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Title: [Electrophysiological characteristics of asymptomatic relatives of patients with type 2 spinocerebellar ataxia]. Author: Velázquez L, Medina EE. Journal: Rev Neurol; 1998 Dec; 27(160):955-63. PubMed ID: 9951012. Abstract: INTRODUCTION: Electrophysiological studies have been shown to be useful in hereditary ataxia, but only a small number of patients have been studied, and the duration of the illness, serial studies and molecular definition have not been taken into account. OBJECTIVE: We proposed, by means of electrophysiological techniques, to characterize the functional evolutionary state of the afferent and efferent systems in asymptomatic relations of patients with type 2 spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA2). Patients and methods. A 10 year longitudinal, prospective study was made of 59 children of patients with SCA2. The sequence included four studies: 1986, 1991, 1994 and 1996, all with informed consent for the investigation. The control group consisted of 108 volunteers. The electrophysiological studies recorded were: conduction studies in peripheral nerves and multimodal evoked potentials. For statistical analysis multivariate methods were used with a confidence interval of 95% (alpha = 0.05). RESULTS: Electrophysiological alterations were observed even in the absence of clinical signs, such as reduced amplitude of sensory potentials, morphological changes and prolonged latency of the central components of somatosensory evoked potentials, and of brain stem auditory evoked potentials, whilst the visual evoked potentials remained normal. Of 79 relations studied during the 10 year investigation, 17 had clinical signs and were considered to be patients with SCA2. CONCLUSIONS: Four stages of the illness were defined: 'healthy', presymptomatic, and patients with and without nerve conduction block. These characterized the degenerative mechanisms of the afferent and efferent systems of the relations of patients with SCA2 who became ill themselves.[Abstract] [Full Text] [Related] [New Search]