were relatively spared. The neuropathological changes can be considered as the neurotoxic result of metabolic disturbances connected with adenylosuccinase deficiency.
    Folia neuropathologica / Association of Polish Neuropathologists and Medical Research Centre, Polish Academy of Sciences 02/2008; 46(1):81-91. · 1.23 Impact Factor
  • Article: Adenylosuccinate lyase deficiency: the first identified polish patient.
    Elzbieta Jurkiewicz, Hanna Mierzewska, Katarzyna Kuśmierska
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    ABSTRACT: Adenylosuccinate lyase (ADSL) deficiency is a rare disease of de novo purine synthesis. The main symptoms are psychomotor retardation, epilepsy, autistic features, occasionally associated with muscular hypotonia. Diagnosis is made by detection of abnormal purine metabolites (succinyladenosine - S-Ado and succinylaminoimidazole carboxamide riboside - SAICAr) in body fluids. The severity of the clinical features correlates with low S-Ado/SAICAr ratio. We report clinical, biochemical and brain MRI findings of a female infant with severe early epilepsy and hypotonia, who died at the age of 10 weeks.
    Brain and Development 11/2007; 29(9):600-2. · 2.12 Impact Factor
  • Article: Magnetic resonance imaging as a diagnostic tool in case of ovarian masses in girls and young women.
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    ABSTRACT: Gynecological examination and transvaginal ultrasound are difficult or impossible in girls and young women who have not started their sexual life. CT is not a method of choice in this age group because of the ionizing radiation and iodine-containing contrast media. MRI is chosen then. Pelvic MRI was performed in 15 patients aged 9-19 years with suspected ovarian mass after they had had unclear gynecological and sonographic examinations. 1.5 T MRI systems were used. SE,T(F)SE and SPIR sequences were applied in T1- and T2-weighted images in three planes. Contrast media were administered in 7 patients. In a group of 3 girls with acute abdominal pain, polycystic ovaries, ovarian hemorrhagic cyst, and fibroma of the ovary were diagnosed. In a group of 11 patients with chronic abdominal pain, dermoid cysts of the ovaries were found in 7 cases, in one bilateral and accompanied by ectopic kidney. In 2 patients, serous cysts were diagnosed. In 2 cases an ovarian origin of the mass was excluded: multilocular cystic lesion in the presacral region and a hydatid mole were revealed. A neoplastic ovarian mass was diagnosed in a girl with increasing circumference of the abdomen. The accuracy of MRI in localizing lesions was 100%. Its accuracy in precisely characterizing lesions was 83.3%. Magnetic resonance imaging, with its noninvasiveness, high spatial resolution, and tissue specificity, is a method of choice in the diagnosis or exclusion of ovarian pathology in children and adolescents.
    Medical science monitor: international medical journal of experimental and clinical research 06/2007; 13 Suppl 1:116-20. · 1.70 Impact Factor
  • Article: Cyst-like cortical tubers in patients with tuberous sclerosis complex: MR imaging with the FLAIR sequence.
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    ABSTRACT: Tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is an inherited disorder characterized by the presence of cortical tubers, the majority of which are solid and show high signal on FLAIR images. Low-signal tubers are less frequent. To evaluate cystic cortical tubers in patients with TSC on the basis of their appearance on FLAIR images. MR examinations of 73 patients were retrospectively reviewed and 17 children (aged 25 days to 12.3 years) with a typical cyst-like tubers were selected for further analysis. The age of the patients, the number of lesions, and the shape and MR intensity were analyzed. Cyst-like cortical tubers were detected in 82% of children below 7 years of age and in 18% of those older then 7 years (P=0.00086). Most of the cystic lesions were of the shrunken type (72%), the expansile type being less frequently seen (28%). FLAIR images confirm the cystic character of some of the cortical tubers in TSC patients although the pathogenesis of cystic change is still unknown.
    Pediatric Radiology 07/2006; 36(6):498-501. · 1.67 Impact Factor
  • Article: Giant intracranial aneurysm in a 9-year-old boy with tuberous sclerosis.
    Elzbieta Jurkiewicz, Sergiusz Jóźwiak
    Pediatric Radiology 06/2006; 36(5):463. · 1.67 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Fat tissue distribution and metabolic alterations in boys with primary hypertension].
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    ABSTRACT: Metabolic alterations related to obesity are regarded as significant risk factor for target organ damage in hypertensive patients. Fat tissue distribution seems to play significant role in metabolic alterations related to cardiovascular damage. The aim of the study was to test hypothesis that fat tissue distribution and excess of visceral fat is related to cardiovascular damage and metabolic cardiovascular risk factors in obese boys with yet untreated, primary hypertension. 40 boys (14.8 +/- 3.0 yrs) with untreated essential hypertensions. amount of visceral (VAT), intraperitoneal visceral (ipVAT), extraperitoneal visceral (epVAT) and subcutaneous fat (SAT) was measured by nuclear magnetic imaging (NMR). Carotic intima media thickness (cIMT), fenoral intima media thickness (fIMT) and left ventricular mass index (LVMi) were evaluated by sonography. Oral glucose loading test was done, lipids, homocysteine, CRP, uric acid, microalbuminuria, adipocytokines, IGF-1 and IGF binding proteins (IGFBP) were determined. The ratio of VAT to epVAT (V/Ve) correlated with carotid IMT (p=0.0001; r=0.561), standard deviation from median of the norm of cIMT (cIMT-SDS) (p=0.0001; r=0.681), femoral IMT (p=0.015; r=0.480) and fIMT-SDS (p=0.002; r=0.579). SAT correlated negatively with cIMT (p=0.0016; r=-0.355) and cIMT-SDS (p=0.01; r=-0.391). Waist to hip ratio (WHR) correlated with cIMT-SDS (p=0.03; r=0.401). VAT correlated positively and SAT negatively with HDL, apoA1, uric acid concentration and HOMA-IR value. VAT/epVAT correlated with HOMA-IR (p=0.02; r=0.402), free IGF-1 (p=0.001; r=0.478). epVAT also correlated with free IGF-1 (p=0.006; r=-0.494) and IGFBP3 (p=0.02; r=-0.471). Step-wise regression analysis revealed that relative excess of intraperitoneal visceral fat (VAT/epVAT) and WHR were independent predictors of cIMT-SDS(p=0.022, R2=0.755). Fat tissue distribution correlates with early vascular injury and metabolic alterations in boys with primary hypertension. Relative excess of visceral fat assessed by NMR and truncal obesity expressed as WHR are independent risk factors for early vascular damage in overweight boys with primary hypertension.
    Przegla̧d lekarski 02/2006; 63 Suppl 3:49-53.
  • Article: Teratoma or enterogenous cyst? The histopathological and clinical dilemma in co-existing occult neural tube dysraphism.
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    ABSTRACT: Better understanding of embryology, histopathology and genetics of dysraphic conditions have lead to an expansion of this concept to entities with a similar microscopic appearance (e.g. enterogenous cysts, colloid cyst of the III-rd ventricle) or rated among neoplasms (e.g. mature teratoma), creating a certain conceptual confusion. Currently the diagnosis of "teratoma" is being substituted by "enterogenous cyst" or "teratomatous cyst". Clarification of concepts in this field and presentation of the experience of the Department of Neurosurgery of the Children's Memorial Health Institute associated therewith. Since January 1990 through April 2005 we had treated 7 children with the final diagnosis of "an enterogenous cyst". The mean age of the children was 10.5 years and the mean follow-up time was 4.1 years. The study was performed by a retrospective analysis of medical records, imaging studies and histological preparations. the study group included: 3 cases of type I enterogenous cyst, 1 case of type II cyst and 3 cases of type III cyst (in 2 cases a former diagnosis of "mature teratoma" has been revised). Within this follow-up time, a good outcome was obtained in 3 cases, moderate disability - in 3 cases and severe disability - in 1 case. (1) Enterogenous cyst often co-exists with other dysraphic features; (2) Clinical signs of an enterogenous cyst are non-typical and depend on location of the lesion. The presence of secreting gastric mucosa may lead to chemical myelitis; (3) Severity of the postoperative neurological deficit is due to the developmental nature of the lesion and common vascular supply; (4) Late results of treatment are satisfactory, provided the lesion is excised radically; (5) Enterogenous cyst may be diagnosed in the case of a tumor composed of tissues originating from 1, 2 or 3 embryonic layers coexisting with dysraphic stigmata, congenital vertebral abnormalities or a mediastinal tumor of the same type. Types II and III of enterogenous cyst were historically diagnosed as "adult teratoma".
    Folia neuropathologica / Association of Polish Neuropathologists and Medical Research Centre, Polish Academy of Sciences 02/2006; 44(1):24-33. · 1.23 Impact Factor
  • Article: Leukoencephalopathy with vanishing white matter due to homozygous EIF2B2 gene mutation. First Polish cases.
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    ABSTRACT: Leukoencephalopathy with vanishing white matter (VWM), also called childhood ataxia with central nervous system hypomyelination (CACH), is an autosomal recessive disease caused by mutations in any of the five genes encoding subunits of the eukaryotic translation initiation factor eIF2B. Neuropathological findings comprise a severe, cavitating orthochromatic leukodystrophy with only small amounts of myelin breakdown products, and predominantly involving the cerebral hemispheric white matter. Within the white matter abnormal oligodendroglial cells are present with abundant "foamy" cytoplasm. In some regions oligodendroglial cells are increased in numbers. We present three sisters, 18, 11 and 8 years old, with the early to late childhood phenotype. The first signs of the disease were gait disturbances at 4, 2 and 6 years of age, respectively. Neurological examination showed mild tremor of hands and head, truncal ataxia, dysarthria, and hypotonia, after several years followed by spasticity. The course of the disease was slowly progressive. Intellectual abilities are relatively spared. The MRI showed diffusely abnormal white matter of the cerebral hemispheres. The FLAIR images revealed rarefaction of the affected white matter with some stripe-like structures, suggesting the presence of remaining tissue strands. The abnormalities were most pronounced with the middle sister, who had the earliest onset of the disease. A homozygous point mutation in the EIF2B2 gene was found, 638A>G. Both the parents were found to be carriers of this mutation. This is the first description of a Polish family with VWM.
    Folia neuropathologica / Association of Polish Neuropathologists and Medical Research Centre, Polish Academy of Sciences 02/2006; 44(2):144-8. · 1.23 Impact Factor
  • Article: MRI of a family with leukoencephalypathy with vanishing white matter.
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    ABSTRACT: Leukoencephalopathy with vanishing white matter (VWM) is a newly described entity with characteristic MRI features. We report the cranial MRI findings in three sisters with slowly progressive neurological deterioration. The MRI showed symmetrical diffuse abnormalities of cerebral white matter with hypointensity on FLAIR images. The diagnosis of leukoencephalopathy with VWM was made on the basis of genetic analysis.
    Pediatric Radiology 11/2005; 35(10):1027-30. · 1.67 Impact Factor
  • Article: Homozygote for mutation c.1204 + 1G > A of the ARSA gene presents with a late-infantile form of metachromatic leukodystrophy and a rare MRI white matter lesion type.
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    ABSTRACT: The metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD)--causing mutation c.1204 + 1G > A damages an intron-exon splice site recognition sequence. This results in a complete loss of enzymatic activity of arylsulfatase A (ARSA) protein molecules. We have found a late-infantile type MLD-patient to be homozygous for this mutation, which was not reported earlier, but is consistent with previous suggestions. Interestingly, the cerebral magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) in this patient displayed linear or punctuate structures radiating in the demyelinated white matter, which resembled the patterns described in Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease. It should be emphasised that whenever a cerebral MRI demonstrates the "tigroid" or "leopard-skin" demyelination pattern not only Pelizaeus-Merzbacher disease, but also metachromatic leukodystrophy diagnosis should be considered; this suggests the necessity of ARSA activity estimations in patients with such specific MRI patterns.
    Journal of applied genetics 01/2005; 46(3):337-9. · 1.66 Impact Factor
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    Article: Magnetic resonance imaging of brain abnormalities in patients with the Nijmegen breakage syndrome.
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    ABSTRACT: The results of brain MRI are presented in 22 patients with documented Nijmegen breakage syndrome (NBS), aged from 1 and 9/12 to 20 years. T1-, PD or FLAIR and T2-weighted SE/TSE images in three planes were obtained. Twenty-one patients showed microcephaly. Decreased size of frontal lobes and narrow frontal horns of the lateral ventricles was observed in all cases. In 6 patients agenesis of the posterior part of the corpus callosum was found as well as colpocephaly and temporal horn dilatation. In 2 patients callosal hypoplasia was accompanied by other anomalies: abnormal cerebrospinal fluid spaces. Sinusitis was present in all patients as a result of primary immunodeficiency. As in ataxia teleangiectasia and other breakage syndromes, NBS patients show inherited malignancy susceptibility and hypersensitivity to X and gamma radiation. Because of that computed tomography is contraindicated in these patients and MRI should be the method of choice in diagnostic imaging.
    Acta neurobiologiae experimentalis 02/2004; 64(4):503-9. · 2.11 Impact Factor
  • Article: Arterial hypertension with brachydactyly in a 15-year-old boy.
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    ABSTRACT: Autosomal dominant brachydactyly with hypertension is the only form of monogenic hypertension which is not sodium dependent. The disease is characterized by brachydactyly type E, short stature, arterial hypertension and aberrant loop of posterior inferior cerebellar artery (PICA) causing neurovascular conflict. So far the syndrome was described in one family in Turkey and two in Canada. We report a case of a 15-year-old boy who was admitted because of arterial hypertension 160/100 mmHg. He complained also of attacks of bilateral numbness of hands with deterioration of visual field. Examination revealed short stature (156 cm) and bone deformities of hands and feet consistent with brachydactyly type E. Ophthalmoscopy showed mild narrowing of retinal arteries. Serum electrolytes, blood gases, and renal function were normal. Renin activity and aldosterone concentrations were raised, and 24-h urinary excretion of catecholamines and urinary steroid profile were in normal range. Renal Doppler ultrasound was normal, but renal scintigraphy suggested vascular changes in the left kidney. Echocardiographic examination, besides mild left ventricular hypertrophy, was normal. Magnetic resonance angiography (angio-MR) revealed bilateral abnormal PICA loops and neurovascular conflict. Spiral angiotomography of renal arteries revealed narrow additional left renal artery. Both nonconsanguineous parents and younger brother were healthy, with normal height, without bone deformities, and had normal intracranial vessels. Amlodipine and metoprolol were given, and blood pressure lowered to 143/87. Adding rilmenidine gave no effect and enalapril was then added. It led to further improvement in blood pressure control. To our knowledge, this is the first pediatric description of a sporadic form of autosomal dominant brachydactyly with hypertension with abnormalities of brain and renal arteries.
    Pediatric Nephrology 09/2003; 18(8):814-9. · 2.52 Impact Factor
  • Article: [Direct trans-sylvian approach to the ventrolateral pons in surgical management of large cystic cavernous malformations of the brain stem in children].
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    ABSTRACT: In the study surgical indications are reviewed and the effect of the applied surgical technique on long-term treatment outcome in children with large cystic brainstem cavernous malformations is evaluated. Clinical data of 5 patients treated surgically for large cystic cavernous malformations of the pons in the years 1995-2001 were retrospectively evaluated. In all the cases the transsylvian approach to the ventrolateral pons with splitting of the crus cerebri was used to reach cavernoma within the cystic cavity. The long-term follow up (mean 4.9 years) included a complete neurological examination and annual MRI studies. At least one hemorrhagic episode was diagnosed in all the cases, while bleeding to the pons, with clinical course mimicking that of stroke, was noted twice in 3 patients. All the episodes confirmed by MRI imaging appeared to be intralesional. The malformations ranged in size from 30 to 50 mm (mean 36.9 mm). Their most characteristic MRI features were not only the localization in the pontine structure exclusively i.e. within the natural anatomical barriers separating the pons from the midbrain and medulla, but also the growth pattern corresponding to that of brainstem benign gliomas. The patients' mean preoperative KPS score was 60 (30 to 90). Cavernous hemangiomas were totally removed in 3 out of 5 cases. One patient with partially removed lesion presented after a year recurrent hemorrhage and new neurological deficits that required a second stage surgery. In all but one case transient complications included some new cranial nerve, motor and sensory deficits that influenced the patients' immediate postoperative KPS assessment, with the mean score of 48. In a follow-up assessment at 1.5 to 7 years, a significant amelioration of both their neurological status and quality of life was found, with KPS scores from 70 to 90 (mean score 80). Annual MRI examinations showed extensive hemosiderin deposits within the pontine tissue in 3 cases of totally removed cavernous hemangiomas and this image was stable during the follow-up period. The findings suggest that resection of large pontine cavernomas in children is indicated in cases of symptomatic hemorrhage with lesions approaching the pial surface, or surrounded by a small margin of normal tissue. Recurrent hemorrhages are intralesional (i.e. limited to pontine structures by the natural anatomical barriers), resulting in a "cyst-like" growth of malformations mimicking that of focal neoplasms and in compression of the brain stem tissue rather than in a direct hemorrhagic insult.
    Neurologia i neurochirurgia polska 02/2003; 37(4):847-60. · 0.43 Impact Factor

Institutions

  • 2010–2011
    • Institute of Mother and Child
      Warsaw, Masovian Voivodeship, Poland
  • 2005–2009
    • Children's Memorial Health Institute
      Warsaw, Masovian Voivodeship, Poland
    • Institute of Psychiatry and Neurology
      Warsaw, Masovian Voivodeship, Poland
  • 2004
    • Central Clinical Hospital of the Ministry of Interior in Warsaw
      Warsaw, Masovian Voivodeship, Poland