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Gaucher disease ascertained through a Parkinson's center: imaging and clinical characterization

Saunders-Pullman, Rachel; Hagenah, Johann; Dhawan, Vijay; Stanley, Kaili; Pastores, Gregory; Sathe, Swati; Tagliati, Michele; Condefer, Kelly; Palmese, Christina; Bruggemann, Norbert; Klein, Christine; Roe, Am; Kornreich, Ruth; Ozelius, Laurie; Bressman, Susan
Among the genes implicated for parkinsonism is glucocerebrosidase (GBA), which causes Gaucher disease (GD). Despite a growing literature that GD may present as parkinsonism, neuroimaging, olfaction, and neuropsychological testing have not been extensively reported. We describe transcranial sonography (TCS), 18F-fluorodopa (F-dopa) and fluorodeoxyglucose (FDG) Positron emission tomography, olfaction testing, neuropsychological testing, and clinical features in homozygous and compound heterozygous GBA mutation carriers identified through screening of 250 Ashkenazi Jewish parkinsonian individuals treated at a tertiary care center. We identified two individuals with N370S/R496H compound heterozygous mutations and two with N370S homozygous mutations; one individual died before completing detailed evaluation. TCS (n = 3) demonstrated nigral hyperechogenicity that was greater than controls [median area maximal substantia nigra echogenicity (aSNmax) = 0.28 cm(2) vs. 0.14 cm(2), P = 0.005], but similar to idiopathic PD (aSNmax = 0.31 cm(2)). FDG PET (n = 2) demonstrated hypermetabolism of the lentiform nuclei, and F-fluorodopa PET (n = 2), bilateral reduction in striatal F-dopa uptake. Olfaction was markedly impaired in the two tested cases, including onset of smell disturbance in adolescence in one. Neuropsychological features (n = 3) were consistent with Parkinson's disease (PD) or diffuse Lewy body disease (DLB). The imaging, neuropsychological and olfactory markers suggest the GD phenotype includes PD with and without features of DLB, marked olfactory loss, nigral hyperechogenicity on TCS, and F-dopa and FDG PET abnormalities
PMCID:2914177
PMID: 20629126
ISSN: 1531-8257
CID: 133771

The risk of Parkinson's disease in type 1 Gaucher disease

Bultron, Gilberto; Kacena, Katherine; Pearson, Daniel; Boxer, Michael; Yang, Ruhua; Sathe, Swati; Pastores, Gregory; Mistry, Pramod K
In Gaucher disease, defective lysosomal glucocerebrosidase due to mutations in the GBA1 gene results in lysosomal accumulation of glucocerebroside in mononuclear phagocytes and a multisystemic phenotype. Observations of occurrence of Parkinson's disease in some patients with non-neuronopathic type 1 Gaucher disease (GD1) and their first degree relatives has led to the identification of GBA1 heterozygous mutations as a genetic risk factor for idiopathic Parkinson's disease (PD). However, the magnitude of risk of PD in patients with known GD1 has not been determined, and it is not known whether GD1/PD represents a specific sub-phenotype of GD1 with distinctive genotype/phenotype characteristics. We estimated the risk of PD in a cohort of 444 consecutively evaluated patients with GD1 compared to that in the general population. Eleven patients developed parkinsonian syndrome during a 12-year follow-up period. The adjusted life-time risk ratio of PD in GD1 compared to that in the general population was 21.4 [95% confidence interval (95% CI) 10.7-38.3], with a higher risk in men compared to women. In our cohort, GD1/Parkinson's disease phenotype (GD1/PD) was characterized by higher GD1 severity score, due to higher incidence of avascular osteonecrosis. The clinical spectrum of PD varied from mild to potentially life-threatening disease. All but one patient with GD1/PD phenotype had at least one N370S GBA1 allele. In conclusion, compared to the general population, patients with GD1 have an almost 20-fold increased life-time risk of developing PD
PMCID:2887303
PMID: 20177787
ISSN: 1573-2665
CID: 141633

Head trauma can initiate the onset of adreno-leukodystrophy

Raymond, Gerald V; Seidman, Roberta; Monteith, Teshamae S; Kolodny, Edwin; Sathe, Swati; Mahmood, Asif; Powers, James M
X-linked adreno-leukodystrophy and its adult variant, adrenomyeloneuropathy, are caused by mutations in ABCD1 that encodes a peroxisomal membrane protein of unknown physiological significance. In spite of identical mutations, they can have markedly divergent neurological and neuropathologic characteristics. Adreno-leukodystrophy classically presents in normal boys with mild neuropsychiatric features, which progress to frank neurological signs, the vegetative state and death in approximately three years. Adrenomyeloneuropathy typically affects young men with spastic paraparesis and sensory ataxia that can progress over decades. The neuropathologic correlate for adreno-leukodystrophy is severe inflammatory demyelination of posterior cerebral white matter, while a chronic distal axonopathy of spinal cord and peripheral nerve occurs in adrenomyeloneuropathy. Consequently, both modifier genes and environmental factors have been implicated in their pathogeneses. We report five cases of adreno-leukodystrophy whose onsets were initiated by moderate to severe head trauma, two of whom were conversions from adrenomyeloneuropathy. Their clinical courses were rapidly incapacitating, short (i.e., weeks to a few years) and fatal due to marked cerebral inflammatory demyelination. These cases, in concert with several previous reports, indicate that head trauma is one environmental factor that can have a profoundly deleterious effect on those genetically at risk for, or with milder clinical phenotypes of, this disease. Avoidance of potential head trauma and a rapid response to episodes of moderate to severe head trauma in this patient population seem prudent
PMID: 19945717
ISSN: 1878-5883
CID: 141325

Open-label Phase I/II clinical trial of pyrimethamine for the treatment of chronic GM2 gangliosidosis [Meeting Abstract]

Clarke, J; Kolodny, E; Mahuran, D; Fuller, M; Tropak, M; Keimel, J; Sathe, S; Pesotchinsky, S; Rigat, B
ISI:000274004300043
ISSN: 1096-7192
CID: 109682

Teaching NeuroImages: Molar tooth sign with hypotonia, ataxia, and nystagmus (Joubert syndrome) and hypothyroidism [Case Report]

Graber, Jerome J; Lau, Heather; Sathe, Swati
PMID: 20018634
ISSN: 1526-632x
CID: 105983

Acute Confusional Migraine May Be a Presenting Feature of CADASIL

Sathe, Swati; DePeralta, Edgar; Pastores, Gregory; Kolodny, Edwin H
Objective.- Characterize the phenomenon of acute confusional migraine (ACM) among Cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) patients and emphasize the possibility of CADASIL in adults with ACM. Background.- ACM, well described in children, has rarely been reported in adults. Although 30-60% of CADASIL patients have migraine, acute confusional state during migraine has not been described. We describe 7 patients with ACM that complicated up to 50% of the migraine episodes. Design/Methods.- Detailed neurologic evaluation was performed in 20 CADASIL patients; International Classification of Headache Disorders 2nd edition criteria were used to diagnose migraine. Results.- The mean age was 51 years. Fourteen patients reported headache and 11 met the criteria for migraine (mean age of onset 25). Seven patients experienced concomitant confusion, within 3 years of migraine onset. Confusion occurred either abruptly or insidiously, at the onset of aura or headache, lasting for 2-48 hours, and ending abruptly. These episodes were stereotypic, characterized by disorientation with agitation, and retrograde amnesia for the episodes. Patients reported disorientation to time and place, inability to recognize friends and relatives, difficulty with finding directions home, fear of getting lost, inability to analyze traffic lights or tell time. Patients reliably predicted the episodes and felt the need to seek a safe place for protection. Severity of the episodes progressed, but a striking improvement occurred after the first stroke. Conclusion.- ACM may be a presenting feature and important clue, enabling CADASIL to be recognized up to a decade or earlier than at present. Therefore, a brain MRI and/or testing for Notch3 mutations should be considered in adult patients with ACM
PMID: 19245392
ISSN: 1526-4610
CID: 95736

Primary cerebral Whipple disease presenting as Kluver-Bucy syndrome [Case Report]

Leesch, Wolfgang; Fischer, Ingeborg; Staudinger, Robert; Miller, Douglas C; Sathe, Swati
PMID: 19139312
ISSN: 1538-3687
CID: 91499

Acute Confusional Migraine may be the Presenting Feature of CADASIL [Meeting Abstract]

Sathe, S; Deperalta, E; Kolodny, EH
ISI:000262112100063
ISSN: 0364-5134
CID: 91498

Juvenile-onset g(m2)-gangliosidosis in an african-american child with nystagmus [Case Report]

Paciorkowski, Alex R; Sathe, Swati; Zeng, Bei-Jin; Torres, Paola; Rosengren, Sally S; Kolodny, Edwin
G(M2)-gangliosidosis is a neurodegenerative lysosomal disease with several clinical variants. We describe a 2-year-old black child with juvenile-onset disease, who presented with abnormal eye movements and cherry-red spots of the maculae. Mutation analysis of the HEXA gene revealed the patient to be a compound heterozygote (M1V/Y37N). The M1V mutation was previously described in an African-American child with acute infantile G(M2)-gangliosidosis. The Y37N mutation is novel. This combination of mutations is consistent with juvenile-onset disease, and provides further evidence for the association of the M1V mutation with individuals of black ancestry. The presence of oculomotor abnormalities is an unusual finding in this form of G(M2)-gangliosidosis, and adds to the phenotypic spectrum
PMID: 18358410
ISSN: 0887-8994
CID: 77798

Homozygosity for a tandem mutation (D409H and H255Q) leads to acute neuronopathic Gaucher disease [Meeting Abstract]

Sathe, S; Basturk, O; Miller, D; Greco, MA; Potaznik, D; Pastores, G; Kolodny, E
ISI:000253358500097
ISSN: 1096-7192
CID: 87129