Cardiomyopathy is the main clinical feature and complication in patients affected by subclinical or mild BMD. The cardiac manifestation is characterized by early right ventricular involvement and is later associated with left ventricular impairment. In mild BMD, myocardial damage may develop because the patients, who are unaware of a possible cardiac involvement, are still able to perform strenuous muscle exercise and, through pressure or volume overload, may induce mechanical stress, which is harmful for dystrophin-deficient myocardial cells.
Migraine is a common and disabling neurological disease of unknown origin characterized by a remarkable clinical variability. It shows strong familial aggregation, suggesting that genetic factors are involved in its pathogenesis. Different approaches have been used to elucidate this hereditary component, but a unique transmission model and causative gene(s) have not yet been identified. We report clinical and molecular data from a large Italian pedigree in which migraine without aura (MO) segregates as an autosomal dominant trait. After exclusion of any association between MO and the known familial hemiplegic migraine and migraine with aura loci, we performed a genomewide linkage analysis using 482 polymorphic microsatellite markers. We obtained significant evidence of linkage between the MO phenotype and the marker D14S978 on 14q22.1 (maximum two-point LOD score of 3.70, at a recombination fraction of 0.01). Multipoint parametric analysis (maximum LOD score of 5.25 between markers D14S976 and D14S978) and haplotype construction showed strong evidence of linkage in a region of 10 cM flanked by markers D14S1027 and D14S980 on chromosome 14q21.2-q22.3. These results indicate the first evidence of a genetic locus associated with MO on chromosome 14.
In the course of an epidemiological survey in four provinces of Veneto (northeastern Italy) 67 spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) cases (types I, II and III) were recorded. The survey spanned the period 1960–1983 and involved 859,891 consecutive live-born infants in a population of 2,635,800 inhabitants. The overall prevalence at birth for SMA types I, II and IIIwas 7.8/100,000 live births. Type I alone accounted for 4.1/100,000 live births. If the hypothesis that SMA types I, II and III are clinical manifestations of allelic mutations is assumed, the mutation rate would be about 70 X 10–6 and the frequency of the heterozygotes 1 in 57.
The results presented here confirm that the short arm of chromosome 1 harbours one or more genes responsible for the development of pheochromocytoma and suggest that one of them could map in a 3.9-Mb fragment between 1p32.3 and 1p32.1.
scite is a Brooklyn-based organization that helps researchers better discover and understand research articles through Smart Citations–citations that display the context of the citation and describe whether the article provides supporting or contrasting evidence. scite is used by students and researchers from around the world and is funded in part by the National Science Foundation and the National Institute on Drug Abuse of the National Institutes of Health.