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Brain Advance Access published online on April 27, 2005

Brain, doi:10.1093/brain/awh511
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© The Author (2005). Published by Oxford University Press on behalf of the Guarantors of Brain. All rights reserved. For Permissions, please email: journals.permissions@oupjournals.org
Received July 30, 2004
Revised February 14, 2005
Accepted March 17, 2005

Article

Autosomal dominant congenital fibre type disproportion: a clinicopathological and imaging study of a large family

M. J. Sobrido 1, J. M. Fernández 2, E. Fontoira 3, C. Pérez-Sousa 4, A. Cabello 5, M. Castro 6, S. Teijeira 7, S. Álvarez 7, S. Mederer 6, E. Rivas 7, M. Seijo-Martínez 6, and C. Navarro 7*

1 Department of Pathology and Neuropathology, Hospital do Meixoeiro, Vigo, Spain; Fundación Pública Galega de Medicina Xenómica, Santiago de Compostela, Ferrol, Spain
2 Department of Neurophysiology, Complexo Hospitalario Xeral-Cíes, Vigo, Spain
3 Department of Radiology, Complexo Hospitalario Xeral-Cíes, Vigo, Spain
4 Neurology Unit, Complexo Hospitalario Arquitecto Marcide, Ferrol, Spain
5 Department of Neuropathology, Hospital 12 Octubre, Madrid, Spain
6 Department of Neurology, Complexo Hospitalario de Pontevedra, Pontevedra, Spain
7 Department of Pathology and Neuropathology, Hospital do Meixoeiro, Vigo, Spain

* To whom correspondence should be addressed.
C. Navarro, E-mail: carmen.navarro.fernandez.balbuena{at}sergas.es


   Abstract

Congenital fibre type disproportion (CFTD) is considered a non-progressive or slowly progressive muscle disease with relative smallness of type 1 fibres on pathological examination. Although generally benign, CFTD has a variable natural course and severe progression has been observed in some patients. The pathogenesis of the disorder is unknown and many authors consider CFTD a syndrome with multiple aetiologies rather than a separate clinical entity. A positive family history has been reported in about 40% of cases, but the inheritance pattern is not clear. Both autosomal recessive and dominant modes of inheritance have been suggested. The present paper describes a large, multigenerational kindred that has an inherited myopathy fulfilling the histological criteria of CFTD, with autosomal dominant transmission and high penetrance. The clinical picture, remarkably similar in all affected family members, started in early infancy with mild limb muscle weakness. There was slow progression of symptoms into adulthood, with moderate to severe, mainly proximal, muscle weakness without loss of ambulation. Muscle biopsy from two affected individuals demonstrated predominance of small type 1 muscle fibres without other significant findings. Nerve conduction studies were normal and needle electromyography showed a myopathic pattern. MRI examination performed on three patients from successive generations showed involvement of proximal limb and paraspinal muscles. The clinical and pathological homogeneity in the present family, together with the lack of additional histological abnormalities after decades of disease progression in two affected individuals, supports this being a distinct myopathy with fibre type disproportion. Whether the disease in this family can be regarded as a form of the congenital myopathy known as CFTD or rather a unique condition sharing histological features with CFTD needs further investigation. This is, to our knowledge, the largest kindred with muscle fibre type disproportion reported to date. Our data confirm autosomal dominant inheritance, and this is the first MRI document of this disorder.

Keywords: congenital fibre type disproportion; congenital myopathy; muscle MRI; autosomal dominant.
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