ABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: The identification of patients surviving an acute intracerebral hemorrhage who are at a long-term risk of arterial thrombosis is a poorly defined, crucial issue for clinicians. METHODS: In the setting of the MUCH-Italy (Multicenter Study on Cerebral Haemorrhage in Italy) prospective observational cohort, we enrolled and followed up consecutive 30-day intracerebral hemorrhage survivors to assess the long-term incidence of arterial thrombotic events, to assess the impact of clinical and radiological variables on the risk of these events, and to develop a tool for estimating such a risk at the individual level. Primary end point was a composite of ischemic stroke, myocardial infarction, or other arterial thrombotic events. A point-scoring system was generated by the ß-coefficients of the variables independently associated with the long-term risk of arterial thrombosis, and the predictive MUCH score was calculated as the sum of the weighted scores. RESULTS: Overall, 1729 patients (median follow-up time, 43 months [25th to 75th percentile, 69.0]) qualified for inclusion. Arterial thrombotic events occurred in 169 (9.7%) patients. Male sex, diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, atrial fibrillation, and personal history of coronary artery disease were associated with increased long-term risk of arterial thrombosis, whereas the use of statins and antithrombotic medications after the acute intracerebral hemorrhage was associated with a reduced risk. The area under the receiver operating characteristic curve of the MUCH score predictive validity was 0.716 (95% CI, 0.56-0.81) for the 0- to 1-year score, 0.672 (95% CI, 0.58-0.73) for the 0- to 5-year score, and 0.744 (95% CI, 0.65-0.81) for the 0- to 10-year score. C statistic for the prediction of events that occur from 0 to 10 years was 0.69 (95% CI, 0.64-0.74). CONCLUSIONS: Intracerebral hemorrhage survivors are at high long-term risk of arterial thrombosis. The MUCH score may serve as a simple tool for risk estimation.
Subject(s)
Atrial Fibrillation , Myocardial Infarction , Stroke , Thrombosis , Humans , Male , Atrial Fibrillation/complications , Cerebral Hemorrhage/diagnostic imaging , Cerebral Hemorrhage/epidemiology , Cerebral Hemorrhage/complications , Myocardial Infarction/complications , Risk Factors , Stroke/epidemiology , Thrombosis/etiology , Thrombosis/complications , FemaleABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Whether statin use after spontaneous intracerebral haemorrhage (ICH) increases the risk of recurrent ICH is uncertain. METHODS: In the setting of the Multicentric Study on Cerebral Haemorrhage in Italy we followed up a cohort of 30-day ICH survivors, consecutively admitted from January 2002 to July 2014, to assess whether the use of statins after the acute event is associated with recurrent cerebral bleeding. RESULTS: 1623 patients (mean age, 73.9±10.3 years; males, 55.9%) qualified for the analysis. After a median follow-up of 40.5 months (25th to 75th percentile, 67.7) statin use was not associated with increased risk of recurrent ICH either in the whole study group (adjusted HR, 0.99; 95% CI 0.64 to 1.53) or in the subgroups defined by haematoma location (deep ICH, adjusted HR, 0.74; 95% CI 0.35 to 1.57; lobar ICH, adjusted HR, 1.09; 95% CI 0.62 to 1.90), intensity of statins (low-moderate intensity statins, adjusted HR, 0.93; 95% CI 0.58 to 1.49; high-intensity statins, adjusted HR, 1.48; 95% CI 0.66 to 3.31) and use of statins before the index event (adjusted HR, 0.66; 95% CI 0.38 to 1.17). CONCLUSIONS: Statin use appears to be unrelated to the risk of ICH recurrence.
ABSTRACT
Hereditary congenital facial palsy (HCFP) is a medical condition caused by dysfunction of the seventh cranial nerve. HCFP is characterized by feeding difficulties and dysmorphic features in the orofacial region. In some cases hearing loss, strabismus, limb malformations, and musculoskeletal defects may be associated. There are three types of HCFP: HCFP3 (OMIM 614744) results from autosomal recessive pathogenic variants in the HOXB1 gene, while HCFP1 and 2 (OMIM 601471, 604185) are autosomal dominant, genetically less defined conditions. We report on a case of congenital bilateral facial palsy due to two novel compound heterozygous variants in the HOXB1 gene, found by exome sequencing (ES), in a child with facial nerve axonal neuropathy without evidence of nerve hypoplasia on neuroimaging. The results of this report suggest that in individuals with congenital facial paralysis and preserved ocular motor skills, with or without facial nerve hypoplasia and with confirmed facial nerve axonal neuropathy, HOXB1 variants and therefore a diagnosis of HCFP3 should be primarily considered.
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INTRODUCTION: Posterior reversible encephalopathy syndrome (PRES) is a rare and complex disorder with variable clinical presentation and a typical magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) pattern of vasogenic edema with typical and atypical locations. It is often triggered by other diseases and drugs and the most prototypical association is with persistently elevated arterial pressure values. Among the potential cerebrovascular complications, intracranial bleeding has been described, but ischemic stroke is uncommonly reported. METHODS: We are presenting a case of a male patient with prolonged and sustained arterial hypertension acutely presenting with lacunar ischemic stroke involving the right corona radiata and composite MRI findings with the association of chronic small vessel disease (SVD) markers, acute symptomatic lacunar stroke, and atypical, central variant, posterior fossa dominant PRES. In the MRI follow-up, the white matter hyperintensities in T2-fluid attenuated inversion recovery (FLAIR sequences) due to PRES. DISCUSSION: The pathophysiology of PRES is not yet fully known, but the association with markedly increased values of arterial pressure is typical. In this context, ischemic stroke has not been considered in the clinical and neuroradiological manifestations of PRES and it has been only occasionally reported in the literature. In this case, the main hypothesis is that sustained hypertension may have triggered both manifestations, PRES, and ischemic stroke and the last one allowed to diagnose the first one. CONCLUSIONS: Atypical variants of PRES are not so rare and it may also occur in typical triggering situations. The association with ischemic stroke is even rarer and it may add some clues to the pathomechanisms of PRES.
Subject(s)
Hypertension , Ischemic Stroke , Posterior Leukoencephalopathy Syndrome , Stroke, Lacunar , White Matter , Humans , Male , Posterior Leukoencephalopathy Syndrome/complications , Posterior Leukoencephalopathy Syndrome/diagnostic imaging , Ischemic Stroke/complications , Hypertension/complications , Magnetic Resonance Imaging/methods , Stroke, Lacunar/complications , Stroke, Lacunar/diagnostic imagingABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION: Calcified arterial cerebral embolism is a rare occurrence among large and medium vessel occlusions causing ischemic stroke and its diagnosis and treatment is a challenge. The sources of calcified embolism might be a calcific atheroma from the aortic arch and carotid artery, but also heart valve disease has been reported in the literature. Calcified embolism is frequently simultaneous on multiple vascular territories. The prognosis of patients is usually poor, including patients treated by using endovascular thrombectomy (EVT) and this diagnosis could be easily missed in the acute phase. In addition, the optimal secondary prevention has not been yet fully stated. METHODS: We are presenting two cases of acute stroke due to calcified embolism in the middle cerebral artery (MCA) coming from a complicated carotid atheroma, non-stenosing in the first case (a 49 years old man) and stenosing in the second case (a 71 years old man) without clinical indications to intravenous thrombolysis and/or EVT, extensively investigated in the acute phase and followed-up for over 12 months with a favorable clinical course and the persisting steno-occlusion in the involved MCA. In both cases, antiplatelet treatment and targeting of vascular risk factors were done without recurrences in the follow-up period. DISCUSSION: Cerebral calcified embolism has been reported in 5.9% of cases of acute ischemic stroke in a single center series and only in 1.2% of a large retrospective cohort of EVT-treated patients. In both series the prognosis was poor and only one third of EVT-treated patients had functional independence at 3-months follow-up. The natural history of these subtype of ischemic stroke is relatively poorly understood and both etiological diagnosis and treatment have not yet defined. It is possible that some cases might be underdiagnosed and underreported. CONCLUSIONS: Calcified cerebral embolism is a rare cause of stroke, but it is largely underreported and both acute phase and secondary preventive treatment have to be defined.
Subject(s)
Intracranial Embolism , Humans , Male , Middle Aged , Aged , Intracranial Embolism/etiology , Intracranial Embolism/diagnostic imaging , Calcinosis/complications , Calcinosis/diagnostic imaging , Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery/diagnostic imaging , Infarction, Middle Cerebral Artery/complicationsABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 2 (AOA2) is an autosomal recessive disorder presenting with cerebellar ataxia, sensory-motor axonal neuropathy, oculomotor apraxia, cerebellar atrophy and high alpha-fetoprotein (AFP) serum level. AOA2 is due to coding mutations of the SETX gene, mapped to chromosome 9q34. Seldom noncoding mutations affecting RNA processing have been reported too. To date psychiatric symptoms have never been reported in AOA2. CASE PRESENTATION: A 19 years-old man came to our attention for progressive gait ataxia debuted five years earlier. His past medical history was unremarkable, while his parents were consanguineous. On neurological examination, he had bilateral horizontal gaze-evoked nystagmus with hypometric saccades and saccadic horizontal smooth pursuit, appendicular ataxia, limbs and trunk myoclonic involuntary movements with hands' dystonic postures and dance of the tendons. Psychological evaluation described intrusive and obsessive thoughts experienced by the patient, then diagnosed as obsessive-compulsive disorder. Blood tests detected an elevated AFP level. Brain MRI showed cerebellar atrophy, while electroneuromyography revealed an axonal sensory-motor polyneuropathy. In the suspicion of a pathology belonging to the autosomal recessive cerebellar ataxias (ARCA) spectrum disorder, a direct search of point mutations by whole-exome sequencing was performed revealing a novel biallelic variant in SETX gene (c.6208+2dupT), which was classified as likely pathogenic. CONCLUSION: The present case expands the genotypic and phenotypic spectrum of AOA2, reporting a novel likely pathogenic SETX mutation (c.6208+2dupT) and highlighting an early psychiatric involvement in AOA2, suggesting the need for psychiatric assessment in these neurologic patients.
ABSTRACT
Cerebellar mutism syndrome (CMS) is a frequent complication of surgical intervention on posterior fossa in children. It has been only occasionally reported in adults and its features have not been fully characterized. In children and in young adults, medulloblastoma is the main reason for neurosurgery. A single case of postsurgical CMS is presented in an adult patient with a cerebellar hemorrhage and a systematic review of the published individual cases of CMS in adults was done. Literature review of individual cases found 30 patients, 18/30 (60%) males, from 20 to 71 years at diagnosis. All but one case was post-surgical, but in one of the post-surgical cases iatrogenic basilar artery occlusion was proposed as cause for CMS. The causes were: primary tumors of the posterior fossa in 16/22 (72.7%) metastasis in 3/30 (10%), ischemia in 3/30 (10%) cerebellar hemorrhage in 3/30 (10%), and benign lesions in 2/30 (6.7%) patients. 8/30 patients (26.7%) were reported as having persistent or incomplete resolution of CMS within 12 months. CMS is a rare occurrence in adults and spontaneous cerebellar hemorrhage has been reported in 3/30 (10%) adult patients. The generally accepted hypothesis is that CMS results from bilateral damage to the dentate nucleus or the dentate-rubro-thalamic tract, leading to cerebro-cerebellar diaschisis. Several causes might contribute in adults. The prognosis of CMS is slightly worse in adults than in children, but two thirds of cases show a complete resolution within 6 months.
Subject(s)
Mutism , Humans , Mutism/etiology , Male , Adult , Cerebellar Diseases/etiology , Cerebellar Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Intracranial Hemorrhages/etiology , Intracranial Hemorrhages/diagnostic imaging , Intracranial Hemorrhages/complications , Middle AgedABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: KBG syndrome is caused by haploinsufficiency of ANKRD11 and is characterised by macrodontia of upper central incisors, distinctive facial features, short stature, skeletal anomalies, developmental delay, brain malformations and seizures. The central nervous system (CNS) and skeletal features remain poorly defined. METHODS: CNS and/or skeletal imaging were collected from molecularly confirmed individuals with KBG syndrome through an international network. We evaluated the original imaging and compared our results with data in the literature. RESULTS: We identified 53 individuals, 44 with CNS and 40 with skeletal imaging. Common CNS findings included incomplete hippocampal inversion and posterior fossa malformations; these were significantly more common than previously reported (63.4% and 65.9% vs 1.1% and 24.7%, respectively). Additional features included patulous internal auditory canal, never described before in KBG syndrome, and the recurrence of ventriculomegaly, encephalic cysts, empty sella and low-lying conus medullaris. We found no correlation between these structural anomalies and epilepsy or intellectual disability. Prevalent skeletal findings comprised abnormalities of the spine including scoliosis, coccygeal anomalies and cervical ribs. Hand X-rays revealed frequent abnormalities of carpal bone morphology and maturation, including a greater delay in ossification compared with metacarpal/phalanx bones. CONCLUSION: This cohort enabled us to describe the prevalence of very heterogeneous neuroradiological and skeletal anomalies in KBG syndrome. Knowledge of the spectrum of such anomalies will aid diagnostic accuracy, improve patient care and provide a reference for future research on the effects of ANKRD11 variants in skeletal and brain development.
Subject(s)
Abnormalities, Multiple , Bone Diseases, Developmental , Intellectual Disability , Tooth Abnormalities , Humans , Intellectual Disability/diagnosis , Intellectual Disability/genetics , Abnormalities, Multiple/diagnosis , Abnormalities, Multiple/genetics , Bone Diseases, Developmental/diagnostic imaging , Bone Diseases, Developmental/genetics , Tooth Abnormalities/diagnostic imaging , Tooth Abnormalities/genetics , Facies , Phenotype , Repressor Proteins/genetics , Transcription Factors , NeuroimagingABSTRACT
Neurological manifestations are frequent in patients with SARS-CoV-2 infection and can be correlated with different pathogenic mechanisms which can be divided into two categories: direct invasion of the central nervous system by the virus and indirect effects deriving from the severity of the systemic infection and by the inflammatory response correlated with cytokine storm. Among the neurological manifestations, acute encephalopathy is very frequent and its nomenclature has recently been updated. The occurrence of a condition of altered mental status, reduced consciousness, delirium up to coma represents an element associated with a greater severity of the infection and mortality both in an Intensive Care Unit setting and in an Emergency Department setting. The tissue damage mechanisms found in COVID-19 patients' encephalopathy and neuroimaging patterns, as well as histopathology, are similar to those described in sepsis-associated encephalopathy, further confirming the role of indirect mechanisms, with no CNS invasion by the virus. The available data have some limitations, notably the underuse of diagnostic neuroimaging techniques in severely affected patients, particularly in the first wave of the pandemic.
Subject(s)
COVID-19 , Neuroimaging , SARS-CoV-2 , Humans , COVID-19/complications , COVID-19/diagnostic imaging , Neuroimaging/methods , SARS-CoV-2/pathogenicity , Brain Diseases/diagnostic imaging , Brain Diseases/virology , Brain/diagnostic imaging , Brain/pathology , Brain/virology , Acute DiseaseABSTRACT
Coronavirus disease 2019 (COVID-19) has been associated with a variety of neurological manifestations (i.e., anosmia, ageusia, myalgia, headache) and neurological syndromes (i.e., encephalopathy, ischemic and hemorrhagic stroke, myelitis, encephalitis) underlying different pathogenetic mechanisms. COVID-19 has also been associated with various movement disorders including acute or subacute parkinsonism. However, to date, only few cases of parkinsonism linked to COVID-19 have been reported, nevertheless raising the possibility of a post-viral parkinsonian syndrome. Furthermore, various studies in vitro and in animal models have highlighted a close relationship between SARS-CoV-2 virus and α-synuclein, leading to the hypothesis that COVID-19 could represent a factor favoring the long-term development of α-synucleopathies. In this chapter, we will discuss the pathophysiological mechanisms related to movement disorders' manifestations of COVID-19 focusing on the possible overlap between pathogenetic mechanisms of Parkinson's Disease and COVID-19.
Subject(s)
COVID-19 , SARS-CoV-2 , Humans , COVID-19/complications , COVID-19/physiopathology , COVID-19/virology , SARS-CoV-2/pathogenicity , alpha-Synuclein/metabolism , Basal Ganglia Diseases/physiopathology , Basal Ganglia Diseases/etiology , Basal Ganglia Diseases/virology , Parkinson Disease/physiopathology , Parkinson Disease/complications , AnimalsABSTRACT
PURPOSE: Arterial supply of thalamus is complex and highly variable. In particular, the distribution pattern of thalamoperforating arteries received more attention some decades ago than in recent years. METHODS: We are presenting the case of a 46-year-old patient with wake-up drowsiness, complex oculomotor disorder and dysarthria. He was investigated in the acute phase using non-contrast brain Computed Tomography (NCCT), CT Angiography (CTA), and in the following days Digital Subtraction Angiography (DSA) was performed Results. The NCCT showed a subacute ischemic stroke in the right anterior thalamus and rostral midbrain with normal findings on CTA. DSA imaged a variant of thalamic supply (Percheron type III), constituted by perforating branches arising from an artery bridging the P1 segments of both Posterior Cerebral Arteries (PCAs). RESULTS: The thalamus has a complex and variable arterial supply, mainly in the pattern of paramedian thalamic-mesencephalic perforating arteries. The most reported variant is Percheron type IIb and supplies the paramedian thalami and the rostral midbrain. Type IIb occlusion usually causes a bilateral paramedian thalamic stroke, but rostral midbrain and anterior thalamus are involved in 57% and 19% cases. The rarer Type III variant probably prevented the bilateral extension of infarction and involved the territory of tuberothalamic and paramedian perforating arteries. CONCLUSIONS: Currently, DSA allows directly imaging variants in thalamic vascularization and better understanding the stroke mechanisms. In particular, in the presented case, a medium-sized vessel occlusion rather than a small vessel occlusion mechanism might be raised, leading to a different diagnostic pathway.
Subject(s)
Anatomic Variation , Angiography, Digital Subtraction , Mesencephalon , Thalamus , Humans , Middle Aged , Thalamus/blood supply , Thalamus/diagnostic imaging , Male , Mesencephalon/blood supply , Mesencephalon/diagnostic imaging , Computed Tomography Angiography , Cerebral Infarction/diagnostic imaging , Cerebral Infarction/etiology , Cerebral Angiography , Posterior Cerebral Artery/diagnostic imaging , Posterior Cerebral Artery/abnormalitiesABSTRACT
INTRODUCTION: Secondary neurodegeneration after stroke is a complex phenomenon affecting remote and synaptically linked cerebral areas. The involvement of the substantia nigra in this process has been rarely described in infarcts involving the striatum. METHODS: We are presenting a case of ischemic stroke involving the right striatum due to atrial fibrillation and associated in a few days with the neuroimaging finding of hyperintensity of the ipsilateral substantia nigra and striatonigral tract on T2-fluid attenuated inversion recovery and diffusion-weighted imaging sequences of brain magnetic resonance imaging. This finding was not related to clinical manifestations and substantially disappeared within 3 months from stroke onset. DISCUSSION: The pathophysiology of secondary degeneration of the substantia nigra is poorly understood and it relies on animal models and autoptic studies. The main putative mechanism is not ischemic but excitotoxic with a different role of the internal and external globus pallidus and a different effect on the pars compacta and pars reticularis of the substantia nigra. In animal models, inflammatory mechanisms seem play a role only in the late phase. The main studies on humans were presented in detail. CONCLUSIONS: A better understanding of the secondary degeneration of the substantia nigra has the potentiality to offer a chance for neuroprotection in acute stroke, but further studies are needed.
Subject(s)
Ischemic Stroke , Stroke , Humans , Corpus Striatum/pathology , Ischemic Stroke/pathology , Magnetic Resonance Imaging , Stroke/complications , Stroke/diagnostic imaging , Stroke/pathology , Substantia Nigra/diagnostic imaging , Substantia Nigra/pathologyABSTRACT
Basel-Vanagaite-Smirin-Yosef syndrome (BVSYS) is an extremely rare autosomal recessive genetic disorder caused by variants in the MED25 gene. It is characterized by severe developmental delay and variable craniofacial, neurological, ocular, and cardiac anomalies. Since 2015, through whole exome sequencing, 20 patients have been described with common clinical features and biallelic variants in MED25, leading to a better definition of the phenotype associated with BVSYS. We report two young sisters, born to consanguineous parents, presenting with intellectual disability, neurological findings, and dysmorphic features typical of BVSYS, and also with bilateral perisylvian polymicrogyria. The younger sister died at the age of 1 year without autoptic examination. Whole exome sequencing detected a homozygous frameshift variant in the MED25 gene: NM_030973.3:c.1778_1779delAG, p.(Gln593Argfs). This report further delineates the most common clinical features of BVSYS and points to polymicrogyria as a distinctive neuroradiological feature of this syndrome.
Subject(s)
Abnormalities, Multiple/genetics , Developmental Disabilities/genetics , Intellectual Disability/genetics , Malformations of Cortical Development/genetics , Mediator Complex/genetics , Mutation/genetics , Polymicrogyria/genetics , Child , Comparative Genomic Hybridization , Female , Humans , Male , Pedigree , Phenotype , Polymicrogyria/diagnosisABSTRACT
Wiedemann-Steiner syndrome (WDSTS) is a rare autosomal dominant condition caused by heterozygous loss of function variants in the KMT2A (MLL) gene, encoding a lysine N-methyltransferase that mediates a histone methylation pattern specific for epigenetic transcriptional activation. WDSTS is characterized by a distinctive facial phenotype, hypertrichosis, short stature, developmental delay, intellectual disability, congenital malformations, and skeletal anomalies. Recently, a few patients have been reported having abnormal skeletal development of the cervical spine. Here we describe 11 such individuals, all with KMT2A de novo loss-of-function variants: 10 showed craniovertebral junction anomalies, while an 11th patient had a cervical abnormality in C7. By evaluating clinical and diagnostic imaging data we characterized these anomalies, which consist primarily of fused cervical vertebrae, C1 and C2 abnormalities, small foramen magnum and Chiari malformation type I. Craniovertebral anomalies in WDSTS patients have been largely disregarded so far, but the increasing number of reports suggests that they may be an intrinsic feature of this syndrome. Specific investigation strategies should be considered for early identification and prevention of craniovertebral junction complications in WDSTS patients.
Subject(s)
Abnormalities, Multiple/pathology , Cervical Vertebrae/pathology , Contracture/pathology , Growth Disorders/pathology , Histone-Lysine N-Methyltransferase/genetics , Intellectual Disability/pathology , Microcephaly/pathology , Mutation , Myeloid-Lymphoid Leukemia Protein/genetics , Abnormalities, Multiple/genetics , Adolescent , Adult , Cervical Vertebrae/metabolism , Child , Child, Preschool , Contracture/genetics , Facies , Female , Growth Disorders/genetics , Humans , Intellectual Disability/genetics , Male , Microcephaly/genetics , Phenotype , Syndrome , Young AdultABSTRACT
BACKGROUND: Glioblastoma (GBM) is known for its devastating intracranial infiltration and its unfavorable prognosis, while extracranial involvement is a very rare event, more commonly attributed to IDH wild-type (primary) GBM evolution. CASE PRESENTATION: We present a case of a young woman with a World Health Organization (WHO) grade II Astrocytoma evolved to WHO grade IV IDH mutant glioblastoma, with subsequent development of lymphatic and bone metastases, despite the favorable biomolecular pattern and the stability of the primary brain lesion. CONCLUSIONS: Our case highlights that grade II Astrocytoma may evolve to a GBM and rarely lead to a secondary metastatic diffusion, which can progress quite rapidly; any symptoms referable to a possible systemic involvement should be carefully investigated.
Subject(s)
Bone Neoplasms/secondary , Brain Neoplasms , Glioblastoma , Lymphatic Metastasis , Neoplasms, Second Primary , Adult , Astrocytoma/pathology , Brain Neoplasms/pathology , Brain Neoplasms/secondary , Female , Glioblastoma/pathology , Glioblastoma/secondary , HumansABSTRACT
PURPOSE: Mowat-Wilson syndrome (MWS) is a genetic disease characterized by distinctive facial features, moderate to severe intellectual disability, and congenital malformations, including Hirschsprung disease, genital and eye anomalies, and congenital heart defects, caused by haploinsufficiency of the ZEB2 gene. To date, no characteristic pattern of brain dysmorphology in MWS has been defined. METHODS: Through brain magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) analysis, we delineated a neuroimaging phenotype in 54 MWS patients with a proven ZEB2 defect, compared it with the features identified in a thorough review of published cases, and evaluated genotype-phenotype correlations. RESULTS: Ninety-six percent of patients had abnormal MRI results. The most common features were anomalies of corpus callosum (79.6% of cases), hippocampal abnormalities (77.8%), enlargement of cerebral ventricles (68.5%), and white matter abnormalities (reduction of thickness 40.7%, localized signal alterations 22.2%). Other consistent findings were large basal ganglia, cortical, and cerebellar malformations. Most features were underrepresented in the literature. We also found ZEB2 variations leading to synthesis of a defective protein to be favorable for psychomotor development and some epilepsy features but also associated with corpus callosum agenesis. CONCLUSION: This study delineated the spectrum of brain anomalies in MWS and provided new insights into the role of ZEB2 in neurodevelopment.Genet Med advance online publication 10 November 2016.