1. The Perirolandic Sign: A Unique Imaging Finding Observed in Association with Polymerase γ-Related Disorders.
- Author
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Gonçalves FG, Hill B, Guo Y, Muraresku CC, McCormick E, Alves CAPF, Teixeira SR, Martin-Saavedra JS, Zolkipli-Cunningham Z, Falk MJ, Vossough A, Goldstein A, and Zuccoli G
- Subjects
- Brain pathology, Child, Child, Preschool, DNA Polymerase gamma genetics, Electroencephalography, Female, Humans, Magnetic Resonance Imaging, Male, Mitochondrial Diseases genetics, Mitochondrial Diseases pathology, Retrospective Studies, Seizures pathology, Brain diagnostic imaging, Mitochondrial Diseases diagnostic imaging, Neuroimaging methods, Seizures diagnostic imaging, Seizures genetics
- Abstract
Pathogenic variants in the polymerase γ gene ( POLG ) cause a diverse group of pathologies known as POLG -related disorders. In this report, we describe brain MR imaging findings and electroencephalogram correlates of 13 children with POLG -related disorders at diagnosis and follow-up. At diagnosis, all patients had seizures and 12 had abnormal MR imaging findings. The most common imaging findings were unilateral or bilateral perirolandic (54%) and unilateral or bilateral thalamic signal changes (77%). Association of epilepsia partialis continua with perirolandic and thalamic signal changes was present in 86% and 70% of the patients, respectively. The occipital lobe was affected in 2 patients. On follow-up, 92% of the patients had disease progression or fatal outcome. Rapid volume loss was seen in 77% of the patients. The occipital lobe (61%) and thalamus (61%) were the most affected brain regions. Perirolandic signal changes and seizures may represent a brain imaging biomarker of early-onset pediatric POLG -related disorders., (© 2020 by American Journal of Neuroradiology.)
- Published
- 2020
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