Home Query References Browse Contact

3 patient data entries in database for mutations A467T,PNF.

Entry
#
Mutations
allele 1allele 2
Clinical representationSymptomsAge groupAge of onsetAge of patientAge of deathReference
645Nonsense
mutation:
E873X
A467T2
Nonsense
mutation:
E873X
His speech and motor development were normal until 19 months of age when he developed an episode of encephalopathy, ataxia, and hypertonia associated with an acute febrile illness. At 30 months, he developed a refractory focal myoclonic seizure disorder. His terminal admission was associated with a documented Rotavirus infection. At this time, he was noted to have cortical blindness, epilepsia partialis continua, and acute liver failure (hepatic failure). lactic acidemia. He was well until 19 months of age, when he experienced an acute febrile illness with anorexia, vomiting, and diarrhea. This was complicated by acute truncal ataxia, lethargy, and hypertonicity.
-lactic acidosis
-epilepsia partialis
-movement disorder (ataxia)
-liver failure
-encephalopathy
-vomiting
-diarrhea
-cortical blindness
infantile
1.58n/a3.5Naviaux and Nguyen, 2004;

[view data]

646Nonsense
mutation:
E873X
A467T2
Nonsense
mutation:
E873X
He had been well and developmentally normal until 15 months when he suffered 3 days of a diarrheal illness and required admission for new ataxia and encephalopathy. On the day of admission, he developed status epilepticus and was intubated for 3 weeks for aspiration pneumonia. He developed progressive hepatic failure and cortical blindness. He remained in a vegetative state until he died. Autopsy showed massive cerebellar and cerebral atrophy.
-status epilepticus
-movement disorder (ataxia)
-liver failure
-encephalopathy
-diarrhea
-cortical blindness
infantile
1.25n/a1.3Naviaux and Nguyen, 2004;

[view data]

647Nonsense
mutation:
E873X
A467T2
Nonsense
mutation:
E873X
At 11 months, she developed otitis media and shortly thereafter she was admitted to the intensive care unit and intubated and treated for 2 days for apnea associated with an episode of absence status epilepticus. Brain computed tomography at that time was normal. Her gait was ataxic after recovery, and she had bouts of epilepsia partialis continua, initially involving the left hand. At 16 months, she suffered another episode of status epilepticus requiring intubation for airway protection and ventilatory support. Head control was lost permanently after this episode. she was found to have cortical blindness, and brain magnetic resonance imaging showed marked cerebral atrophy without focal abnormalities. A liver biopsy showed chronic and acute liver disease with micronodular cirrhosis, hepatocyte dropout, microvesicular fat, and bile ductular proliferation. The diagnosis of Alpers’ syndrome was made at that time. refractory partial seizures, scoliosis, quadriparesis, tracheomalacia, and osteoporosis and was aphasic.
-status epilepticus
-epilepsia partialis
-liver dysfunction
-cortical blindness
-Alpers syndrome
-encephalopathy
-developmental delay
infantile
0.9n/a10Naviaux and Nguyen, 2004;

[view data]

1-5 pathogenic cluster assignment of mutations. Mutations displayed without a superscript number are outside of the assigned pathogenic clusters. See cluster definitions for details.

Number of displayed patient cases: 3
Avg age of onset in displayed cases: 1.2
Std dev in onset in displayed cases: 0.3

Search criteria for patient entries:
Mutations Entry IDs Clusters Reference Residue range
Mutations:
Allele 1:Allele 2:
Separate multiple mutations with commas.
Use "PNF" for non-missense mutations.
Match: Inclusive Exact
:.: Privacy Statement :.: Disclaimer :.: Contact Information :.: