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Annals of Neurology 1994-May

Hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy with calf hypertrophy is associated with 17p11.2 duplication.

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A Uncini
A Di Muzio
F Chiavaroli
D Gambi
M Sabatelli
N Archidiacono
R Antonacci
R Marzella
M Rocchi

Keywords

Abstract

The demyelinating type of hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy (HMSN I) is characterized by progressive weakness and atrophy of leg muscles. Six patients (age, 25-79 yr) belonging to three generations had calf hypertrophy (6 of 6), foot drop or difficulty with heel walking (4 of 6), pes cavus (3 of 6), absent or depressed tendon jerks in the lower limbs (4 of 6), and mild distal sensory loss (3 of 6). No other family member had leg atrophy. Motor conduction velocities ranged from 20 to 40 m/sec. Sural nerve biopsy showed loss of large myelinated fibers, numerous onion bulbs, and segmental demyelination and remyelination. Computed tomographic scans of leg muscles and histological and morphometric findings in gastrocnemius revealed true muscular hypertrophy. Southern blot and fluorescence in situ hybridization documented the duplication of the entire 17p11.2 segment associated with classical HMSN IA. The pathogenesis of muscle hypertrophy in our cases is unclear. Chronic leg muscle weakness and long-standing partial denervation might cause calf enlargement by a combination of compensatory "work-induced" and "stretch-induced" fiber hypertrophy. Alternatively, that all the affected family members presented calf hypertrophy might suggest the action of a genetic factor associated with the duplication at 17p11.2.

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