Morvan's syndrome: peripheral and central nervous system and cardiac involvement with antibodies to voltage-gated potassium channels

被引:266
作者
Liguori, R
Vincent, A
Clover, L
Avoni, P
Plazzi, G
Cortelli, P
Baruzzi, A
Carey, T
Gambetti, P
Lugaresi, E
Montagna, P
机构
[1] Univ Bologna, Inst Neurol, I-40126 Bologna, Italy
[2] Univ Oxford, John Radcliffe Hosp, Weatherall Inst Mol Med, Oxford OX3 9DU, England
[3] Case Western Reserve Univ, Div Neuropathol, Cleveland, OH 44106 USA
关键词
neuromyotonia; anti-VGKC antibodies; Morvan's syndrome; paraneoplastic syndrome; fatal familial insomnia;
D O I
10.1093/brain/124.12.2417
中图分类号
R74 [神经病学与精神病学];
学科分类号
摘要
Alorvan's 'fibrillary chorea' or Morvan's syndrome is characterized by neuromyotonia (NMT), pain, hyper-hydrosis, weight loss, severe insomnia and hallucinations. We describe a man aged 76 years with NMT, dysautonomia, cardiac arrhythmia, lack of slow-wave sleep and abnormal rapid eye movement sleep. He had raised serum antibodies to voltage-gated K+ channels (VGKC), oligoclonal bands in his CSF, markedly increased serum norepinephrine, increased serum cortisol and reduced levels and absent circadian rhythms of prolactin and melatonin. The neurohormonal findings and many of the clinical features were very similar to those in fatal familial insomnia, a hereditary prion disease that is associated with thalamic degenerative changes. Strikingly, however, all symptoms in our MFC patient improved,with plasma exchange. The patient died unexpectedly 11 months later. At autopsy, there was a pulmonary adenocarcinoma, but brain pathology showed only a microinfarct in the hippocampus and no thalamic changes. The NMT and some of the autonomic features are likely to be directly related to the VGKC antibodies acting in the periphery. The central symptoms might also be due to the direct effects of VGKC antibodies, or perhaps of other autoantibodies still to be defined, on the limbic system with secondary effects on neurohormone levels. Alternatively, changes in secretion of neurohormones in the periphery might contribute to the central disturbance. The relationship between VGKC antibodies, neurohormonal levels, autonomic, limbic and sleep disorders requires further study.
引用
收藏
页码:2417 / 2426
页数:10
相关论文
共 33 条
[1]   Mechanisms of disease - Ion channels - Basic science and clinical disease [J].
Ackerman, MJ ;
Clapham, DE .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1997, 336 (22) :1575-1586
[2]   Restricted IgG1 subclass of anti-Yo antibodies in paraneoplastic cerebellar degeneration [J].
Amyes, E ;
Curnow, J ;
Stark, Z ;
Corlett, L ;
Sutton, I ;
Vincent, A .
JOURNAL OF NEUROIMMUNOLOGY, 2001, 114 (1-2) :259-264
[3]  
ANTON AH, 1962, J PHARMACOL EXP THER, V138, P360
[4]  
BANNISTER R, 1988, AUTONOMIC FAILURE TX, P289
[5]   Morvan's syndrome associated with voltage-gated K+ channel antibodies [J].
Barber, PA ;
Anderson, NE ;
Vincent, A .
NEUROLOGY, 2000, 54 (03) :771-772
[6]   Potassium channel antibodies in two patients with reversible limbic encephalitis [J].
Buckley, C ;
Oger, J ;
Clover, L ;
Tüzün, E ;
Carpenter, K ;
Jackson, M ;
Vincent, A .
ANNALS OF NEUROLOGY, 2001, 50 (01) :73-78
[7]   LIMBIC ENCEPHALITIS AND ITS ASSOCIATION WITH CARCINOMA [J].
CORSELLIS, JA ;
GOLDBERG, GJ ;
NORTON, AR .
BRAIN, 1968, 91 :481-+
[8]  
FISCHERP.C, 1974, REV NEUROL, V130, P111
[9]  
Gambetti Pierluigi, 1994, P27
[10]   PSEUDO-HYPERSOMNIA AND PRE-SLEEP BEHAVIOR WITH BILATERAL PARAMEDIAN THALAMIC LESIONS [J].
GUILLEMINAULT, C ;
QUERASALVA, MA ;
GOLDBERG, MP .
BRAIN, 1993, 116 :1549-1563