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Brain Advance Access published online on October 18, 2008

Brain, doi:10.1093/brain/awn269
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© The Author (2008). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oxfordjournals.org

Visual system involvement in patients with Friedreich's ataxia

Filippo Fortuna1, Piero Barboni1,2, Rocco Liguori1, Maria Lucia Valentino1, Giacomo Savini3, Cinzia Gellera4, Caterina Mariotti4, Giovanni Rizzo1,5, Caterina Tonon5, David Manners5, Raffaele Lodi5, Alfredo A Sadun6 and Valerio Carelli1

1Department of Neurological Sciences, University of Bologna, Bologna, 2Studio oculistico d’Azeglio, Bologna, 3Fondazione G.B. Bietti-IRCCS, Rome, 4U.O. Biochemistry and Genetics, Fondazione IRCCS-Istituto Neurologico Nazionale ‘Carlo Besta’, Milan, 5Department of Clinical Medicine and Applied Biotechnology, University of Bologna, Bologna, Italy and 6Doheny Eye Institute, Keck School of Medicine, University of Southern California, USA

Correspondence to: Valerio Carelli, MD, PhD, Dipartimento di Scienze Neurologiche, Università di Bologna, Via Ugo Foscolo 7, 40123 Bologna, Italy E-mail: valerio.carelli{at}unibo.it

Optic neuropathy is common in mitochondrial disorders, but poorly characterized in Friedreich's ataxia (FRDA), a recessive condition caused by lack of the mitochondrial protein frataxin. We investigated 26 molecularly confirmed FRDA patients by studying both anterior and posterior sections of the visual pathway using a new, integrated approach. This included visual field testing and optical coherence tomography (OCT), pattern visual evoked potentials (P-VEPs) and diffusion-weighted imaging. The latter was used to study optic radiation by calculating water apparent diffusion coefficients (ADC). All patients suffered optic nerve involvement with their disorder. Different patterns of visual field defects were observed and a variably reduced retinal nerve fiber layer thickness was seen by OCT in all cases. P-VEPs were abnormal in approximately half of the patients. Decreased visual acuity and temporal optic disc pallor were present in advanced stages of the disease, but only five patients were symptomatic. Two of these patients suffered a sudden loss of central vision, mimicking Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy (LHON), and of the other three symptomatic patients two were noted to be compound heterozygotes. ADC values of optic radiations in patients were significantly higher than controls (P < 0.01). Retinal nerve fiber layer thickness at OCT and P-VEPs correlated with age at onset and ICARS total score. ADC values correlated with age at onset, disease duration, GAA triplet expansion size, ICARS total score and P-VEPs. Visual pathway involvement is found consistently in FRDA, being previously underestimated, and we here document that it also involves the optic radiations. Occasional LHON-like cases may occur. However, optic neuropathy in FRDA substantially differs from classic mitochondrial optic neuropathies implying a different pathophysiology of visual system degeneration in this mitochondrial disease.

Key Words: optic neuropathy; Friedreich's Ataxia; mitochondria; OCT; frataxin

Abbreviations: ADC, apparent diffusion coefficients; DOA, dominant optic atrophy; DWI, diffusion-weighted imaging; EPI, echo planar imaging; F-ERG, flash-electroretinogram; FRDA, Friedreich's ataxia; ICARS, International Cooperative Ataxia Rating Scale; LHON, Leber's hereditary optic neuropathy; MERRF, myoclonic epilepsy, ragged-red-fibres; mtDNA, mitochondrial DNA; nt, nucleotide; OCT, optical coherence tomography; ONH, optic nerve head; PCR, polymerase chain reaction; P-VEPs, pattern visual evoked potentials; RGC, retinal ganglion cell; RNFL, retinal nerve fiber layer; ROI, regions of interest; RPE, retinal pigmented epithelium

Received May 30, 2008. Revised September 9, 2008. Accepted September 22, 2008.


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