The results indicate that the MNSI is a good screening tool for diabetic neuropathy and that the MDNS coupled with nerve conductions provides a simple means to confirm this diagnosis.
Clinical and electrophysiological investigations and nerve biopsies were carried out on 61 patients shown to have a chromosome 17p11.2 duplication (hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy-HMSN Ia). Of these, 50 showed a Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) phenotype and eight could be classified as having the Roussy-Lévy syndrome. Of the patients with a CMT phenotype, three had associated pyramidal signs and of these one had 'complicated' HMSN and also signs of cerebellar and bulbar involvement. Diaphragmatic weakness was present in three severely affected cases, one of whom also had denervation of the anal sphincter associated with faecal incontinence. One unusual case presented in middle life with incapacitating muscle cramps associated with calf hypertrophy and only mild clinical signs of neuropathy. Prominent distal sensory loss was a consistent feature in one family, resulting in acrodystrophic changes in several members. Concurrent focal peripheral nerve lesions were seen with both the CMT and Roussy-Lévy phenotypes, in seven patients. Upper limb motor nerve conduction velocity was 19.9 m/s +/- 1.3 (SEM), range 5-34 m/s. This corresponds to values previously obtained for autosomal dominant HMSN I. This series consisted mainly of older patients with more advanced disease. In contrast to the findings in younger patients, in their nerve biopsies, myelin thickness tended to be relatively reduced for axon size, indicating remyelination and/or hypomyelination; there was also regression of the onion bulbs. It is concluded that the possession of two copies of the peripheral myelin protein 22 gene within the duplicated region on chromosome 17p gives rise to a range of phenotypes and not solely to a CMT syndrome, and that the pattern of histological change in the peripheral nerves alters with advance of the disease.
Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA) is an autosomal recessive disorder with a frequency of 1 in 50 000 live births. In 97% of patients it is caused by the abnormal expansion of a GAA repeat in intron 1 of the FRDA gene on chromosome 9, which encodes a 210 amino acid protein called frataxin. Frataxin is widely expressed and has been localized to mitochondria although its function is unknown. We have investigated mitochondrial function, mitochondrial DNA levels, aconitase activity and iron content in tissues from FRDA patients. There were significant reductions in the activities of complex I, complex II/III and aconitase in FRDA heart. Respiratory chain and aconitase activities were decreased although not significantly in skeletal muscle, but were normal in FRDA cerebellum and dorsal root ganglia, although there was a mild decrease in aconitase activity in the latter. Mitochondrial DNA levels were reduced in FRDA heart and skeletal muscle, although in skeletal muscle this was paralleled by a decline in citrate synthase activity. Increased iron deposition was seen in FRDA heart, liver and spleen in a pattern consistent with a mitochondrial location. The iron accumulation, mitochondrial respiratory chain and aconitase dysfunction and mitochondrial DNA depletion in FRDA heart samples largely paralleled those in the yeast YFH1 knockout model, suggesting that frataxin may be involved in mitochondrial iron regulation or iron sulphur centre synthesis. However, the severe deficiency in aconitase activity also suggests that oxidant stress may induce a self-amplifying cycle of oxidative damage and mitochondrial dysfunction, which may contribute to cellular toxicity.
Although there are now widely accepted diagnostic criteria for chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyradiculoneuropathy (CIDP) there are few epidemiological data. A prevalence study was performed in the four Thames health regions, population 14 049 850. The prevalence date was 1 January 1995. Data were from a national consultant neurologist surveillance programme and the personal case series of two investigators. A diagnosis of CIDP was made according to definite, probable, possible, or suggestive diagnostic criteria. A wide diVerence in prevalence rates between the four health regions was noted, probably due to reporting bias. In the South East Thames Region, from which the data were most comprehensive the prevalence for definite and probable cases was 1.00/100 000; the highest total prevalence (if possible and suggestive cases were included) would have been 1.24/100 000. On the prevalence date 13% of patients required aid to walk and 54% were still receiving treatment. (J Neurol Neurosurg Psychiatry 1999;66:677-680)
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