SIL1 (also called BAP) acts as a nucleotide exchange factor for the Hsp70 chaperone BiP (also called GRP78), which is a key regulator of the main functions of the endoplasmic reticulum. We found nine distinct mutations that would disrupt the SIL1 protein in individuals with Marinesco-Sjögren syndrome, an autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxia complicated by cataracts, developmental delay and myopathy. Identification of SIL1 mutations implicates Marinesco-Sjögren syndrome as a disease of endoplasmic reticulum dysfunction and suggests a role for this organelle in multisystem disorders.
Surgery is considered to be the standard therapy for arachnoid cysts (ACs). We report the case of a 13-year-old boy in whom a right temporal AC disappeared spontaneously over a period of 10 years. Bulging of the right temporal skull led to the detection of the cyst by computed tomography (CT) scan at the age of 3 years. There were no other clinical symptoms. Subsequent CT scans showed spontaneous regression of the cyst without surgical intervention. The question as to how ACs should be treated is discussed.
We report six patients with Emery-Dreifuss muscular dystrophy (EDMD) and four patients including one female with EDMD phenotype (EDMDP). This series includes one sporadic case who had previously been reported in this journal under the diagnosis of "rigid spine syndrome" in 1977. Time of observation ranged from three to ten years. Detailed cardiological assessment was performed in all patients, skeletal muscle biopsies were obtained from 9 out of 10 and cardiac muscle biopsies from 2 out of 10 patients. One patient showed evidence of cardiomyopathy in the absence of clinically apparent neuromuscular disease and one sibling of another EDMD patient reportedly had a similar combination of symptoms which, to our knowledge, has not yet been reported. Cardiac involvement was found to consist of four independent, albeit often combined features: 1) impairment of impulse generating cells; 2) conduction defects with atrial preponderance; 3) increased atrial and ventricular heterotopia; and 4) functional impairment of ventricular myocardium. Ventricular involvement as apparent from ventricular heterotopia, abnormal enddiastolic diameter, decrease of contractility and/or morphological evidence of ventricular myocardial disease was found in 7 out of 10 patients and confirmed by myocardial histopathology in two EDMD patients. In one myocardial biopsy extensive accumulations of intermediate filaments were observed, a rare finding, which has not been linked to EDMD before. Skeletal muscle biopsies showed evidence of myopathy throughout but several equivocal features such as fibre type grouping in EDMD and fibre type disproportion in EDMDP were also observed. The variability of clinical manifestation of both cardiac and neuromuscular disease encompassed a broader spectrum than apparent from the literature. The consequences for the inherent differential diagnosis are discussed.
We report on 3 sporadic cases of in utero onset megalencephaly. Children were born to healthy nonconsanguineous parents after uneventful pregnancies. Head circumferences were just above the 97th centile at birth in 2 patients, 2 cm above the 97th centile in 1 patient, and subsequently increased to 4.5-6.5 cm above the 97th centile at age 5 years. All patients completely lacked motor and speech development and showed very little intellectual progress. There was a distinctive facial aspect with frontal bossing, low nose bridge, and large eyes, but no cutaneous abnormalities and no signs of other organ involvement. Magnetic resonance imaging showed bilateral megalencephaly with a broad corpus callosum, enlarged white matter, and focally thick gray matter, resulting in pachygyric appearance of the cortex. Opercularization was incomplete, and the Sylvian fissures were wide. Somatosensory evoked potentials in 1 patient showed normal latencies of cervical and contracortical potentials but bilaterally increased cortical amplitudes. To the best of our knowledge, no similar case observations have been recorded previously.
We have investigated 3 children aged 6, 3, and 2 years, from 2 families, with the clinical features of Marinesco-Sjögren syndrome. Muscle biopsy specimens from all 3 were abnormal and showed small vacuoles and slight variation in fiber size. Electron microscopy revealed vacuolation and membranous whorls and, in particular, a unique dense membranous structure associated with nuclei. These cases emphasize the involvement of muscle in Marinesco-Sjögren syndrome and the importance of electron microscopy in differential diagnosis.
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