PMM2-CDG

PMM2-CDG is the most frequent form of congenital disorder of N-glycosylation and is characterized by cerebellar dysfunction, abnormal fat distribution, inverted nipples, strabismus and hypotonia. 3 forms of PMM2-CDG can be distinguished: the infantile multisystem type, late-infantile and childhood ataxia-intellectual disability type (3-10 yrs old), and the adult stable disability type. Infants usually develop ataxia, psychomotor delay and extraneurological manifestations including failure to thrive, enteropathy, hepatic dysfunction, coagulation abnormalities and cardiac and renal involvement. The phenotype is however highly variable and ranges from infants who die in the first year of life to mildly involved adults.

Seizure

Seizures are an intermittent abnormality of the central nervous system due to a sudden, excessive, disorderly discharge of cerebral neurons and characterized clinically by some combination of disturbance of sensation, loss of consciousness, impairment of psychic function, or convulsive movements. The term epilepsy is used to describe chronic, recurrent seizures.


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PMID (PMCID)
18485644
MALE Child
Different neuroradiological findings during two stroke-like episodes in a patient with a congenital disorder of glycosylation type Ia.
Ishikawa N, Tajima G, Ono H, Kobayashi M.
Brain Dev. 2009;31(3):240-3.
Congenital disorders of glycosylation type Ia (CDG-Ia) are the most common type of CDG and are characterized by liver dysfunction, coagulation disorders, mental retardation, hypotonia, cerebellar dysfunction, polyneuropathy, seizures, and stroke-like episodes.