A progressive syndrome of autism, dementia, ataxia, and loss of purposeful hand use in girls: Rett's syndrome: report of 35 cases

B Hagberg, J Aicardi, K Dias… - Annals of Neurology …, 1983 - Wiley Online Library
B Hagberg, J Aicardi, K Dias, O Ramos
Annals of Neurology: Official Journal of the American Neurological …, 1983Wiley Online Library
Thirty‐five patients, exclusively girls, from three countries had a uniform and striking
progressive encephalopathy. After normal general and psychomotor development up to the
age of 7 to 18 months, developmental stagnation occurred, followed by rapid deterioration of
higher brain functions. Within one‐and‐a‐half years this deterioration led to severe
dementia, autism, loss of purposeful use of the hands, jerky truncal ataxia, and acquired
microcephaly. The destructive stage was followed by apparent stability lasting through …
Abstract
Thirty‐five patients, exclusively girls, from three countries had a uniform and striking progressive encephalopathy. After normal general and psychomotor development up to the age of 7 to 18 months, developmental stagnation occurred, followed by rapid deterioration of higher brain functions. Within one‐and‐a‐half years this deterioration led to severe dementia, autism, loss of purposeful use of the hands, jerky truncal ataxia, and acquired microcephaly. The destructive stage was followed by apparent stability lasting through decades. Additional insidious neurological abnormalities supervened, mainly spastic parapareses, vasomotor disturbances of the lower limbs, and epilepsy. Prior extensive laboratory investigations have not revealed the cause. The condition is similar to a virtually overlooked syndrome described by Rett in the German literature. The exclusive involvement of females, correlated with findings in family data analyses, suggests a dominant mutation on one X chromosome that results in affected girls and nonviable male hemizygous conceptuses.
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