The diagnosis of Hallervorden-Spatz disease (HSD) has usually been made post mortem, although the recent description of characteristic abnormalities in the globus pallidus has suggested the possibility of an in vivo diagnosis. We present the clinical histories, neurological features and MRI findings of 11 patients, diagnosed as having HSD. Generalized dystonia with predominance of oromandibular involvement, behavioural changes followed by dementia and retinal degeneration were present in all the patients. MRI pallidal abnormalities consisted of decreased signal intensity in T2-weighted images, compatible with iron deposits, and of a small area of hyperintensity in its internal segment ("eye of the tiger" sign). We propose that the combination of these neurological signs with these MRI findings could be considered as highly suggestive of a diagnosis of HSD in living patients.
A 9-year-old boy showed a progressive generalized dystonia, with onset at the age of 4 years, combined with mental deterioration and behavioral disturbances. The values of beta-hexosaminidase activities studied in plasma, leukocytes, and fibroblasts obtained using two different substrates (MUG-NAc and MUG-NAc-6-S) were significantly reduced but higher than in Tay-Sachs disease and similar to those found in the juvenile chronic form of GM2 gangliosidosis. With anticholinergic therapy, for 1.5 years, the dystonic symptoms did not progress and the boy can still care for himself and attend school. The description of another case of the disease, clinically expressed as dystonia, corroborates the existence of a dystonic phenotype of GM2 gangliosidosis.
We report the electroclinical and neuropathologic correlations in 2 children aged 2.5 months affected by early myoclonic encephalopathy characterized by epileptic seizures, erratic myoclonus, and an EEG pattern of burst suppression. Despite different etiologies, the neuropathologic findings showed similar abnormalities in both cases, with no substantial impairment of the myelination processes. Islands of matrix tissue scattered in the periventricular region and neurons aligned marginally in the bulbar olives were detected. The presence of numerous large spiny neurons dispersed in the white matter along the axons of the cortical gyri was the most striking finding. The neurons have been interpreted as abnormally persisting interstitial cells in 2.5-month-old children. These early generated neurons, normally present during neocortical histogenesis, are programmed to die near the end of gestation or soon after birth. The interstitial cells are regarded as a waiting compartment of afferent fibers during cortical development. Their persistence in our patients represents an anatomic condition for cortical disconnection providing a pathophysiologic basis to burst-suppression phenomena.
We evaluated an otherwise healthy 57-year-old man with refractory posttraumatic complex partial seizures. Results of neurological examination and cranial magnetic resonance imaging studies were normal. There was no evidence of tremor. After failing carbamazepine and phenytoin monotherapy, we treated him with phenytoin and valproate. Immediately after starting the valproate, he developed a moderate postural and kinetic tremor of the upper extremities, with partial functional disability. Acetazolamide (AZA) 8 mg/kg/day was started, advancing to 14 mglkglday in 5 days. Significant clinical improvement of the tremor after 8 days of treatment was evident (Fig.
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