Brain MR patterns in inherited disorders of monoamine neurotransmitters: An analysis of 70 patients

  • Oya Kuseyri Hübschmann
  • Alexander Mohr
  • Jennifer Friedman
  • Filippo Manti
  • Gabriella Horvath
  • Elisenda Cortès-Saladelafont
  • Saadet Mercimek-Andrews
  • Yilmaz Yildiz
  • Roser Pons
  • Jan Kulhánek
  • Mari Oppebøen
  • Jeanette Aimee Koht
  • Inés Podzamczer-Valls
  • Rosario Domingo-Jimenez
  • Salvador Ibáñez
  • Oscar Alcoverro-Fortuny
  • Teresa Gómez-Alemany
  • Pedro de Castro
  • Chiara Alfonsi
  • Dimitrios I Zafeiriou
  • Eduardo López-Laso
  • Philipp Guder
  • René Santer
  • Tomáš Honzík
  • Georg F Hoffmann
  • Sven F Garbade
  • H S Sivri
  • Vincenzo Leuzzi
  • Kathrin Jeltsch
  • Angeles García-Cazorla
  • Thomas Opladen
  • Inga Harting
  • International Working Group on Neurotransmitter Related Disorders (iNTD)

Abstract

Inherited monoamine neurotransmitter disorders (iMNDs) are rare disorders with clinical manifestations ranging from mild infantile hypotonia, movement disorders to early infantile severe encephalopathy. Neuroimaging has been reported as non-specific. We systematically analyzed brain MRIs in order to characterize and better understand neuroimaging changes and to re-evaluate the diagnostic role of brain MRI in iMNDs. 81 MRIs of 70 patients (0.1-52.9 years, 39 patients with tetrahydrobiopterin deficiencies, 31 with primary disorders of monoamine metabolism) were retrospectively analyzed and clinical records reviewed. 33/70 patients had MRI changes, most commonly atrophy (n = 24). Eight patients, six with dihydropteridine reductase deficiency (DHPR), had a common pattern of bilateral parieto-occipital and to a lesser extent frontal and/or cerebellar changes in arterial watershed zones. Two patients imaged after acute severe encephalopathy had signs of profound hypoxic-ischemic injury and a combination of deep gray matter and watershed injury (aromatic l-amino acid decarboxylase (AADCD), tyrosine hydroxylase deficiency (THD)). Four patients had myelination delay (AADCD; THD); two had changes characteristic of post-infantile onset neuronal disease (AADCD, monoamine oxidase A deficiency), and nine T2-hyperintensity of central tegmental tracts. iMNDs are associated with MRI patterns consistent with chronic effects of a neuronal disorder and signs of repetitive injury to cerebral and cerebellar watershed areas, in particular in DHPRD. These will be helpful in the (neuroradiological) differential diagnosis of children with unknown disorders and monitoring of iMNDs. We hypothesize that deficiency of catecholamines and/or tetrahydrobiopterin increase the incidence of and the CNS susceptibility to vascular dysfunction.

Bibliografische Daten

OriginalspracheEnglisch
ISSN0141-8955
DOIs
StatusVeröffentlicht - 07.2021
PubMed 33443316