Abstract

Aicardi-Goutières syndrome (AGS) is a hereditary inflammatory encephalopathy resulting in severe neurological damage in the majority of cases. We report on two siblings with AGS6 due to compound heterozygosity for a known and a novel mutation in the ADAR gene and a strikingly variable phenotype. The first sibling presented at 12 months of age with a subacute encephalopathy following a mild respiratory infection. The child developed a spastic tetraparesis, generalized dystonia and dysarthria. In contrast, the younger sibling presented with an acute episode of neurological impairment in his third year of life, from which he recovered without sequelae within a few weeks. These findings illustrate a striking intrafamilial phenotypic variability in patients with AGS6 and describe the first case of a full recovery from an acute encephalopathy in an AGS patient. Our findings also suggest that AGS should be considered as an important differential diagnosis of an infection-triggered encephalopathy in infancy despite the absence of typical neuroimaging findings.

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