Neurocutaneous syndromes Flashcards
Tuberous sclerosis
Autosomal dominant mutation in TSC1 (Hamartin) or TSC2 (60% Tuberin and more severe phenotype). High rate of spontaneous mutations leading to abnormal mTOR activity and cell growth.
Major criteria (2+): hypomelanotic macules, faical angiofibroma, ungal fibroa, shagreen patch, retinal hamartoma, cortical tubers, subependymal nodules, SEGA, cardiac rhabdomyoma, pulmonary lymphangiomyomatosis, renal angiomyolipoma
Complications of TS
mTOR inhibitor - Rapamycin
Infantile spasms - vigabatrin first line
50% will have cognitive impairment. High rates of autism and epilepsy.
Associated with PKD1/TSC2 deletion with renal cysts and berry aneurysms.
Estrogen can exacerbate LAM
Pits in dental enamel
NF1 (at least 2 criteria)
- 6+ cafe au lait (>5mm prepubertal or >15 mm pubertal)
- 2+ neurofibromas
- Plexiform neurofibroma
- Axillary or inguinal freckling
- Optic glioma (may present with precocious puberty)
- 2+ lisch nodules
- osseous (sphenoid dysplasia, tibial pseudoarthrosis)
- First degree relative
NF1 associated features
AD mutation in NF1 tumour suppressor gene (RAS gene pathway)
Macrocephaly, epilepsy in 3-7%. Hydrocephalus.
Specific learning (visual/language) difficulties
ADHD without hyperactivity.
Short stature, growth retardation
Scoliosis
Moya moya, leukaemia, renal artery stenosis + HTN
Plexiforms can progress to Malignant Peripheral Nerve Shealth Tumours (sarcomas)
Sturge Weber
Venous angioma of leptomeninges (pia with underlying cortical calcification and atrophy). Ipsilateral port wine stain above the palpebral fissure with choroidal angioma (sporadic inheritance).
75-90% have seizures with transient stroke like episides with hemiplegia.
Intellectual disability, glaucoma common.
Incontinentia pigmenti
X linked dominant condition lethal in males
CNS in half with recurrent episodes of encephalomyelitis. 1/3 have retinal detachment.
Other distinguishing feature is of peg shaped teeth.
Von Hippel-Lindau
Autosomal disorder characterized by the formation of haemangioblastoma tumors and fluid-filled sacs (cysts) in many different parts of the body.
Associated with retinal angiomas and vision loss, phaeochromocytomas, renal cell carciinoma and hearing loss.