Results 201 to 210 of about 2,239,775 (376)
A Novel CHMP2B Splicing Variant in Atypical Presentation of Familial Frontotemporal Lobar Degeneration
Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology, EarlyView.ABSTRACT
C‐truncating variants in the charged multivesicular body protein 2B (CHMP2B) gene are a rare cause of frontotemporal lobar degeneration (FTLD), previously identified only in Denmark, Belgium, and China. We report a novel CHMP2B splice‐site variant (c.35‐1G>A) associated with familial FTLD in Spain. The cases were two monozygotic male twins who Sara Rubio‐Guerra, Sara Bernal, David Almenta, Josefina Pérez‐Blanco, Valle Camacho, Isabel Sala, Mª Belén Sánchez‐Saudinós, Jesús García Castro, Judit Selma‐González, Miguel Ángel Santos‐Santos, Álvaro Carbayo, Janina Turon‐Sans, Ricard Rojas‐Garcia, Daniel Alcolea, Juan Fortea, Alberto Lleó, Oriol Dols‐Icardo, Ignacio Illán‐Gala +17 morewiley +1 more sourceAmyotrophic Lateral Sclerosis as a Multistep Process in the United States: A Population‐Based Study
Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology, EarlyView.ABSTRACT Background
Amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) is a fatal, progressive neurodegenerative disease that typically results in death within 3–5 years from symptom onset. However, little is known about the environmental exposures, clinical aspects, or social determinants of health factors that may be associated with the disease.Jasmine Berry, Jaime Raymond, Theodore Larson, D. Kevin Horton, Moon Han, Theresa Nair, Ammar Al‐Chalabi, Paul Mehta +7 morewiley +1 more sourceInfluence of Dystrophin Isoform Deficiency on Motor Development in Duchenne Muscular Dystrophy
Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology, EarlyView.ABSTRACT Objective
In Duchenne muscular dystrophy (DMD), lack of the shorter dystrophin isoforms Dp140 and Dp71 is associated with increased central nervous system (CNS) involvement. We aimed to investigate how CNS involvement affects motor development in young DMD boys.Mary Chesshyre, Deborah Ridout, Georgia Stimpson, Laurent Servais, Giovanni Baranello, Adnan Manzur, UK NorthStar Clinical Network, M. Scoto, A. Sarkozy, P. Munot, S. Robb, E. Chan, V. Robinson, W. Girshab, V. Crook, E. Milev, L. Abbott, A. Wolfe, E. O’Reilly, J. Watts‐Whent, N. Burnett, R. Thomas, R. Terespolsky, O. Martinaeu, J. Longatto, V. Straub, C. Bettolo, M. Guglieri, J. Diaz‐Manera, G. Tasca, M. Elseed, R. Muni‐Lofra, M. James, D. Moat, J. Sodhi, K. Wong, E. Robinson, E. Groves, R. Rabb, D. Parasuraman, H. McMurchie, H. Chase, Tracey Willis, C. Rylance, N. Birchall, E. Wright, A. Childs, K. Pysden, C. Martos, D. Roberts, L. Pallant, S. Walker, A. Henderson, R. Madhu, R. Karuvattil, Y. Balla, S. Gregson, S. Clark, E. Wraige, H. Jungbluth, V. Gowda, M. Vanegas, J. Sheehan, A. Schofield, C. Smith, I. Hughes, E. Whitehouse, S. Warner, E. Reading, N. Emery, J. Moustoukas, K. Strachan, M. Ong, M. Atherton, N. Mills, S. Sanchez Marco, A. Saxena, K. Skone, J. TeWaterNaude, H. Davis, C. Wood, A. Majumdar, A. Murugan, I. Guarino, R. Tomlinson, H. Jarvis, L. Wills, C. Frimpong, J. Watson, G. Cobb, G. Robertson, P. Brink, J. Burslem, C. Adams, J. Wong, S. Joseph, I. Horrocks, J. Dunne, M. DiMarco, S. Brown, S. McKenzie, K. Torne, R. Mohamed, V. Velmurugan, M. Prasad, S. Sedehizadeh, A. Schugal, R. Keetley, S. Williamson, K. Payne, E. Dowling, P. Fenty, C. de Goede, A. Parkes, K. Baxter, M. Illingworth, N. Bhangu, S. Geary, J. Palmer, K. Shill, S. Tirupathi, A. Shah, D. O’Donogue, J. McVeigh, J. McFetridge, G. Nicfhirleinn, H. Beattie, T. Leyland, K. Stevenson, N. Hussain, D. Baskaran, Z. Lambat, R. Sullivan, L. Locke, G. Ambegaonkar, D. Krishnakumar, J. Taylor, J. Moores, E. Stephen, J. Tewnion, S. Ramdas, M. Sa, A. Skippen, M. Khries, C. Lilien, H. Ramjattan, F. Taylor, H. English, K. Stewart, F. Flint, E. Bartram, R. Noble, Francesco Muntoni +152 morewiley +1 more sourceContinuous Monitoring of Bladder Dysfunction in People With Multiple Sclerosis: Wearables for the Bladder
Annals of Clinical and Translational Neurology, EarlyView.ABSTRACT Background
Bladder dysfunction affects over 85% of people with multiple sclerosis (PwMS), yet current assessment methods are limited to periodic in‐clinic evaluations or subjective patient reports, failing to capture real‐world symptom fluctuations.Valerie J. Block, Shane Poole, Leah McIntyre, Nikki Sisodia, Chelyn Park, Gabby Joseph, Michelle E. Van Kuiken, Anne M. Suskind, Riley Bove +8 morewiley +1 more source