Brain & development
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Brain & development · Feb 2021
Initial treatment of seizures in children in an emergency department in rural Japan.
Although the initial treatment of childhood seizures is important, treatment within an appropriate time window is often difficult in resource-limited areas. This study examined childhood seizure treatment in a rural area in Japan. ⋯ In rural Japan, many children with seizures are initially treated by doctors other than pediatricians or emergency physicians, and they require a longer time to achieve seizure cessation. Non-intravenous benzodiazepine formulas, which have not yet been approved in Japan, would be helpful.
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Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS) is a clinically and genetically heterogenous autoinflammatory disorder caused by constitutive activation of the type I interferon axis. It has been associated with the genes TREX1, RNASEH2A, RNASEH2B, RNASEH2C, SAMHD1, ADAR1, IFIH1. The clinical diagnosis of AGS is usually made in the context of early-onset encephalopathy in combination with basal ganglia calcification or white matter abnormalities on cranial MRI and laboratory prove of interferon I activation. ⋯ Bi-allelic mutations in PNPT1 have been reported in early-onset encephalopathy. Insufficient nuclear RNA import into mitochondria with consecutive disruption of the respiratory chain was proposed as the main underlying pathomechanism. Recent studies have shown that PNPT1 deficiency causes an accumulation of double-stranded mtRNAs in the cytoplasm, leading to aberrant type I interferon activation, however, longitudinal assessment has been lacking. Here, we present a case of AGS with continuously elevated type I interferon signature with a novel likely-pathogenic homozygous PNTP1 variant. We highlight the clinical value of assessing the interferon signature in children with encephalopathy of unknown origin and suggest all patients presenting with a phenotype of AGS should be screened for mutations in PNPT1.