Article ID | Journal | Published Year | Pages | File Type |
---|---|---|---|---|
8689796 | Neuromuscular Disorders | 2018 | 22 Pages |
Abstract
Sixty-one different CLCN1 mutations (including 12 novel mutations) were detected in myotonia congenita. Twenty-eight different SCN4A missense mutations (including three novel mutations) were identified in paramyotonia congenita/sodium channel myotonia, hypokalemic periodic paralysis and hyperkalemic periodic paralysis. Four different CACNA1S missense mutations were detected in hypokalemic periodic paralysis and five KCNJ2 missense mutations in Andersen-Tawil syndrome. The minimum point prevalence rates for genetically-defined skeletal muscle channelopathies confirm their rare disease status in the Netherlands. Rates are almost twice as high as in the UK and more in line with pre-genetic prevalence estimates in parts of Scandinavia. Future diagnostic and therapeutic studies may benefit from knowledge of the mutation spectrum of skeletal muscle channelopathies.
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Authors
B.C. Stunnenberg, J. Raaphorst, J.C.W. Deenen, T.P. Links, A.A. Wilde, D.J. Verbove, E.J. Kamsteeg, A. van den Wijngaard, C.G. Faber, G.J. van der Wilt, B.G.M. van Engelen, G. Drost, H.B. Ginjaar,