Waardenburg syndrome type 4 (WS4), also called Shah-Waardenburg syndrome, is a rare neurocristopathy that results from the absence of melanocytes and intrinsic ganglion cells of the terminal hindgut. WS4 is inherited as an autosomal recessive trait attributable to EDN3 or EDNRB mutations. It is inherited as an autosomal dominant condition when SOX10 mutations are involved. We report on three unrelated WS4 patients with growth retardation and an as-yet-unreported neurological phenotype with impairment of both the central and autonomous nervous systems and occasionally neonatal hypotonia and arthrogryposis. Each of the three patients was heterozygous for a SOX10 truncating mutation (Y313X in two patients and S251X [corrected] in one patient). The extended spectrum of the WS4 phenotype is relevant to the brain expression of SOX10 during human embryonic and fetal development. Indeed, the expression of SOX10 in human embryo was not restricted to neural-crest-derived cells but also involved fetal brain cells, most likely of glial origin. These data emphasize the important role of SOX10 in early development of both neural-crest-derived tissues, namely melanocytes, autonomic and enteric nervous systems, and glial cells of the central nervous system.
The authors believe there is a prevalence of nonspecific headache in hypothyroidism and that it has a particular response to thyroid hormone therapy. Hypothyroidism is another cephalalgia with an endocrinological cause after menstrual cephalalgia. We suspect a metabolic or vascular pathophysiological process.
We report on four patients with severe polyneuropathy associated with intestinal pseudoobstruction (MNGIE). Three patients presented characteristic supranuclear ophthalmoplegia, and hyperdense signals on T2 weighted cerebral MRI and dystrophic mitochondria in Schwann cells and in endothelial cells in nerve biopsy specimens. Two of these patients had a Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) presentation. All three were heterozygous for a recessively transmitted double substitution in the TP gene: Glu286Lys/Glu289Ala, Asp156Gly/Leu177Pro and Glu289Ala/Gly387Asp. The fourth patient, who was the only patient of this series with an affected sib, had no oculomotor manifestations, nor T2 hyperdense signals on brain MRI, and no TP gene mutation and or morphological abnormalities of mitochondria on electron microscopic examination. He was the only patient of this series with an affected sib. The three patients with the full MNGIE syndrome died before the age of 30 years. Detailed results of nerve pathology show that severe axonal degeneration is associated with segmental abnormalities of the myelin sheath in this syndrome which appears genetically heterogeneous. Our findings suggest that only ophthalmoplegia and hyperdense signals on cerebral MRI are directly related to the mitochondriopathy.
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