Abstract

IntroductionThe nerve sonographic features of Dejerine‐Sottas disease (DSD) have not previously been described.MethodsThis exploratory cross‐sectional, matched, case–control study investigated differences in nerve cross‐sectional area (CSA) in children with DSD compared to healthy controls and children with Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease type 1A (CMT1A). CSA of the median, ulnar, tibial, and sural nerves was measured by peripheral nerve ultrasound. The mean difference in CSA between children with DSD, controls, and CMT1A was determined individually and within each group.ResultsFive children with DSD and five age‐ and sex‐matched controls were enrolled. Data from five age‐matched children with CMT1A was also included. Group comparison showed no mean difference in nerve CSA between children with DSD and controls. Individual analysis of each DSD patient with their matched control indicated an increase in nerve CSA in three of the five children. The largest increase was observed in a child with a heterozygous PMP22 point mutation (nerve CSA fivefold larger than a control and twofold larger than a child with CMT1A). Nerve CSA was moderately increased in two children—one with a heterozygous mutation in MPZ and the other of unknown genetic etiology.ConclusionsChanges in nerve CSA on ultrasonography in children with DSD differ according to the underlying genetic etiology, confirming the variation in underlying pathobiologic processes and downstream morphological abnormalities of DSD subtypes. Nerve ultrasound may assist in the clinical phenotyping of DSD and act as an adjunct to known distinctive clinical and neurophysiologic findings of DSD subtypes. Larger studies in DSD cohorts are required to confirm these findings.

Highlights

  • The nerve sonographic features of Dejerine-Sottas disease (DSD) have not previously been described

  • We evaluated nerve cross-­sectional area (CSA) in children with DSD in comparison both with age-­and sex-­matched healthy controls and age-­matched children with Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease type 1A (CMT1A)

  • Given the more severe clinical course and neurophysiologic abnormalities in DSD compared to CMT1A, we hypothesized that nerve CSA would be significantly greater in children with DSD compared to their healthy controls, and greater than matched children with CMT1A

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Summary

| INTRODUCTION

Dejerine–Sottas disease (DSD) comprises a genetically heterogeneous group of early-­onset demyelinating hereditary neuropathies. The clinical and neurophysiologic phenotype of DSD includes forms of Charcot–Marie–Tooth disease (CMT) types 3 and 4 (Yiu & Ryan, 2012). Yiu et al (2015) found a two-­ to threefold increase in nerve cross-­sectional area (CSA) in children with CMT1A compared to controls. Nerve ultrasound may play a role in the diagnosis of pediatric inherited neuropathies, and in the era of next-­generation sequencing, knowledge of specific nerve sonographic features, in addition to clinical and neurophysiologic findings, may assist in the interpretation of genetic testing results. We evaluated nerve CSA in children with DSD in comparison both with age-­and sex-­matched healthy controls and age-­matched children with CMT1A

| MATERIALS AND METHODS
Findings
| Study design and recruitment
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