Diagnosis across a cohort of “atypical” atypical and complex parkinsonism
The diagnostic approach for adulthood parkinsonism can be challenging when atypical features hamper its classification in one of the two main parkinsonian groups: Parkinson's disease or atypical parkinsonian syndromes (APS). Atypical features are usually associated with non-sporadic neurodegene...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Parkinsonism & related disorders 2023-06, Vol.111, p.105408-105408, Article 105408 |
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Zusammenfassung: | The diagnostic approach for adulthood parkinsonism can be challenging when atypical features hamper its classification in one of the two main parkinsonian groups: Parkinson's disease or atypical parkinsonian syndromes (APS). Atypical features are usually associated with non-sporadic neurodegenerative causes.
Retrospective analysis of patients with a working clinical diagnosis of “atypical” APS and complex parkinsonism. “Atypical” APS were classified according to the diagnostic research criteria and the “4-step diagnostic approach” (Stamelou et al. 2013). When not indicated, the final aetiological diagnosis was prospectively assessed. Brain MRI of progressive supranuclear palsy (PSP) look-alikes was reviewed by a neuroradiologist.
Among 18 patients enrolled, ten were assigned to the “atypical” APS and eight to the complex parkinsonism group. In the “atypical” APS group, nine patients had PSP and one had corticobasal degeneration. In the PSP group the median magnetic resonance parkinsonism index was 17.1. A final aetiological diagnosis was established for 11 patients, four from the complex parkinsonism (L-2-hidroxiglutaric aciduria and DiGeorge syndrome) and seven from the “atypical” APS (Perry syndrome, postencephalitic PSP, vascular PSP, and MTP-AT6 mitochondrial disease) group.
In this study, the identification of atypical APS features, as proposed in the “4-step diagnostic approach”, successfully guided the investigation of alternative diagnoses. Distinctive non-neurodegenerative etiologies causing “atypical” atypical and complex parkinsonism were uncovered, including acquired (post-encephalitis and vascular) and genetic (MTP-AT6 mitochondrial disease mimicking PSP, described for the first time) ones. In the future, accurate clinical identification and distinction between neurodegenerative and non-neurodegenerative parkinsonism etiologies will allow for refining clinical trials.
•Age cut-off can be permissively higher and still be able to identify “atypical” APS.•Postencephalitic parkinsonism can mimic a PSP phenotype.•MRPI can be useful to distinguished between vascular PSP and vascular parkinsonism.•MT-ATP6 mitochondrial disease, usually associated with adult-onset SCA, was found in one PSP patient.•DiGeorge syndrome is an important cause of early-onset parkinsonism, with neuropsychiatric features. |
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ISSN: | 1353-8020 1873-5126 |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.parkreldis.2023.105408 |