Nosological delineation of congenital ocular motor apraxia type Cogan: an observational study

Abstract Background The nosological assignment of congenital ocular motor apraxia type Cogan (COMA) is still controversial. While regarded as a distinct entity by some authorities including the Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man catalog of genetic disorders, others consider COMA merely a clinical symptom. Methods We performed a retrospective multicenter data collection study with re-evaluation of clinical and neuroimaging data of 21 previously unreported patients (8 female, 13 male, ages ranging from 2 to 24 years) diagnosed as having COMA. Results Ocular motor apraxia (OMA) was recognized during the first year of life and confined to horizontal pursuit in all patients. OMA attenuated over the years in most cases, regressed completely in two siblings, and persisted unimproved in one individual. Accompanying clinical features included early onset ataxia in most patients and cognitive impairment with learning disability (n = 6) or intellectual disability (n = 4). Re-evaluation of MRI data sets revealed a hitherto unrecognized molar tooth sign diagnostic for Joubert syndrome in 11 patients, neuroimaging features of Poretti-Boltshauser syndrome in one case and cerebral malformation suspicious of a tubulinopathy in another subject. In the remainder, MRI showed vermian hypo-/dysplasia in 4 and no abnormalities in another 4 patients. There was a strong trend to more severe cognitive impairment in patients with Joubert syndrome compared to those with inconclusive MRI, but otherwise no significant difference in clinical phenotypes between these two groups. Conclusions Systematical renewed analysis of neuroimaging data resulted in a diagnostic reappraisal in the majority of patients with early-onset OMA in the cohort reported here. This finding poses a further challenge to the notion of COMA constituting a separate entity and underlines the need for an expert assessment of neuroimaging in children with COMA, especially if they show cognitive impairment.

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PID https://www.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3632954
PID https://www.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3632954.v1
PID https://www.doi.org/10.15496/publikation-27285
URL http://dx.doi.org/10.15496/publikation-27285
URL http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3632954
URL http://dx.doi.org/10.6084/m9.figshare.c.3632954.v1
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Author Wente, Sarah
Author Schröder, Simone
Author Buckard, Johannes
Author Hans-Martin Büttel
Author Deimling, Florian Von
Author Diener, Wilfried
Author Häussler, Martin
Author Hübschle, Susanne
Author Kinder, Silvia
Author Kurlemann, Gerhard
Author Kretzschmar, Christoph
Author Lingen, Michael
Author Maroske, Wiebke
Author Mundt, Dirk
Author Sánchez-Albisua, Iciar
Author Seeger, Jürgen
Author Toelle, Sandra
Author Boltshauser, Eugen
Author Brockmann, Knut
Contributor University, My
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Collected From Datacite
Hosted By figshare
Publication Date 2016-01-01
Publisher Figshare
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Language UNKNOWN
Resource Type Collection; Other ORP type
keyword FOS: Health sciences
keyword FOS: Biological sciences
system:type other
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Source https://science-innovation-policy.openaire.eu/search/other?orpId=dedup_wf_001::2c04b5d897d08eb2712a3f444731ef1f
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Last Updated 19 December 2020, 15:53 (CET)
Created 19 December 2020, 15:53 (CET)