Clinical features of childhood-onset paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia with PRRT2 gene mutations

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Abstract

Aim: To define better the phenotype and genotype of familial and sporadic cases of paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia (PKD) caused by mutations in the PRRT2 gene presenting in the paediatric age group. Method: We report the detailed clinical and molecular genetic features of 11 patients (six females, five males) with childhood-onset PRRT2-mutation-positive PKD. Results: Mean age at disease onset was 8 years 7.5 months (range 5-11y), and clinical presentation was characterized by daily short paroxysmal episodes of dystonia/dyskinesia. Most patients also had non-kinesigenic attacks in addition to the classical movement-induced paroxysmal episodes. One family demonstrated great phenotypic variability with PKD, infantile convulsions, and/or hemiplegic migraine affecting different family members with the same mutation. All patients in whom antiepileptics (carbamazepine/phenytoin) were tried showed a dramatic improvement with complete abolition of dyskinetic episodes. Interpretation: Our case series provides a detailed clinical description of patients with PRRT2-PKD, and reports a spectrum of disease-causing mutations, thereby expanding both the clinical phenotype and mutation spectrum of disease. © 2013 Mac Keith Press.

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Silveira-Moriyama, L., Gardiner, A. R., Meyer, E., King, M. D., Smith, M., Rakshi, K., … Kurian, M. A. (2013). Clinical features of childhood-onset paroxysmal kinesigenic dyskinesia with PRRT2 gene mutations. Developmental Medicine and Child Neurology, 55(4), 327–334. https://doi.org/10.1111/dmcn.12056

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