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The proband was a 22-year-old man with a complaint of progressive weakness in his lower limbs. His clinical diagnosis of hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy (HMSN) type 1 was made based on the neurological findings and the results of peripheral nerve conduction studies and of histological
We have investigated the myelin P0 gene on chromosome 1 as a candidate gene in two sporadic cases with Dejerine-Sottas disease or hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy (HMSN) type III. We found different mutations, a cysteine substitution for serine 63 in the extracellular domain and an arginine
We present expression of Po protein and Po mRNA on the sural nerve of a patient with hereditary motor and sensory neuropathy type III. This patient was identified with a point mutation in Po gene, which resulted in the substitution of glycine for arginine in transmembrane domain of P0 protein. An
A 46-year-old housewife had complaints of insidiously progressive muscle weakness and paresthesia in the distal lower limbs. On neurological examination, a slight to moderate degree of muscle weakness with slight atrophy was observed in the bilateral intrinsic hand muscles. A severe degree of muscle
A 16-year-old school boy suffered from an insidious foot deformity. Slight degrees of symmetrical muscular weakness of the distal lower limb muscles were observed. In addition, slight degrees of atrophy of the anterior tibial muscles with moderate degrees of pes cavus deformity and flexion
Clinical, pathologic and molecular genetic studies of Japanese HMSN patients were reported. Among 26 HMSN I probands tested, the PMP22 gene region was duplicated in 18 (69%). A proband of HNPP, whose PMP22 gene region was deleted, was described. A proband with HMSN I was found to have a mutant
Charcot-Marie-Tooth (CMT) disease is an inherited peripheral neuropathy caused by mutations in more than 30 different genes. One of the genes encodes for periaxin (PRX) protein, which is required for the maintenance of peripheral nerve myelin. Individuals with PRX gene mutations have been described
Hereditary neuropathies form a heterogeneous group of disorders for which over 40 causal genes have been identified to date. Recently, dominant mutations in the transient receptor potential vanilloid 4 gene were found to be associated with three distinct neuromuscular phenotypes: hereditary motor