Huntington's disease Flashcards

1
Q

Define Huntington’s disease.

A

Huntington’s disease is an autosomal dominant neurodegenerative disorder

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2
Q

What is the aetiology of Huntington’s disease?

A

Pathology:

Atrophy and neuronal loss of striatum and cortex. Chorea results from striatal dysfunction.

Genetic basis:

Expanded CAG repeats on Chr. 4 N-terminus of the gene that codes for the huntingtin protein. If _>_40 CAG repeats then certain to develop Huntington’s.

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3
Q

What are the risk factors for Huntington’s disease?

A
  • FH
  • Expanded CAG repeat length at N-terminal of huntingtin gene
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4
Q

When does Huntington’s usually present?

A

Often presents in mid-life (35-45yrs) but may appear at any age.

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5
Q

How common is Huntington’s? M:F? Typical onset?

A
  • In Europe - 6/100,000
  • Incurable, progressive - duration of disease is approx 20 years from time of diagnosis to death
  • M:F 1:1
  • Typical onset is 35-45 years
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6
Q

What are the two variants of Huntington’s?

A
  1. Rigid form: children or young adults present with rigidity and may not have chorea.
  2. Choreic form: patients have chorea as a significant initial presenting feature. This is the most common phenotype.
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7
Q

What are the clinical features of Huntington’s?

A

Starts with cognitive changes (e.g. reduced performance), then behavioural issues (e.g. irritability and impulsivity) then motor symptoms last (e.g. chorea, twitching, bradykinesia, rigidity)

  • concentration impairment reducing performance at work or school
  • depression
  • incoordination (dropping things, stumbling, or RTA)
  • irritability
  • impulsivity
  • lack of attention to hygiene
  • personality change
  • chorea
  • restlessness
  • bradykinesia/rigidity
  • depression
  • obsessions and compulsions

O/E:

  • twitching/restlessness,
  • loss of fine motor coordination (finger tapping),
  • slowed saccadic eye movements,
  • motor impersistence (e.g. when asked to squeeze for 10sec intensity varies),
  • impaired tandem gait
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8
Q

Define chorea.

A

Neurological disorder characterized by jerky involuntary movements affecting especially the shoulders, hips, and face.

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9
Q

What should patients without Huntington’s be able to do on physical examination?

A
  • Recite serial 7s seated, with eyes closed, without adventitious movements of fingers or toes.
  • Tap finger 25 times in 2 seconds (with equal speed, regularity)
  • Look quickly (saccade) between two index fingers, shoulder width apart.
  • Maintain tongue protrusion/lid closure/grip tightly with same intensity for 10 seconds (HD = milkmaid’s grip)
  • Walk heel to toe (tandem gait)
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10
Q

What investigations would you do for Huntington’s?

A
  • No initial tests - clinical diagnosis
  • Consider: testing for CAG repeats, MRI/CT may show caudate/striatal atrophy
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11
Q

Which parts of the brain does Huntington’s disease mostly affect?

A

Striatal dysfunction –> cognitive impairment, behavioural change, loss of coordination (→ chorea)

Damage is also seen in cortical and sub cortical structures.

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12
Q

What is the management of Huntington’s?

A

MDT approach

Counselling for patient and family, carer support

Depression (and anxiety) - the most treatable symptom with SSRI or SNRI, reduces risk of suicide

Irritability and aggression - benzodiazepines, anticonvulsants, antipsychotics

Chorea - haloperidol or trifluoperazine (antipsychotics), tetrabenazine (VMATi)

Bradykinesia/rigidity - levodopa/carbidopa

Physiotherapy - improves motor fitness, motor function and gait

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13
Q

What are the complications of Huntington’s disease?

A
  • Weight loss due to dysphagia
  • Falls
  • Suicide risk
  • Incontinence - end-stage
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14
Q

What is the prognosis with Huntington’s?

A

Chorea sometimes reduces in severity with progression of the disease

Diagnosis to death is usually 20 years

Depression should improve with therapy

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