A mixed-ethnicity myoclonus-dystonia patient with a novel SGCE nonsense mutation: a case report

BMC Neurol. 2022 Jan 5;22(1):11. doi: 10.1186/s12883-021-02530-z.

Abstract

Background: Myoclonus-dystonia is a rare movement disorder with an autosomal dominant inheritance pattern characterized by a combination of myoclonic jerks and dystonia that may have psychiatric manifestations. Our aim is to present neurologic and psychiatric phenotypic characteristics in the first Filipino bi-ethnic myoclonus-dystonia patient and her father.

Case presentation: We investigated a Filipino myoclonus-dystonia patient with a positive family history. This 21-year-old woman of mixed Filipino-Greek ethnicity presented with involuntary jerking movements of her upper extremities, head, and trunk. Her symptoms affected her activities of daily living which led her to develop moderate depression, mild to moderate anxiety, and mild obsessive-compulsive disorder (OCD). Her 49-year-old Greek father suffered from adolescence-onset myoclonus-dystonia.

Conclusion: Genetic testing revealed a novel epsilon-sarcoglycan (SGCE) gene nonsense mutation c.821C > A; p.Ser274* that confirmed our clinical diagnosis. For co-morbid anxiety, depression, and OCD, this patient was given duloxetine, in addition to clonazepam for the myoclonus and dystonia.

Keywords: Case report; DYT-SGCE; Dystonia; Myoclonus.

Publication types

  • Case Reports

MeSH terms

  • Activities of Daily Living
  • Codon, Nonsense
  • Dystonic Disorders* / drug therapy
  • Dystonic Disorders* / genetics
  • Ethnicity
  • Female
  • Humans
  • Male
  • Middle Aged
  • Mutation
  • Myoclonus* / complications
  • Myoclonus* / drug therapy
  • Myoclonus* / genetics
  • Sarcoglycans / genetics
  • Young Adult

Substances

  • Codon, Nonsense
  • SGCE protein, human
  • Sarcoglycans

Supplementary concepts

  • Myoclonic dystonia