Browsing by Author "Tuna, A."
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- Cefalea racimos en una niña de 3 añosPublication . Garrido, C.; Tuna, A.; Ramo, S.; Temudo, T.Summary. Introduction. Cluster headache is a rare disorder in childhood. We identified, in the literature, 64 cases of cluster headache starting at or before 18 years (only 17 of them began before 10 years old). All patients met the criteria of the International Headache Society. Russell et al demonstrated recently that the cluster headache is an inherited disorder in some families. They conclude that the gene is present in 3 to 4% of males and 7 to 10% of females with cluster headache and that it has an autossomal dominant transmission. Clinical case. The authors report the clinical case of a five-year-old child with cluster headache starting at three years. This paper reviews the differential diagnosis and the treatment of cluster headache
- Cerebellar ataxia with spasmodic cough: a new form of dominant ataxiaPublication . Coutinho, P.; Cruz, V.; Tuna, A.; Silva, S.; Guimarães, J.Background: Although mentioned in most series, “pure” autosomal dominant cerebellar ataxias, except spinocerebellar ataxia type 6, are difficult to differentiate on clinical grounds. Objective: To describe Portuguese families with a peculiar pure form of dominant ataxia that, to our knowledge, has never been documented before and in which cerebellar signs are preceded by spasmodic cough. Patients: Through a population-based survey of hereditary ataxias in Portugal, we identified 19 patients in 6 families with this particular disorder. Results: The majority of patients had a pure late-onset ataxia with a benign evolution. In all of the families, attacks of spasmodic coughing preceded ataxia for 1 to 3 decades and were a reliable marker of the disease. In Portugal, this form of ataxia accounts for 2.7% of all of the dominant ataxias. Conclusions: The families that we describe shared some relevant clinical and imagiological features with spinocerebellar ataxia type 5 and the recently described spinocerebellar ataxia type 20, allelic to spinocerebellar ataxia type 5. Spinocerebellar ataxia types 5 and 20 could be different phenotypic expressions of the same molecular disorder. The association of a dominant ataxia with spasmodic cough is rare but probably underdiagnosed.
- High germinal instability of the (CTG)n at the SCA8 locus of both expanded and normal allelesPublication . Silveira, I.; Afonso, I.; Guimarães, L.; Mendonça, P.; Santos, C.; Maciel, P.; Matos, J.; Costa, M.; Barbot, C.; Tuna, A.; Barros, J.; Jardim, L.; Coutinho, P.; Sequeiros, J.Abstract The autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxias (SCAs) are a group of late-onset, neurodegenerative disorders for which 10 loci have been mapped (SCA1, SCA2, SCA4-SCA8, SCA10, MJD, and DRPLA). The mutant proteins have shown an expanded polyglutamine tract in SCA1, SCA2, MJD/SCA3, SCA6, SCA7, and DRPLA; a glycine-to-arginine substitution was found in SCA6 as well. Recently, an untranslated (CTG)n expansion on chromosome 13q was described as being the cause of SCA8. We have now (1) assessed the repeat size in a group of patients with ataxia and a large number of controls, (2) examined the intergenerational transmission of the repeat, and (3) estimated the instability of repeat size in the sperm of one patient and two healthy controls. Normal SCA8 chromosomes showed an apparently trimodal distribution, with classes of small (15-21 CTGs), intermediate (22-37 CTGs), and large (40-91 CTGs) alleles; large alleles accounted for only0.7% of all normal-size alleles. No expanded alleles (>/=100 CTGs) were found in controls. Expansion of the CTG tract was found in five families with ataxia; expanded alleles (all paternally transmitted) were characterized mostly by repeat-size contraction. There was a high germinal instability of both expanded and normal alleles: in one patient, the expanded allele (152 CTGs) had mostly contraction in size (often into the normal range); in the sperm of two normal controls, contractions were also more frequent, but occasional expansions into the upper limit of the normal size range were also seen. In conclusion, our results show (1) no overlapping between control (15-91) and pathogenic (100-152) alleles and (2) a high instability in spermatogenesis (both for expanded and normal alleles), suggesting a high mutational rate at the SCA8 locus.
- Migraine-induced epistaxis and sporadic hemiplegic migraine: unusual features in the same patientPublication . Barros, J.; Damásio, J.; Tuna, A.; Pereira-Monteiro, J.Abstract Background: Since the mid-19th century, epistaxis and migraine have been occasionally associated with each other. Nevertheless, we found only two cases in the contemporary medical literature. Sporadic hemiplegic migraine is a subtype of migraine with reversible motor deficits, without similar episodes in relatives. Case: We describe a 47-year-old male with a history of migraine with a scintillating scotoma starting at the age of 20. In some of the episodes, he developed epistaxis in the resolution phase of migraine. At the age of 35, he experienced a visual aura followed by transient aphasia, left crural weakness and headache. Contralateral similar episodes occurred in the subsequent months. Neurological examination and MRI were normal. Mutations in CACNA1A, ATP1A2, SCN1A and NOTCH3 were excluded. Discussion: Three distinct aspects deserve our consideration. This is the first report of migraine-induced epistaxis involving aura; the scarcity of similar reports may be due to the lack of a guided anamnesis. The complex aura presented had a peculiar topography, inconsistent with the classical analytical neurological semiology. This may suggest that the spreading depression affects the brain bilaterally but in an uneven and elective manner. Lastly, the present report conveys that the late appearance of complex auras requires improbable interactions between environmental and endogenous conditions in individuals with a genetic predisposition.
- Phenotypes of spinocerebellar ataxia type 6 and familial hemiplegic migraine caused by a unique CACNA1A missense mutation in patients from a large familyPublication . Alonso, I.; Barros, J.; Tuna, A.; Coelho, J.; Sequeira, J.; Silveira, I.; Coutinho, P.Background: Different mutations in the 1A-subunit of the brain P/Q-type calcium channel gene (CACNA1A) are responsible for familial hemiplegic migraine (FHM), episodic ataxia type 2, and spinocerebellar ataxia type 6 (SCA6). Missense and splice site mutations have been found in FHM and episodic ataxia type 2, respectively, whereas a CAG repeat in the CACNA1A gene was found expanded in patients with SCA6. Objective: To identify the disease causing mutation in a large family of patients with phenotypes of hemiplegic migraine with or without cerebellar signs or permanent cerebellar ataxia without migraine inherited in a dominant manner. Patients and Methods: We examined 15 patients from a large family identified through a systematic survey of hereditary ataxias being conducted in Portugal. Linkage analysis was performed with CACNA1A gene markers, and mutation analysis was performed by single strand conformational polymorphism analysis and sequencing. Results: Genetic linkage analysis with CACNA1A intragenic markers showed positive LOD scores. The maximal LOD score was obtained with the polymorphic CAG repeat (Zmax=4.47, =0). By single-strand conformational polymorphism analysis, a shift in exon 13 of the CACNA1A gene was detected in all patients.AG-to-A substitution was then identified, resulting in an arginine-to-glutamine change at codon 583 of this calcium channel 1A-subunit. Conclusions: The disease-causing mutation in this family was identified, showing that a unique mutation in the CACNA1A gene causes several phenotypes, including those of SCA6 and FHM, thus suggesting that SCA6 and FHM are not only allelic diseases but are the same disorder with a large phenotypic variability.
- SÍNDROME DE HIPERPERFUSÃO CEREBRAL APÓS ANGIOPLASTIA CAROTÍDEA: COMPLICAÇÃO POTENCIALMENTE EVITÁVELPublication . Pereira, J.; Tuna, A.; Nunnes, P.; Caixeiro, T.; Alves, V.; Xavier, J.