Abstract

The cerebral autosomal dominant arteriopathy with subcortical infarcts and leukoencephalopathy (CADASIL) is caused by mutations of the Notch3 gene in the chromosome 19p13.1. and is characterized by small-vessel disease of the cerebral. The clinical feature consists of migraine, recurrent strokes, mood changes and dementia. To describe the clinical phenotype of a Colombian family with hereditary cerebrovascular disease. We performed one pedigree with 268 individuals, neurologic examination to 57 members and magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) to 25 of them. Clinical analysis strongly support the diagnosis of CADASIL because 12 individuals had suffered recurrent stroke, five of them later developed subcortical dementia. Two patients developed dementia without preceding stroke. All affected individuals by stroke or dementia whom were tested with MRI had white matter hyperintensities and subcortical infarcts (nine cases). Others seven individuals have MRI signal abnormalities like CADASIL, four of them are asymptomatic, one had suffered ischemic transient attacks and two had suffered migraine. Other 22 individuals had only migraine. We outstand the high frequency of MRI signal abnormalities in corpus callosum that we found in five individuals with stroke or dementia, the patient with ischemic transient attack and one asymptomatic patient, either the presence of hearing loss in seven individuals with stroke or dementia. We describe one large family with hereditary cerebrovascular disease characterized by recurrent strokes, subcortical dementia, hearing loss, migraine, and MRI signal abnormalities typed leukoencephalopathy, subcortical infarcts and alterations in corpus callosum. Clinical analysis strongly support the diagnosis of CADASIL.

Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call