Molecular correlates of epilepsy in early diagnosed and treated Menkes disease.
Publication/Presentation Date
10-1-2010
Abstract
Epilepsy is a major feature of Menkes disease, an X-linked recessive infantile neurodegenerative disorder caused by mutations in ATP7A, which produces a copper-transporting ATPase. Three prior surveys indicated clinical seizures and electroencephalographic (EEG) abnormalities in a combined 27 of 29 (93%) symptomatic Menkes disease patients diagnosed at 2 months of age or older. To assess the influence of earlier, presymptomatic diagnosis and treatment on seizure semiology and brain electrical activity, we evaluated 71 EEGs in 24 Menkes disease patients who were diagnosed and treated with copper injections in early infancy (≤6 weeks of age), and whose ATP7A mutations we determined. Clinical seizures were observed in only 12.5% (3/24) of these patients, although 46% (11/24) had at least one abnormal EEG tracing, including 50% of patients with large deletions in ATP7A, 50% of those with small deletions, 60% of those with nonsense mutations, and 57% of those with canonical splice junction mutations. In contrast, five patients with mutations shown to retain partial function, either via some correct RNA splicing or residual copper transport capacity, had neither clinical seizures nor EEG abnormalities. Our findings suggest that early diagnosis and treatment improve brain electrical activity and decrease seizure occurrence in classical Menkes disease irrespective of the precise molecular defect. Subjects with ATP7A mutations that retain some function seem particularly well protected by early intervention against the possibility of epilepsy.
Volume
33
Issue
5
First Page
583
Last Page
589
ISSN
1573-2665
Published In/Presented At
Kaler, S. G., Liew, C. J., Donsante, A., Hicks, J. D., Sato, S., & Greenfield, J. C. (2010). Molecular correlates of epilepsy in early diagnosed and treated Menkes disease. Journal of inherited metabolic disease, 33(5), 583–589. https://doi.org/10.1007/s10545-010-9118-2
Disciplines
Medicine and Health Sciences
PubMedID
20652413
Department(s)
Department of Medicine
Document Type
Article