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Electroclinical pattern in MECP2 duplication syndrome: eight new reported cases and review of literature

Authors :
Aglaia, Vignoli
Renato, Borgatti
Angela, Peron
Claudio, Zucca
Lucia, Ballarati
Clara, Bonaglia
Melissa, Bellini
Lucio, Giordano
Romina, Romaniello
Maria Francesca, Bedeschi
Roberta, Epifanio
Silvia, Russo
Rossella, Caselli
Daniela, Giardino
Francesca, Darra
Francesca, La Briola
Giuseppe, Banderali
Maria Paola, Canevini
Publication Year :
2012

Abstract

Duplications encompassing the MECP2 gene on the Xq28 region have been described in male patients with moderate to severe mental retardation, absent speech, neonatal hypotonia, progressive spasticity and/or ataxia, recurrent severe respiratory infections, gastrointestinal problems, mild facial dysmorphisms (midface hypoplasia, depressed nasal bridge, large ears) and epilepsy. Epilepsy can occur in50% of cases, but the types of seizures and the electroclinical findings in affected male individuals have been poorly investigated up to the present. Herein we describe eight patients with MECP2 duplication syndrome and a specific clinical and electroencephalographic pattern.Array CGH of genomic DNA from the probands was performed, and an Xq28 duplication ranging from 209 kb to 6.36 Mb was found in each patient. Electroencephalography studies and clinical and seizure features of all the patients were analyzed.We found that epilepsy tended to occur between late childhood and adolescence. Episodes of loss of tone of the head and/or the trunk were the most represented seizure types. Generalized tonic-clonic seizures were rarely observed. The typical interictal EEG pattern showed abnormal background activity, with generalized slow spike and wave asynchronous discharge with frontotemporal predominance. Sleep electroencephalography studies also demonstrated abnormal background activity; spindles and K complex were often abnormal in morphology and amplitude. Response to therapy was generally poor and drug resistance was a significant feature.Although these cases and a review of the literature indicate that epilepsy associated with MECP2 duplication syndrome cannot be considered a useful marker for early diagnosis, epilepsy is present in90% of adolescent patients and shows a peculiar electroclinical pattern. Consequently, it should be considered a significant sign of the syndrome, and an EEG follow-up of these patients should be encouraged from early childhood. Moreover, the definition of a more specific epileptic phenotype could be useful in order to suspect MECP2 duplication syndrome in older undiagnosed patients.

Details

Language :
English
Database :
OpenAIRE
Accession number :
edsair.pmid.dedup....f4259a8d0ec86bdbccbbcee6d5af3f70