- Author:
June Woo AHN
1
;
Su-Keong HWANG
;
Jae-Hyung KIM
;
Hoon JUNG
;
Jin-Sung PARK
Author Information
- Publication Type:증례
- From:Journal of the Korean Neurological Association 2021;39(3):219-221
- CountryRepublic of Korea
- Language:Korean
- Abstract: Congenital myasthenic syndromes are a genetically and clinically heterogeneous group of neuromuscular disorders linked by abnormal signal transmission at the motor endplate caused by various genetic defects. Major clinical symptoms include weakness and fatigue during the first years of life but patients may also present with hypotonia, facial weakness, swallowing difficulties, respiratory dysfunction, ptosis and ophthalmoparesis. Here we report a 10-year-old boy who presented with mild developmental delay and bilateral ptosis caused by a frameshift mutation in the CHRNA1 gene that co-segregated within the family, and finally diagnosed as autosomal dominant congenital myasthenic syndrome.