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Home: Papers of the Week
Annotation


Takada LT, Pimentel ML, Dejesus-Hernandez M, Fong JC, Yokoyama JS, Karydas A, Thibodeau MP, Rutherford NJ, Baker MC, Lomen-Hoerth C, Rademakers R, Miller BL. Frontotemporal dementia in a Brazilian kindred with the c9orf72 mutation. Arch Neurol. 2012 Sep 1;69(9):1149-53. PubMed Abstract

Comments on Related News
  Related News: C9ORF72 Steals the Show at Frontotemporal Dementia Meeting

Comment by:  Ging-Yuek Robin Hsiung
Submitted 21 September 2012  |  Permalink Posted 21 September 2012

A lot of clinical descriptions have come forth since the initial discovery of the C9ORF72 mutations last year. It is clear that, like other frontotemporal dementias (FTDs), C9ORF72 is highly heterogeneous in presentation, and it is difficult to distinguish FTD due to C9ORF72 mutations from FTD with other pathology (i.e., tau or other mutations) based on clinical presentation alone. However, there are some features emerging that may alert the clinician to a C9ORF72 mutation. First, the presence of motor neuron disease (ALS) in the patient at any time, or if present in any other family members, should raise a red flag. Also, while some patients can start with a non-fluent aphasia phenotype, over time, most patients develop significant behavioral issues that would fit the behavioral FTD criteria as well, and in a number of cases, psychosis is quite prominent. Rigidity and parkinsonism can also be present. Compared to FTD due to progranulin, FTD due to the C9ORF72 mutation tends to have a slightly older age of onset, while the duration of disease is dictated by the co-development of...  Read more

  Related News: C9ORF72 Steals the Show at Frontotemporal Dementia Meeting

Comment by:  Bryan Traynor
Submitted 22 September 2012  |  Permalink Posted 25 September 2012

In our lab, we simply call it "the expansion"!

View all comments by Bryan Traynor
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