1.Clinic significance of CT scan in diagnosis and management unsudden unilateral sensorineural hearing loss.
Ping GUO ; Tongli REN ; Wuqing WANG
Journal of Clinical Otorhinolaryngology Head and Neck Surgery 2014;28(10):685-687
OBJECTIVE:
To investigate the clinic significance of the temporal bone high-resolution CT in discovering unilateral sensorineural hearing loss of adolescents, and to provide the basis for the rational using of medical resources.
METHOD:
A retrospective study was conducted on 28 outpatients with unilateral sensorineural hearing loss at unsure time. Their medical history and CT examine were reevaluated,combined with associated articles in this report.
RESULT:
All of the 28 patients with unilateral sensorineural hearing loss had the normal external ear and middle ear and received CT scan. Nine out of twenty-eight cases had inner ear malformation. Among the nine cases, 1 cases was Mondini malformation and 1 cases was common cavity, 5 cases were single stenosis of IAC, and 2 cases were semicircular canal and vestibular malformation. 19 cases were not found abnormal by CT, and 4 cases had had suffered from mumps.
CONCLUSION
CT scan was available in diagnosis of unsudden unilateral sensorineural hearing loss, which would help us to use medical resource more rationally.
Adolescent
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Child
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Child, Preschool
;
Female
;
Hearing Loss, Sensorineural
;
diagnostic imaging
;
Humans
;
Male
;
Retrospective Studies
;
Tomography, X-Ray Computed
;
methods
;
Young Adult
2. Phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of fever-induced paroxysmal weakness and encephalopathy caused by ATP1A3 pathogenic variants
Weihua ZHANG ; Xiaotun REN ; Weixing FENG ; Chunhong CHEN ; Changhong DING ; Junlan LYU ; Tongli HAN
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2019;57(7):543-547
Objective:
To characterize fever-induced paroxysmal weakness and encephalopathy (FIPWE) caused by ATP1A3 gene pathogenic variant.
Methods:
Phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of 4 FIPWE patients (3 boys and 1 girl), who were ascertained from October 2016 to March 2018 in Beijing Children's Hospital due to ATP1A3 heterozygous variants, were retrospectively analyzed. The whole exsome sequencing was used for genetic testing.
Results:
The onset ages of 4 patients were 2 years and 9 months, 2 years and 4 months, 8 months, 2 years and 5 months respectively. The episode ranged from 1 to 3 times, and at 3 months to 2 years and 10 months intervals. All 4 patients had symptoms of limb weakness and encephalopathy, accompanied with mild to severe ataxia or athetosis. The tendon reflex was absent in all patients, and the Babinski's sign was positive. Three patients had dysphagia and 3 patients had slurred speech. Three patients had abnormal eye movements, including strabismus and opsoclonus. None of the 4 patients exhibited visual impairment, auditory impairment or talipes cavus. The duration of acute phase ranged from 1 week to 3 months. In 3 relapsing patients, symptoms became progressively worse, with relapses occurring frequently and recovery being more difficult, and various sequelae were found after the last relapse. All patients carried heterozygous variant in ATP1A3 gene. The missense variants result in the substitution of an arginine residue at position 756. Three variants were identified, including C. 2267G > T (p. R756L) (1 case), C. 2266C > T (p. R756C) (2 cases), and C. 2267G > A (p. R756H) (1 case). Three were de novo and one inherited from his father, but the grandparents did not carry the variant. All variants were reported as pathogenic.
Conclusions
FIPWE is one of new clinical phenotypes of ATP1A3 spectrum disease and most cases are sporadic. The missense variants result in the substitution of an arginine residue at position 756. This report provided insights into the phenotype-genotype association in patients with FIPWE caused by pathogenic variants of ATP1A3.
3.Phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of fever?induced paroxysmal weakness and encephalopathy caused by ATP1A3 pathogenic variants
Weihua ZHANG ; Xiaotun REN ; Weixing FENG ; Chunhong CHEN ; Changhong DING ; Junlan LYU ; Tongli HAN
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2019;57(7):543-547
Objective To characterize fever‐induced paroxysmal weakness and encephalopathy (FIPWE) caused by ATP1A3 gene pathogenic variant. Methods Phenotypic and genotypic characteristics of 4 FIPWE patients(3 boys and 1 girl), who were ascertained from October 2016 to March 2018 in Beijing Children′s Hospital due to ATP1A3 heterozygous variants, were retrospectively analyzed. The whole exsome sequencing was used for genetic testing. Results The onset ages of 4 patients were 2 years and 9 months, 2 years and 4 months, 8 months, 2 years and 5 months respectively. The episode ranged from 1 to 3 times, and at 3 months to 2 years and 10 months intervals. All 4 patients had symptoms of limb weakness and encephalopathy, accompanied with mild to severe ataxia or athetosis. The tendon reflex was absent in all patients, and the Babinski′s sign was positive. Three patients had dysphagia and 3 patients had slurred speech. Three patients had abnormal eye movements, including strabismus and opsoclonus. None of the 4 patients exhibited visual impairment, auditory impairment or talipes cavus. The duration of acute phase ranged from 1 week to 3 months. In 3 relapsing patients, symptoms became progressively worse, with relapses occurring frequently and recovery being more difficult, and various sequelae were found after the last relapse. All patients carried heterozygous variant in ATP1A3 gene. The missense variants result in the substitution of an arginine residue at position 756. Three variants were identified, including C. 2267G>T (p. R756L) (1 case), C. 2266C>T (p. R756C) (2 cases), and C. 2267G>A (p. R756H) (1 case). Three were de novo and one inherited from his father, but the grandparents did not carry the variant. All variants were reported as pathogenic. Conclusions FIPWE is one of new clinical phenotypes of ATP1A3 spectrum disease and most cases are sporadic. The missense variants result in the substitution of an arginine residue at position 756. This report provided insights into the phenotype‐genotype association in patients with FIPWE caused by pathogenic variants of ATP1A3.
4.Clinical observation on the overlapping syndrome of myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody and anti-N-methyl-D aspartate receptor in children
Shuai GONG ; Weihua ZHANG ; Haitao REN ; Jiuwei LI ; Ji ZHOU ; Hua CHENG ; Xiuwei ZHUO ; Changhong REN ; Tongli HAN ; Junlan LYU ; Changhong DING ; Fang FANG ; Hongzhi GUAN ; Xiaotun REN
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2020;58(7):581-585
Objective:To investigate the clinical features, imaging findings and prognosis of children with overlapping syndrome of myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein (MOG) antibody disease and anti-N-methyl-D aspartate receptor (NMDAR) encephalitis (MNOS).Methods:The clinical manifestations, immunological antibodies in blood and cerebrospinal fluid, cranial image, treatment and follow-up of 11 patients diagnosed as MNOS in the Department of Neurology, Beijing Children′s Hospital from January 2011 to April 2019 were analyzed retrospectively.Results:A total of 11 patients, including 4 males and 7 females were analyzed, the age of onset was (10.4±2.3) years. A total of 29 episodes occurred in 11 children. At the last follow-up, 8 cases showed relapsed remission course, the interval of recurrence was 3 to 60 months. The onset symptoms of 11 patients included convulsions (10 cases), lethargy (6 cases), psychosis (6 cases). Among 29 episodes, the common symptoms were convulsions (16 episodes), psychosis (13 episodes),and lethargy (10 episodes). According to the diagnostic criteria of anti-NMDAR encephalitis and MOG-antibody disease, 29 episodes were divided into three phenotypes, including anti-NMDAR encephalitis(4 episodes), MOG-antibody diseases (10 episodes) and overlapping types (15 episodes).Twenty-seven times of acute stage cranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) were available, common lesions included cortical focus (22 times), subcortical white matter (7 times), brainstem (9 times). All patients were sensitive to first-line immunotherapy. Eight patients had recurrence during glucocorticoid reduction, 6 of them were treated with additional second-line immunosuppressive therapy, including cyclophosphamide (1 case) and mycophenolate mofetil (5 cases). The follow-up time of patients were 5-99 months. At the last follow-up, all patients were in remission, the pediatric cerebral performance category (PCPC) score was 1 (10 cases) and 2 (1 cases).Conclusions:MNOS mainly affects older children. In the period of acute episodes, convulsions and psychosis are common. The cranial MRI showed extensive brain involvement and mainly in the cortex. The recurrence rates of MNOS are relatively high, patients are sensitive to first-line immunotherapy. No significant neurological dysfunction was left in the remission stage.
5.Clinical features and laboratory characteristics of eight patients with subacute sclerosing panencephalitis
Hongmei WANG ; Xiaohui WANG ; Jie DENG ; Fang FANG ; Jiuwei LI ; Changhong DING ; Chunhong CHEN ; Tongli HAN ; Xu WANG ; Xinying YANG ; Changhong REN ; Yan LI
Chinese Journal of Neurology 2020;53(10):798-804
Objective:To investigate the clinical and laboratory characteristics of subacute sclerosing panencephalitis (SSPE).Methods:The clinical, laboratory and electroencephalogram (EEG) data of eight patients with SSPE who admitted to the Department of Neurology, Beijing Children's Hospital, Capital Medical University, from May 2014 to February 2019 were retrospectively analyzed and followed up.Results:Four of the patients were male and four were female, who aged from two years and seven months to 13 years and five months with a median onset age of five years and six months. All of the eight cases had disease onset with progressive mental and physical regression, then developed periodic myoclonic seizures at the course of 11 days to 11 months. Video EEG examinations showed persistent generalized periodic complex waves with long interval (3-20 s). The IgG titers of measles virus in blood and cerebrospinal fluid of all cases were significantly increased. There was no significant abnormality in blood/urine metabolism screening nor head magnetic resonance imaging for the first time. Five cases performed head magnetic resonance imaging again, in which two cases with deepening hemispheric sulcus, two cases with cerebral white matter signal abnormalities. Antiepileptic drugs, gamma globulin, adrenocortical hormone and antiviral drugs were used after diagnosis though all were ineffective. All patients presented progressive deterioration. During the follow-up period of three months to two years and seven months, four patients died, of which three patients died at the time of five months, one year and two months, two years and six months after onset respectively, and the other one was unknown.Conclusions:The diagnostic clues of SSPE are progressive mental and physical regression, recurrent myoclonic seizures during period Ⅱ, as well as the extensive periodic complex waves of EEG. It is necessary to detect measles virus IgG antibody in blood and cerebrospinal fluid to make a definite diagnosis. There is no specific treatment for SSPE and its prognosis is very poor.
6.Clinical characteristics and gene analysis of SYNGAP1-related epilepsy in children
Xiaojuan TIAN ; Fang FANG ; Changhong DING ; Xiaotun REN ; Xu WANG ; Xiaofei WANG ; Junlan LYU ; Hong JIN ; Tongli HAN ; Jie DENG
Chinese Journal of Pediatrics 2021;59(12):1059-1064
Objective:To summarize the clinical characteristics of SYNGAP1-related epilepsy in children.Methods:Data of 13 patients with SYNGAP1 gene variants diagnosed with epilepsy at Department of Neurology, Beijing Children's Hospital were collected retrospectively from March 2017 to October 2020 and the patients were followed up. The clinical features, electroencephalogram(EEG), brain imaging, gene results and treatment were summarized.Results:Twelve patients were followed up successfully among the 13 patients with SYNGAP1 variants. The last follow-up age was 5 years and 7 months (3 years and 1 month to 9 years).The onset age of seizures was 2 years (4 months to 3 years). Seizure types included eyelid myoclonia with or without absence (9 cases), myoclonic seizure (5 cases), atypical absence (4 cases), suspicious atonic seizures(4 cases),unclassified fall attack (6 cases), and the frequency of seizures varied from several times to more than 100 times per day. Four cases had the mimic phenotype of myoclonic astatic epilepsy. The seizures of 10 cases could be triggered by eating (5 cases), emotion (5 cases), fever (3 cases), voice (2 cases), fatigue (2 cases), etc. Electroencephalography (10 cases) showed interictal generalized or focal epileptiform discharges (9 cases), and atypical aphasia (4 cases), myoclonic seizure (2 cases) and eyelid myoclonic seizure (1 case) were monitored. Of the 12 cases, 9 were added with valproate, all of which were effective (the frequency of seizures reduced>50%). Five cases received combined levetiracetam, in 3 the treatments were effective. To last follow-up, 3 cases were seizure free from 6 months to 1 year and 1 month, but the remaining 7 cases still had seizures, one or several times per day. All 13 cases had developmental retardation (speech ability impaired mostly), 2 cases were severe, 10 cases were moderate, 1 case was mild. The SYNGAP1 gene variants of 13 patients were all de novo, including 12 variants. Among them, 4 were frameshift variants, 4 were nonsense variants, 2 were missense variants and 2 were splice site variants.Conclusions:Patients with SYNGAP1-related epilepsy have an early onset age and many seizure types. The main seizure type is eyelid myoclonia with or without absence, and other seizure types include myoclonic seizure, atypical absence, unclassified fall attack, etc. Valproate is effective in most patients, but seizures in some patients might be intractable. Most patients have developmental delay (mainly moderate and severe), speech ability impaired mostly.
7. Clinical features of central nerve system inflammatory demyelinating diseases associated with anti-myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibodies in children
Weihua ZHANG ; Xiaotun REN ; Tongli HAN ; Hua CHENG ; Jiuwei LI ; Shuai GONG ; Weixing FENG ; Xiaoyun ZHU ; Changhong REN ; Ji ZHOU ; Changhong DING ; Haitao REN ; Hongzhi GUAN ; Fang FANG
Chinese Journal of Applied Clinical Pediatrics 2019;34(24):1858-1861
Objective:
To describe the clinical manifestations of central nerve system inflammatory demyelinating disease associated with anti-myelin oligodendrocyte glycoprotein antibody (MOG-IDD) in children, and to explore the clinical characteristics of the children.
Methods:
The clinical and laboratory characteristics of the patients diagnosed in Beijing Children′s Hospital, Capital Medical University, from October 2016 to August 2018 were described, and the clinical data of the patients with unipolar and recurrent diseases were compared.
Results:
A total of 50 patients were included, among whom the ratio of male to female was 24:26, and the average age of onset was (6.7±3.1) years old (0.4-12.6 years old). There was no significant difference in the age of onset between boys and girls(