※ PTMD 2.0 database Online Browse Options
Browse result for Peripheral neuropathy with variable spasticity
※ introduction Peripheral neuropathy with variable spasticity, exercise intolerance, and developmental delay (PNSED) is an autosomal recessive multisystemic disorder with highly variable manifestations, even within the same family. Some patients present in infancy with hypotonia and global developmental delay with poor or absent motor skill acquisition and poor growth, whereas others present as young adults with exercise intolerance and muscle weakness. All patients have signs of a peripheral neuropathy, usually demyelinating, with distal muscle weakness and atrophy and distal sensory impairment; many become wheelchair-bound. Additional features include spasticity, extensor plantar responses, contractures, cerebellar signs, seizures, short stature, and rare involvement of other organ systems, including the heart, pancreas, and kidney. Biochemical analysis may show deficiencies in mitochondrial respiratory complex enzyme activities in patient tissue, although this is not always apparent. Lactate is frequently increased, suggesting mitochondrial dysfunction (Powell et al., 2015; Argente-Escrig et al., 2022).
Reference
OMIM: Peripheral neuropathy with variable spasticity
Reference
OMIM: Peripheral neuropathy with variable spasticity
| PTMD ID | UniProt Accession | Entrez ID | Gene Name | Protein Name | Organism |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| PTMD07302 | Q32P41 | 57570 | TRMT5 | tRNA -N1)-methyltransferase | Homo sapiens |
