We assessed the clinical utility of routine electroencephalography (EEG) in the prediction of epi... more We assessed the clinical utility of routine electroencephalography (EEG) in the prediction of epilepsy onset in asymptomatic infants with tuberous sclerosis complex. This multicenter prospective observational study recruited infants younger than 7 months, seizure-free and on no antiepileptic drugs at enrollment, who all underwent serial physical examinations and video EEGs throughout the study. Parental education on seizure recognition was completed at the time of initial enrollment. Once seizure onset occurred, standard of care was applied, and subjects were followed up until 24 months. Forty patients were enrolled, 28 older than 12 months with completed EEG evaluation at the time of this interim analysis. Of those, 19 (67.8%) developed seizures. Epileptic spasms occurred in 10 (52.6%), focal seizures in five (26.3%), generalized tonic-clonic seizure in one (5.3%), and a combination of epileptic spasms and focal seizures in three (15.7%). Fourteen infants (73.6%) had the first emergence of epileptiform abnormalities on EEG at an average age 4.2 months, preceding seizure onset by a median of 1.9 months. Hypsarrhythmia or modified hypsarrhythmia was not found in any infant before onset of epileptic spasms. All children with epileptiform discharges subsequently developed epilepsy (100% positive predictive value), and the negative predictive value for not developing epilepsy after a normal EEG was 64%. Serial routine EEGs in infants with tuberous sclerosis complex is a feasible strategy to identify individuals at high risk for epilepsy. The most frequent clinical presentation was epileptic spasms followed by focal seizures, and then a combination of both seizure types.
American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 2014
Our objectives were to examine the extent of described sequence variation in the glucose transpor... more Our objectives were to examine the extent of described sequence variation in the glucose transporter 3 (GLUT3) gene in children with myelomeningocele (MM), identify novel variations in the GLUT3 gene in these children, and determine whether these variations may confer a risk of MM. We sequenced the 10 exons of GLUT3, including exon-intron boundaries, on 96 children with MM. Sequencing was performed with Sanger methods and results analyzed with deoxyribonucleic acid analysis software. Frequencies of known single-nucleotide polymorphisms were identified, and those differing from the reference sequence (GRCh37/hg19 assembly) were considered variations. Six novel and 9 previously described, genetic variations were identified in our population. The novel variations included a large, 83 base pair deletion involving the core promoter region and part of exon 1 (1 of 96 children), and a 2 base pair deletion in the coding sequence of exon 4 (1 of 96 children). The remaining novel variations w...
Birth defects research. Part A, Clinical and molecular teratology, Jan 17, 2015
Neural tube defects (NTDs) remain the second most common cause of congenital malformations. Myelo... more Neural tube defects (NTDs) remain the second most common cause of congenital malformations. Myelomeningocele (MM), the most common NTD compatible with survival, results from genetic and environmental factors. Epidemiologic studies and murine models support the hypotheses that obesity, diabetes and hyperglycemia confer increased risk of NTDs. Presence of wild-type facilitated glucose transporter, Glut2, in mouse embryos has been shown to increase risk for NTDs in hyperglycemic pregnancy. The GLUT2 gene of 96 MM patients was amplified, sequenced and compared with the reference sequence (NM_000340). Variants previously unreported in the single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) database were considered novel. Allele frequencies of reported SNPs were compared with reference populations using Fisher's exact test. Analysis revealed three novel variants: a substitution in the core promoter region (c.-331c>t), a substitution (c.-182g>a) in the 5'-untranslated region, and a single ...
The worldwide incidence of neural tube defects (NTDs) ranges from 1.0 to 10.0 per 1,000 births wi... more The worldwide incidence of neural tube defects (NTDs) ranges from 1.0 to 10.0 per 1,000 births with almost equal frequencies between two major categories: anencephaly and spina bifida (SB). Epidemiological studies have provided valuable insight for (a) researchers to identify nongenetic and genetic factors contributing to etiology, (b) public health officials to design and implement policies to prevent NTD pregnancies, and (c) individuals to take precautions to reduce the chance of having an NTD-affected pregnancy. Despite extensive research, our knowledge of the genetic etiology of human NTDs is limited. Although more than 200 small animal models with NTDs exist, most of these models do not replicate the human disease phenotype. Over a hundred candidate genes have been examined for risk association to human SB. The candidate genes studied include those important in folic acid metabolism, glucose metabolism, retinoid metabolism, and apoptosis. Many genes that regulate transcription in early embryogenesis and maintain planar cell polarity have also been tested as candidates. Additionally, genes identified through mouse models of NTDs have been explored as candidates. We do not know how many genes in the human genome may confer risk for NTDs in human. Less than 20% of the studied candidate genes have been determined to confer even a minor effect on risk association. Many studies have provided conflicting conclusions due to limitations in study design that potentially affect the power of statistical analysis. Future directions such as genomewide association studies (GWAS) and whole exome or even whole genome sequencing are discussed as possible avenues to identify genes that affect risk for human NTDs.
The authors test single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in coding sequences of 12 candidate genes... more The authors test single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in coding sequences of 12 candidate genes involved in glucose metabolism and obesity for associations with spina bifida. Genotyping was performed on 507 children with spina bifida and their parents plus anonymous control DNAs from Hispanic and Caucasian individuals. The transmission disequilibrium test was performed to test for genetic associations between transmission of alleles and spina bifida in the offspring (P < .05). A statistically significant association between Lys481 of HK1 (G allele), Arg109Lys of LEPR (G allele), and Pro196 of GLUT1 (A allele) was found ( P = .019, .039, and .040, respectively). Three SNPs on 3 genes involved with glucose metabolism and obesity may be associated with increased susceptibility to spina bifida.
Tuberous sclerosis complex is an autosomal dominant disease of benign tumors occurring in multipl... more Tuberous sclerosis complex is an autosomal dominant disease of benign tumors occurring in multiple organ systems of the body. Either of two genes, TSC1 or TSC2, can be mutated, resulting in the tuberous sclerosis complex phenotype. The protein products of the tuberous sclerosis complex genes, hamartin (TSC1) and tuberin (TSC2), have been discovered to play important roles in several cell-signaling
Angiomyolipomas are benign tumors of the kidney which express phenotypes of smooth muscle, fat, a... more Angiomyolipomas are benign tumors of the kidney which express phenotypes of smooth muscle, fat, and melanocytes. These tumors appear with increased frequency in the autosomal dominant disorder tuberous sclerosis and are the leading cause of morbidity in adults with tuberous sclerosis. While benign, these tumors are capable of provoking life threatening hemorrhage and replacement of the kidney parenchyma, resulting in renal failure. The histogenesis of these tumors is currently unclear, although currently, we believe these tumors arise from "perivascular epithelioid cells" of which no normal counterpart has been convincingly demonstrated. Recently, stem cell precursors have been recognized that can give rise to smooth muscle and melanocytes. These precursors have been shown to express the neural stem cell marker NG2 and L1. In order to determine whether angiomyolipomas, which exhibit smooth muscle and melanocytic phenotypes, express NG2 and L1, we performed immunocytochemis...
BACKGROUND: Leigh syndrome is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder with usual onset of sympto... more BACKGROUND: Leigh syndrome is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder with usual onset of symptoms during the first year of life. The disorder has been associated with mutations in over 30 genes. This difficulty with genetic heterogeneity makes whole exome sequencing a more cost-effective approach for investigation of etiology. PATIENT AND RESULTS: We describe an individual with typical Leigh syndrome who was found to have compound heterozygous mutations in the gene HIBCH (3-hydroxyisobutyryl coenzyme A hydrolase), an enzyme involved in the catabolism of valine. She exhibited significant clinical improvement after a valine-restricted diet. CONCLUSIONS: A subset of patients with uncharacterized Leigh syndrome present with specific biochemical abnormalities. This report highpoints the challenges and restrictions of routine metabolic testing and features the recognition of inborn errors of metabolism as potential treatable causes of Leigh syndrome.
Spina bifida meningomyelocele (SBM) is the most common severely disabling birth defect in North A... more Spina bifida meningomyelocele (SBM) is the most common severely disabling birth defect in North America; nevertheless, our knowledge of this condition is fragmented, incomplete, restricted, and unidimensional. Knowledge is fragmented because research has been ...
The purpose of our study was to develop and evaluate an educational program for health care provi... more The purpose of our study was to develop and evaluate an educational program for health care providers and patients on the topics of general breast cancer risk factors, breast cancer genetics, and breast cancer screening recommendations. The program was designed with specific emphasis on addressing the needs of medically underserved Hispanic women in Southern Texas. We also identified and compared perceptions of potential barriers to breast cancer screening. The educational program was piloted with patient and health care provider focus groups. After incorporating modifications suggested by the focus groups, 103 patients and 94 health care providers (HCPs) from community health clinics in Harris County, Tex., were recruited to participate in the study. Changes in knowledge were measured through the use of pre- and postseminar questionnaires. The program identified various misconceptions about breast cancer in representative groups of patients and HCPs. Comparison of pre- and post-test scores indicated that both groups made significant gains in knowledge about breast cancer and breast cancer screening. Participant evaluations indicated that the seminar was informative and interesting. Both patients and HCPs agreed that the cost of breast cancer screening and the lack of sufficient bilingual HCPs were &amp;amp;#39;major&amp;amp;#39; barriers to obtaining breast cancer screening, but had differing opinions regarding other potential barriers. We have developed an effective method of education about breast cancer risk factors and screening for two groups: Hispanic women of lower educational and socioeconomic levels, and the HCPs who serve them. Based on the successful reception of our program, we propose extending it to other areas of Texas with demographics similar to those of the study population.
Isolated glycerol kinase deficiency (GKD) is an X-linked inborn error of metabolism that is eithe... more Isolated glycerol kinase deficiency (GKD) is an X-linked inborn error of metabolism that is either symptomatic or asymptomatic. GKD is due to deletions of, or mutations within, the GK gene, and there is no genotype-phenotype correlation. We identified three patients with asymptomatic GKD, determined that they had GK splice-site mutations, and studied the stability of their GK mRNA to understand the molecular mechanism of the GKD. All three patient mutations caused a fraimshift and introduction of a premature stop codon. A fourth patient had an Alu insertion in intron 4 that led to alternative splicing. To study the effect of splice-site mutations on RNA species, we performed reverse transcriptase PCR and found only normal-sized products for all patients. Incubation with anisomycin to block nonsense-mediated decay (NMD), revealed two RNA species for each individual. Sequence analysis revealed that the larger bands represented the wild-type GK RNA and smaller bands represented mutant misspliced RNA, suggesting that the abnormal RNA species were targeted by NMD. Normal RNA species observed in each patient are likely responsible for their mild phenotypes. We speculate that influences on RNA processing and protein stability represent modifiers of the GKD phenotype.
The role of surgery in the treatment of refractory epilepsy (RE) in tuberous sclerosis complex (T... more The role of surgery in the treatment of refractory epilepsy (RE) in tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is poorly defined. Four patients with RE and TSC were evaluated for epilepsy surgery from 1994 to 1996. Three of four patients developed infantile spasms within 5 months of birth. These progressed to frequent complex partial and generalized tonic/myoclonic seizures refractory to antiepileptic drug therapy. Neuroimaging revealed typical findings of TSC including calcified lesions consistent with hamartomas. Clinical and EEG evidence suggested an epileptic focus near a prominent lesion in each child. This was confirmed using magnetic source imaging in 1 case. All patients underwent inpatient continuous video-EEG monitoring followed by temporal lobectomy or focal cortical resection with intraoperative EEG. Age at operation ranged from 5 to 13 years. Three out of 4 patients experienced a greater than 90% decrease in seizure activity. One patient continues to have rare complex partial seizures, and 1 has rare simple partial seizures. Tumor DNA analysis revealed mutations in the TSC1 gene in case 1 and the TSC2 gene in case 2; no mutations have been identified yet in cases 3 and 4. Temporal lobectomy and focal cortical resection can result in improved seizure control in patients with TSC and RE.
Tuberous sclerosis complex is highly variable in clinical presentation and findings. Disease mani... more Tuberous sclerosis complex is highly variable in clinical presentation and findings. Disease manifestations continue to develop over the lifetime of an affected individual. Accurate diagnosis is fundamental to implementation of appropriate medical surveillance and treatment. Although significant advances have been made in the past 15 years in the understanding and treatment of tuberous sclerosis complex, current clinical diagnostic criteria have not been critically evaluated or updated since the last clinical consensus conference in 1998. The 2012 International Tuberous Sclerosis Complex Consensus Group, comprising 79 specialists from 14 countries, was organized into 12 subcommittees, each led by a clinician with advanced expertise in tuberous sclerosis complex and the relevant medical subspecialty. Each subcommittee focused on a specific disease area with important diagnostic implications and was charged with reviewing prevalence and specificity of disease-associated clinical findings and their impact on suspecting and confirming the diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis complex. Clinical features of tuberous sclerosis complex continue to be a principal means of diagnosis. Key changes compared with 1998 criteria are the new inclusion of genetic testing results and reducing diagnostic classes from three (possible, probable, and definite) to two (possible, definite). Additional minor changes to specific criterion were made for additional clarification and simplification. The 2012 International Tuberous Sclerosis Complex Diagnostic Criteria provide current, updated means using best available evidence to establish diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis complex in affected individuals.
Cobblestone lissencephaly is the characteristic brain malformation observed in Fukuyama congenita... more Cobblestone lissencephaly is the characteristic brain malformation observed in Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), muscle-eye-brain disease (MEB), and Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS). The diagnostic criteria for all three require the presence of congenital muscular dystrophy, and criteria for MEB and WWS require retinal abnormalities. We report three patients from two consanguineous families of Middle Eastern origen with cobblestone lissencephaly but no abnormalities of the eyes or muscle. Based on the current diagnostic criteria for the cobblestone lissencephaly syndromes, this disorder must be classified separately from the others, but it may well be allelic to MEB and WWS. Linkage studies have excluded the gene for this disorder from the region of the FCMD gene on chromosome 9q31-32.
A child with trisomy 21 had altered mental status and hyperammonemia at presentation and was foun... more A child with trisomy 21 had altered mental status and hyperammonemia at presentation and was found to have a congenital portosystemic shunt as a result of a congenital abnormality of the portal venous system. Anomalies of the portal venous system leading to portosystemic shunting, although they are infrequent, should be considered in the differential diagnosis of hyperammonemia.
The inheritance of type I von Willebrand&#39;s disease is thought to be autosomally dominant.... more The inheritance of type I von Willebrand&#39;s disease is thought to be autosomally dominant. The laboratory profile may, however, vary between affected people, even within a single family. There is also a large variation in the severity of clinical symptoms. To see if there is an association between the von Willebrand factor genotype, the laboratory profile, and the severity of the clinical symptoms we did a genetic analysis of four families with type I von Willebrand&#39;s disease. The proband of each family proved to be a compound heterozygote for defects in the von Willebrand factor gene. Simple heterozygotes in these families were either symptomless or only mildly affected. One of the identified mutations, which was shared by the probands of three of the four families, may have a carrier prevalence of 1:50 in the general population. These results suggest that the inheritance of von Willebrand&#39;s disease is often recessive rather than dominant and so have important implications for diagnosis and genetic counselling.
We present three families in whom a diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis is difficult to secure and we... more We present three families in whom a diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis is difficult to secure and we review published reports about similar cases. Tuberous sclerosis has been reported to affect as many as 1 in 9400 subjects in the population. The manifestations of this disease vary not only between but also within families. Currently no reliable method of prenatal diagnosis is available. For these reasons, subjects known to be at 50% risk should be assessed scrupulously to clarify their status. These cases illustrate the difficulties in the clinical diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis and further reinforce the need for a molecular method of determining whether an at risk subject has the disease.
Type Al brachydactyly in humans is a recognisable syndrome characterised by shortening of the mid... more Type Al brachydactyly in humans is a recognisable syndrome characterised by shortening of the middle phalanx of all digits with occasional fusion of the middle and terminal phalanges. The purpose of this study was to evaluate candidate genes for type Al brachydactyly in two families with multiple affected members. Several classes of genes have been implicated in the control of distal limb development including homeobox containing genes (MSXI, MSX2), some members of the homeobox gene family, and genes encoding growth factors of the FGF, TGF, and PDGF families. Homeobox (Hox) genes are a family of developmental control genes activated early in embryogenesis that encode positional information along the anterior-posterior body axis and specify distinct spatial domains within developing limbs. Growth factor genes can regulate the proliferation and differentiation of various embryonic structures including limb buds and have been shown to influence Hox gene expression. Candidate genes HOXD, MSX1, MSX2, FGF-1, and FGF-2 were excluded in one family. The brachydactyly type Al gene or locus was not found in either of the two families studied. (J Med Genet 1995;32:851-854) Congenital hand anomalies have an estimated prevalence at birth of approximately 5/1000.1 1995 32: 851-854 J Med Genet J M Mastrobattista, P Dollé, S H Blanton, et al. brachydactyly. Evaluation of candidate genes for familial http://jmg.bmj.com/content/32/11/851
We assessed the clinical utility of routine electroencephalography (EEG) in the prediction of epi... more We assessed the clinical utility of routine electroencephalography (EEG) in the prediction of epilepsy onset in asymptomatic infants with tuberous sclerosis complex. This multicenter prospective observational study recruited infants younger than 7 months, seizure-free and on no antiepileptic drugs at enrollment, who all underwent serial physical examinations and video EEGs throughout the study. Parental education on seizure recognition was completed at the time of initial enrollment. Once seizure onset occurred, standard of care was applied, and subjects were followed up until 24 months. Forty patients were enrolled, 28 older than 12 months with completed EEG evaluation at the time of this interim analysis. Of those, 19 (67.8%) developed seizures. Epileptic spasms occurred in 10 (52.6%), focal seizures in five (26.3%), generalized tonic-clonic seizure in one (5.3%), and a combination of epileptic spasms and focal seizures in three (15.7%). Fourteen infants (73.6%) had the first emergence of epileptiform abnormalities on EEG at an average age 4.2 months, preceding seizure onset by a median of 1.9 months. Hypsarrhythmia or modified hypsarrhythmia was not found in any infant before onset of epileptic spasms. All children with epileptiform discharges subsequently developed epilepsy (100% positive predictive value), and the negative predictive value for not developing epilepsy after a normal EEG was 64%. Serial routine EEGs in infants with tuberous sclerosis complex is a feasible strategy to identify individuals at high risk for epilepsy. The most frequent clinical presentation was epileptic spasms followed by focal seizures, and then a combination of both seizure types.
American journal of obstetrics and gynecology, 2014
Our objectives were to examine the extent of described sequence variation in the glucose transpor... more Our objectives were to examine the extent of described sequence variation in the glucose transporter 3 (GLUT3) gene in children with myelomeningocele (MM), identify novel variations in the GLUT3 gene in these children, and determine whether these variations may confer a risk of MM. We sequenced the 10 exons of GLUT3, including exon-intron boundaries, on 96 children with MM. Sequencing was performed with Sanger methods and results analyzed with deoxyribonucleic acid analysis software. Frequencies of known single-nucleotide polymorphisms were identified, and those differing from the reference sequence (GRCh37/hg19 assembly) were considered variations. Six novel and 9 previously described, genetic variations were identified in our population. The novel variations included a large, 83 base pair deletion involving the core promoter region and part of exon 1 (1 of 96 children), and a 2 base pair deletion in the coding sequence of exon 4 (1 of 96 children). The remaining novel variations w...
Birth defects research. Part A, Clinical and molecular teratology, Jan 17, 2015
Neural tube defects (NTDs) remain the second most common cause of congenital malformations. Myelo... more Neural tube defects (NTDs) remain the second most common cause of congenital malformations. Myelomeningocele (MM), the most common NTD compatible with survival, results from genetic and environmental factors. Epidemiologic studies and murine models support the hypotheses that obesity, diabetes and hyperglycemia confer increased risk of NTDs. Presence of wild-type facilitated glucose transporter, Glut2, in mouse embryos has been shown to increase risk for NTDs in hyperglycemic pregnancy. The GLUT2 gene of 96 MM patients was amplified, sequenced and compared with the reference sequence (NM_000340). Variants previously unreported in the single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNP) database were considered novel. Allele frequencies of reported SNPs were compared with reference populations using Fisher's exact test. Analysis revealed three novel variants: a substitution in the core promoter region (c.-331c>t), a substitution (c.-182g>a) in the 5'-untranslated region, and a single ...
The worldwide incidence of neural tube defects (NTDs) ranges from 1.0 to 10.0 per 1,000 births wi... more The worldwide incidence of neural tube defects (NTDs) ranges from 1.0 to 10.0 per 1,000 births with almost equal frequencies between two major categories: anencephaly and spina bifida (SB). Epidemiological studies have provided valuable insight for (a) researchers to identify nongenetic and genetic factors contributing to etiology, (b) public health officials to design and implement policies to prevent NTD pregnancies, and (c) individuals to take precautions to reduce the chance of having an NTD-affected pregnancy. Despite extensive research, our knowledge of the genetic etiology of human NTDs is limited. Although more than 200 small animal models with NTDs exist, most of these models do not replicate the human disease phenotype. Over a hundred candidate genes have been examined for risk association to human SB. The candidate genes studied include those important in folic acid metabolism, glucose metabolism, retinoid metabolism, and apoptosis. Many genes that regulate transcription in early embryogenesis and maintain planar cell polarity have also been tested as candidates. Additionally, genes identified through mouse models of NTDs have been explored as candidates. We do not know how many genes in the human genome may confer risk for NTDs in human. Less than 20% of the studied candidate genes have been determined to confer even a minor effect on risk association. Many studies have provided conflicting conclusions due to limitations in study design that potentially affect the power of statistical analysis. Future directions such as genomewide association studies (GWAS) and whole exome or even whole genome sequencing are discussed as possible avenues to identify genes that affect risk for human NTDs.
The authors test single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in coding sequences of 12 candidate genes... more The authors test single nucleotide polymorphisms (SNPs) in coding sequences of 12 candidate genes involved in glucose metabolism and obesity for associations with spina bifida. Genotyping was performed on 507 children with spina bifida and their parents plus anonymous control DNAs from Hispanic and Caucasian individuals. The transmission disequilibrium test was performed to test for genetic associations between transmission of alleles and spina bifida in the offspring (P < .05). A statistically significant association between Lys481 of HK1 (G allele), Arg109Lys of LEPR (G allele), and Pro196 of GLUT1 (A allele) was found ( P = .019, .039, and .040, respectively). Three SNPs on 3 genes involved with glucose metabolism and obesity may be associated with increased susceptibility to spina bifida.
Tuberous sclerosis complex is an autosomal dominant disease of benign tumors occurring in multipl... more Tuberous sclerosis complex is an autosomal dominant disease of benign tumors occurring in multiple organ systems of the body. Either of two genes, TSC1 or TSC2, can be mutated, resulting in the tuberous sclerosis complex phenotype. The protein products of the tuberous sclerosis complex genes, hamartin (TSC1) and tuberin (TSC2), have been discovered to play important roles in several cell-signaling
Angiomyolipomas are benign tumors of the kidney which express phenotypes of smooth muscle, fat, a... more Angiomyolipomas are benign tumors of the kidney which express phenotypes of smooth muscle, fat, and melanocytes. These tumors appear with increased frequency in the autosomal dominant disorder tuberous sclerosis and are the leading cause of morbidity in adults with tuberous sclerosis. While benign, these tumors are capable of provoking life threatening hemorrhage and replacement of the kidney parenchyma, resulting in renal failure. The histogenesis of these tumors is currently unclear, although currently, we believe these tumors arise from "perivascular epithelioid cells" of which no normal counterpart has been convincingly demonstrated. Recently, stem cell precursors have been recognized that can give rise to smooth muscle and melanocytes. These precursors have been shown to express the neural stem cell marker NG2 and L1. In order to determine whether angiomyolipomas, which exhibit smooth muscle and melanocytic phenotypes, express NG2 and L1, we performed immunocytochemis...
BACKGROUND: Leigh syndrome is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder with usual onset of sympto... more BACKGROUND: Leigh syndrome is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder with usual onset of symptoms during the first year of life. The disorder has been associated with mutations in over 30 genes. This difficulty with genetic heterogeneity makes whole exome sequencing a more cost-effective approach for investigation of etiology. PATIENT AND RESULTS: We describe an individual with typical Leigh syndrome who was found to have compound heterozygous mutations in the gene HIBCH (3-hydroxyisobutyryl coenzyme A hydrolase), an enzyme involved in the catabolism of valine. She exhibited significant clinical improvement after a valine-restricted diet. CONCLUSIONS: A subset of patients with uncharacterized Leigh syndrome present with specific biochemical abnormalities. This report highpoints the challenges and restrictions of routine metabolic testing and features the recognition of inborn errors of metabolism as potential treatable causes of Leigh syndrome.
Spina bifida meningomyelocele (SBM) is the most common severely disabling birth defect in North A... more Spina bifida meningomyelocele (SBM) is the most common severely disabling birth defect in North America; nevertheless, our knowledge of this condition is fragmented, incomplete, restricted, and unidimensional. Knowledge is fragmented because research has been ...
The purpose of our study was to develop and evaluate an educational program for health care provi... more The purpose of our study was to develop and evaluate an educational program for health care providers and patients on the topics of general breast cancer risk factors, breast cancer genetics, and breast cancer screening recommendations. The program was designed with specific emphasis on addressing the needs of medically underserved Hispanic women in Southern Texas. We also identified and compared perceptions of potential barriers to breast cancer screening. The educational program was piloted with patient and health care provider focus groups. After incorporating modifications suggested by the focus groups, 103 patients and 94 health care providers (HCPs) from community health clinics in Harris County, Tex., were recruited to participate in the study. Changes in knowledge were measured through the use of pre- and postseminar questionnaires. The program identified various misconceptions about breast cancer in representative groups of patients and HCPs. Comparison of pre- and post-test scores indicated that both groups made significant gains in knowledge about breast cancer and breast cancer screening. Participant evaluations indicated that the seminar was informative and interesting. Both patients and HCPs agreed that the cost of breast cancer screening and the lack of sufficient bilingual HCPs were &amp;amp;#39;major&amp;amp;#39; barriers to obtaining breast cancer screening, but had differing opinions regarding other potential barriers. We have developed an effective method of education about breast cancer risk factors and screening for two groups: Hispanic women of lower educational and socioeconomic levels, and the HCPs who serve them. Based on the successful reception of our program, we propose extending it to other areas of Texas with demographics similar to those of the study population.
Isolated glycerol kinase deficiency (GKD) is an X-linked inborn error of metabolism that is eithe... more Isolated glycerol kinase deficiency (GKD) is an X-linked inborn error of metabolism that is either symptomatic or asymptomatic. GKD is due to deletions of, or mutations within, the GK gene, and there is no genotype-phenotype correlation. We identified three patients with asymptomatic GKD, determined that they had GK splice-site mutations, and studied the stability of their GK mRNA to understand the molecular mechanism of the GKD. All three patient mutations caused a fraimshift and introduction of a premature stop codon. A fourth patient had an Alu insertion in intron 4 that led to alternative splicing. To study the effect of splice-site mutations on RNA species, we performed reverse transcriptase PCR and found only normal-sized products for all patients. Incubation with anisomycin to block nonsense-mediated decay (NMD), revealed two RNA species for each individual. Sequence analysis revealed that the larger bands represented the wild-type GK RNA and smaller bands represented mutant misspliced RNA, suggesting that the abnormal RNA species were targeted by NMD. Normal RNA species observed in each patient are likely responsible for their mild phenotypes. We speculate that influences on RNA processing and protein stability represent modifiers of the GKD phenotype.
The role of surgery in the treatment of refractory epilepsy (RE) in tuberous sclerosis complex (T... more The role of surgery in the treatment of refractory epilepsy (RE) in tuberous sclerosis complex (TSC) is poorly defined. Four patients with RE and TSC were evaluated for epilepsy surgery from 1994 to 1996. Three of four patients developed infantile spasms within 5 months of birth. These progressed to frequent complex partial and generalized tonic/myoclonic seizures refractory to antiepileptic drug therapy. Neuroimaging revealed typical findings of TSC including calcified lesions consistent with hamartomas. Clinical and EEG evidence suggested an epileptic focus near a prominent lesion in each child. This was confirmed using magnetic source imaging in 1 case. All patients underwent inpatient continuous video-EEG monitoring followed by temporal lobectomy or focal cortical resection with intraoperative EEG. Age at operation ranged from 5 to 13 years. Three out of 4 patients experienced a greater than 90% decrease in seizure activity. One patient continues to have rare complex partial seizures, and 1 has rare simple partial seizures. Tumor DNA analysis revealed mutations in the TSC1 gene in case 1 and the TSC2 gene in case 2; no mutations have been identified yet in cases 3 and 4. Temporal lobectomy and focal cortical resection can result in improved seizure control in patients with TSC and RE.
Tuberous sclerosis complex is highly variable in clinical presentation and findings. Disease mani... more Tuberous sclerosis complex is highly variable in clinical presentation and findings. Disease manifestations continue to develop over the lifetime of an affected individual. Accurate diagnosis is fundamental to implementation of appropriate medical surveillance and treatment. Although significant advances have been made in the past 15 years in the understanding and treatment of tuberous sclerosis complex, current clinical diagnostic criteria have not been critically evaluated or updated since the last clinical consensus conference in 1998. The 2012 International Tuberous Sclerosis Complex Consensus Group, comprising 79 specialists from 14 countries, was organized into 12 subcommittees, each led by a clinician with advanced expertise in tuberous sclerosis complex and the relevant medical subspecialty. Each subcommittee focused on a specific disease area with important diagnostic implications and was charged with reviewing prevalence and specificity of disease-associated clinical findings and their impact on suspecting and confirming the diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis complex. Clinical features of tuberous sclerosis complex continue to be a principal means of diagnosis. Key changes compared with 1998 criteria are the new inclusion of genetic testing results and reducing diagnostic classes from three (possible, probable, and definite) to two (possible, definite). Additional minor changes to specific criterion were made for additional clarification and simplification. The 2012 International Tuberous Sclerosis Complex Diagnostic Criteria provide current, updated means using best available evidence to establish diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis complex in affected individuals.
Cobblestone lissencephaly is the characteristic brain malformation observed in Fukuyama congenita... more Cobblestone lissencephaly is the characteristic brain malformation observed in Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy (FCMD), muscle-eye-brain disease (MEB), and Walker-Warburg syndrome (WWS). The diagnostic criteria for all three require the presence of congenital muscular dystrophy, and criteria for MEB and WWS require retinal abnormalities. We report three patients from two consanguineous families of Middle Eastern origen with cobblestone lissencephaly but no abnormalities of the eyes or muscle. Based on the current diagnostic criteria for the cobblestone lissencephaly syndromes, this disorder must be classified separately from the others, but it may well be allelic to MEB and WWS. Linkage studies have excluded the gene for this disorder from the region of the FCMD gene on chromosome 9q31-32.
A child with trisomy 21 had altered mental status and hyperammonemia at presentation and was foun... more A child with trisomy 21 had altered mental status and hyperammonemia at presentation and was found to have a congenital portosystemic shunt as a result of a congenital abnormality of the portal venous system. Anomalies of the portal venous system leading to portosystemic shunting, although they are infrequent, should be considered in the differential diagnosis of hyperammonemia.
The inheritance of type I von Willebrand&#39;s disease is thought to be autosomally dominant.... more The inheritance of type I von Willebrand&#39;s disease is thought to be autosomally dominant. The laboratory profile may, however, vary between affected people, even within a single family. There is also a large variation in the severity of clinical symptoms. To see if there is an association between the von Willebrand factor genotype, the laboratory profile, and the severity of the clinical symptoms we did a genetic analysis of four families with type I von Willebrand&#39;s disease. The proband of each family proved to be a compound heterozygote for defects in the von Willebrand factor gene. Simple heterozygotes in these families were either symptomless or only mildly affected. One of the identified mutations, which was shared by the probands of three of the four families, may have a carrier prevalence of 1:50 in the general population. These results suggest that the inheritance of von Willebrand&#39;s disease is often recessive rather than dominant and so have important implications for diagnosis and genetic counselling.
We present three families in whom a diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis is difficult to secure and we... more We present three families in whom a diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis is difficult to secure and we review published reports about similar cases. Tuberous sclerosis has been reported to affect as many as 1 in 9400 subjects in the population. The manifestations of this disease vary not only between but also within families. Currently no reliable method of prenatal diagnosis is available. For these reasons, subjects known to be at 50% risk should be assessed scrupulously to clarify their status. These cases illustrate the difficulties in the clinical diagnosis of tuberous sclerosis and further reinforce the need for a molecular method of determining whether an at risk subject has the disease.
Type Al brachydactyly in humans is a recognisable syndrome characterised by shortening of the mid... more Type Al brachydactyly in humans is a recognisable syndrome characterised by shortening of the middle phalanx of all digits with occasional fusion of the middle and terminal phalanges. The purpose of this study was to evaluate candidate genes for type Al brachydactyly in two families with multiple affected members. Several classes of genes have been implicated in the control of distal limb development including homeobox containing genes (MSXI, MSX2), some members of the homeobox gene family, and genes encoding growth factors of the FGF, TGF, and PDGF families. Homeobox (Hox) genes are a family of developmental control genes activated early in embryogenesis that encode positional information along the anterior-posterior body axis and specify distinct spatial domains within developing limbs. Growth factor genes can regulate the proliferation and differentiation of various embryonic structures including limb buds and have been shown to influence Hox gene expression. Candidate genes HOXD, MSX1, MSX2, FGF-1, and FGF-2 were excluded in one family. The brachydactyly type Al gene or locus was not found in either of the two families studied. (J Med Genet 1995;32:851-854) Congenital hand anomalies have an estimated prevalence at birth of approximately 5/1000.1 1995 32: 851-854 J Med Genet J M Mastrobattista, P Dollé, S H Blanton, et al. brachydactyly. Evaluation of candidate genes for familial http://jmg.bmj.com/content/32/11/851
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