Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL), a genetic arteriopathy related to Notch3 mutations, is difficult to diagnosis. The goal of this study was to determine the value of clinical, immunohistochemical, and molecular techniques for the diagnosis of CADASIL. Clinical features and the immunohistochemical and molecular findings in 200 subjects with suspected CADASIL in whom 93 biopsies and 190 molecular studies are reported. Eighteen pathogenic mutations of the Notch3 gene, six of them previously unreported, were detected in 67 patients. The clinical features did not permit differentiation between CADASIL and CADASIL-like syndromes. The sensitivity and specificity of the skin biopsies was 97.7% and 56.5%, respectively, but increased to 100% and 81.5%, respectively, in cases with proven family history. In conclusion, a clinical diagnosis of CADASIL is difficult to determine and confirmatory techniques should be used judiciously.
A 37-year-old woman with hepatic failure developed a locked-in syndrome after correction of a severe symptomatic hyponatremia. Magnetic resonance imaging showed a lesion involving the basis pontis and extending into the midbrain, consistent with central pontine myelinolysis. In this patient the rate of correction of hyponatremia was within the range considered sure by several authors, but factors such as hepatic encephalopathy, a single generalized seizure and correction of hyponatremia in 42 h with a change in serum sodium concentration of 34 mmol/1 were present, and they could have been etiologically relevant. This case, like other recent reports, suggests new views about the pathogenesis of cerebral demyelinating lesions in patients with hyponatremia.
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