Lissencephaly Flashcards

1
Q

Lissencephaly

A
  • “Smooth brain”
  • Genetic malformation of the cerebral cortex in which abnormal neuronal migration in early development results in smooth cerebral surfaces with absent (agyria) or decreased (pachygyria) convolutions.
  • In children, characterized by seizures, cognitive dysfunction, poor feeding, and spasticity
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2
Q

Miller-Dieker syndrome

A
  • Inherited form of lissencephalopathy
  • Due to a microdeletion on chromosme 17
    • 80% de novo, 20% inherited
  • Agyria and dysmorphic features
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3
Q

Isolated lissencephaly sequence

A
  • Milder phenotype of lissencephaly compared to Miller-Dieker syndrome
  • Pachygryria, mild or absent dysmorphic features
  • LIS1 form: AD on chr17. Pachygyria is primarily posterior
  • Doublecortin form: X-linked. Pachygyria is primarily anterior
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4
Q

Subcortical band heterotropia

A
  • A radiographic finding
  • Band of heterotropic gray matter located just beneath the cortex and separated by a thin wall of normal white matter
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5
Q

Infantile spasms

A
  • Dramatic, repetitive bouts of rapid neck flexion, arm extension, hip and knee flexio, etc, often with arousal from sleep
  • Parents may describe them as unprovoked startle responses or colicky spells due to abdominal pain, but without crying
  • Typical presentation between 3-8 months of age
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6
Q

Hypertelorism

A

Abnormally increased distance between the eyes

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7
Q

Epicanthal fold

A

Skin fold of the upper eyelid covering the medial corner of the eye

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8
Q

Clinodactyly

A
  • Congenital condition where the little finger is curved towards the ring finger
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9
Q

Treament for lissencephaly

A
  • ACTH or prednisone to prevent infantile spasms (used with varying success)
  • Feeding tube and gastrostomy to prevent aspiration long-term (aspiration and pneumonia are a common cause of death)
  • Physical therapy and muscle relaxants to slow the development of spasms and contractures, which may cause falls, atelectasis, decubitus ulcers
  • Treatment of congenital heart and kidney anomalies
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10
Q

Genetic counseling in lissencephalopathy

A

Recurrence risk is very low for most cases, as most mutations are de novo.

However, if a recpirocal translocation is identified, recurrence risk can be as high as 33%

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11
Q

Diagnosis of lissencephaly

A
  • In utero:
    • Karyotyping, FISH, amniocentesis, chorionic villus sampling
    • Imaging for cerebral gyral malformations (if beyond 28 weeks)
  • In a child:
    • Neuroimaging
    • FISH
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12
Q

Clinical hallmarks of Miller-Dieker syndrome

A
  • Microcephaly with abnormal fascies
  • Motor delay (with spasms)
  • Cognitive delay
  • Seizures
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13
Q

__ can mimic infantile spasms, but will always occur after a child eats, and the child will typically be developmentally normal

A

Intestinal colic can mimic infantile spasms, but will always occur after a child eats, and the child will typically be developmentally normal

This might make you suspect intussusception

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