Spectrum of clinical and electrophysiologic features in HNPP patients with the 17p11.2 deletion

Neurology. 1999 Apr 22;52(7):1440-6. doi: 10.1212/wnl.52.7.1440.

Abstract

Objective: To study the clinical and electrophysiologic features of a large series of carriers of the 17p11.2 deletion.

Background: The 17p11.2 deletion is associated in most patients with recurrent acute nerve palsies, which is the typical presentation of hereditary neuropathy with liability to pressure palsies (HNPP). Nevertheless, a few other phenotypes have been reported.

Methods: On the basis of clinical and electrophysiologic data, the authors conducted a retrospective study of 99 individuals with the 17p11.2 deletion referred to their neurogenetic department between 1993 and 1997.

Results: In addition to the typical presentation of HNPP, they describe five other phenotypes in 15 patients: recurrent positional short-term sensory symptoms, progressive mononeuropathy, Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease-like polyneuropathy, chronic sensory polyneuropathy, and chronic inflammatory demyelinating polyneuropathy-like, recurrent subacute polyneuropathy; and 14 asymptomatic patients. In all the deletion carriers, regardless of their phenotype and by the second decade, the authors found a characteristic, multifocal electrophysiologic neuropathy consisting of a diffuse increase in distal motor latencies contrasting with normal or moderately reduced motor nerve conduction velocities, a diffuse reduction in sensory nerve action potential, and multiple focal slowing of nerve conduction at the usual sites of entrapment. The key diagnostic criterion is a bilateral slowing of sensory and motor nerve conduction at the carpal tunnel with at least one abnormal parameter for motor conduction in one peroneal nerve.

Conclusion: The authors confirm the clinical phenotypic heterogeneity of the 17p11.2 deletion and suggest that electrophysiologic examination is a reliable tool for screening suspected HNPP patients in its various clinical presentations.

MeSH terms

  • Adolescent
  • Adult
  • Aged
  • Aged, 80 and over
  • Chromosomes, Human, Pair 17 / genetics*
  • Gene Deletion*
  • Hereditary Sensory and Motor Neuropathy / genetics*
  • Hereditary Sensory and Motor Neuropathy / physiopathology*
  • Humans
  • Middle Aged
  • Neural Conduction / physiology