CORRELATION BETWEEN CARDIAC INVOLVEMENT AND CTG TRINUCLEOTIDE REPEAT LENGTH IN MYOTONIC-DYSTROPHY

被引:101
作者
MELACINI, P
VILLANOVA, C
MENEGAZZO, E
NOVELLI, G
DANIELI, G
RIZZOLI, G
FASOLI, G
ANGELINI, C
BUJA, G
MIORELLI, M
DALLAPICCOLA, B
DALLAVOLTA, S
机构
[1] UNIV PADUA, DEPT NEUROL, PADUA, ITALY
[2] UNIV PADUA, DEPT BIOL, PADUA, ITALY
[3] UNIV ROMA TOR VERGATA, DEPT PUBL HLTH & CELL BIOL, I-00173 ROME, ITALY
[4] UNIV CATTOLICA SACRO CUORE, ROME, ITALY
关键词
D O I
10.1016/0735-1097(94)00351-P
中图分类号
R5 [内科学];
学科分类号
1002 ; 100201 ;
摘要
Objectives. Because sudden death due to complete atrioventricular (AV) block or ventricular arrhythmias is the most dramatic event in myotonic dystrophy, we assessed the relation of cardiac disease to cytosine-thymine-guanine (CTG) triplet mutation in adults affected with myotonic dystrophy. Background. The myotonic dystrophy mutation, identified as an unstable deoxyribonucleic acid (DNA) sequence (CTG) prone to increase the number of trinucleotide repeats, produces clinical manifestations of the disease in skeletal muscle, the heart and many organ systems. Methods. Forty-two adult patients underwent electrocardiography and echocardiography; in addition, signal-averaging electrocardiography was performed in 22, and 24-h Holter monitoring was recorded in 32. The diagnosis was established by neurologic examination, electromyography, muscle biopsy and DNA analysis. The patients were then classified into three subgroups on the basis of the number of CTG trinucleotide repeat expansions: E(1) = 18 patients with 0 to 500 CTG repeats; E(2) = 12 patients with up to 1,000 repeats; E(3) + E(4) = 10 patients with up to 1,500 repeats and 2 patients with >1,500 repeats. Results. The incidence of normal electrocardiographic (EGG) results was found to be significantly different in the three subgroups (55%, 50%, 17% in E(1), E(2), E(3) + E(4), respectively, p = 0.04), with the highest values in the group with fewer repeat expansions. The incidence of complete left bundle branch block was also significantly different among the groups (5% in E(1), 0% in E(2), 42% in E(3) + E(4) p = 0.01) and was directly correlated with the size of the expansion. A time domain analysis of the signal-averaged ECG obtained in 12 patients in E(1), 4 in E(2), 5 in E(3) and 1 in E(4) showed that abnormal ventricular late potentials were directly correlated with CTG expansion (33% in E(1), 75% in E(2), 83% in E(3) + E(4), p = 0.05). Moreover, the incidence of ventricular couplets or triplets showed a positive correlation with size of CTG expansion (0 in E(1), 0 in E(2), 29% in E(3) + E(4) chi square 0.02). Conclusions. Our findings suggest that the involvement of specialized cardiac tissue, accounting for severe AV and intraventricular conduction defects, is related to CTG repeat length. In addition, the presence of abnormal late potentials directly correlates to CTG expansion. Abnormal late potentials, caused by slowed and fragmented conduction through damaged areas of myocardium, represent a substrate for malignant reentrant ventricular arrhythmias. In the future, therefore, molecular analysis of DNA should identify patients with cardiac disease at high risk for development of AV block or Lethal ventricular arrhythmias.
引用
收藏
页码:239 / 245
页数:7
相关论文
共 47 条
[1]   LARGER EXPANSIONS OF THE CTG REPEAT IN MUSCLE COMPARED TO LYMPHOCYTES FROM PATIENTS WITH MYOTONIC-DYSTROPHY [J].
ANVRET, M ;
AHLBERG, G ;
GRANDELL, U ;
HEDBERG, B ;
JOHNSON, K ;
EDSTROM, L .
HUMAN MOLECULAR GENETICS, 1993, 2 (09) :1397-1400
[2]  
ASHIZAWA T, 1902, NEUROLOGY, V42, P1871
[3]   CLONING OF THE ESSENTIAL MYOTONIC-DYSTROPHY REGION AND MAPPING OF THE PUTATIVE DEFECT [J].
ASLANIDIS, C ;
JANSEN, G ;
AMEMIYA, C ;
SHUTLER, G ;
MAHADEVAN, M ;
TSILFIDIS, C ;
CHEN, C ;
ALLEMAN, J ;
WORMSKAMP, NGM ;
VOOIJS, M ;
BUXTON, J ;
JOHNSON, K ;
SMEETS, HJM ;
LENNON, GG ;
CARRANO, AV ;
KORNELUK, RG ;
WIERINGA, B ;
DEJONG, PJ .
NATURE, 1992, 355 (6360) :548-551
[4]   MOLECULAR-BASIS OF MYOTONIC-DYSTROPHY - EXPANSION OF A TRINUCLEOTIDE (CTG) REPEAT AT THE 3' END OF A TRANSCRIPT ENCODING A PROTEIN-KINASE FAMILY MEMBER [J].
BROOK, JD ;
MCCURRACH, ME ;
HARLEY, HG ;
BUCKLER, AJ ;
CHURCH, D ;
ABURATANI, H ;
HUNTER, K ;
STANTON, VP ;
THIRION, JP ;
HUDSON, T ;
SOHN, R ;
ZEMELMAN, B ;
SNELL, RG ;
RUNDLE, SA ;
CROW, S ;
DAVIES, J ;
SHELBOURNE, P ;
BUXTON, J ;
JONES, C ;
JUVONEN, V ;
JOHNSON, K ;
HARPER, PS ;
SHAW, DJ ;
HOUSMAN, DE .
CELL, 1992, 68 (04) :799-808
[5]   REVERSE MUTATION IN MYOTONIC-DYSTROPHY [J].
BRUNNER, HG ;
JANSEN, G ;
NILLESEN, W ;
NELEN, MR ;
DEDIE, CEM ;
HOWELER, CJ ;
VANOOST, BA ;
WIERINGA, B ;
ROPERS, HH ;
SMEETS, HJM .
NEW ENGLAND JOURNAL OF MEDICINE, 1993, 328 (07) :476-480
[6]   EFFECT OF CONDUCTION DEFECTS ON THE SIGNAL-AVERAGED ELECTROCARDIOGRAPHIC DETERMINATION OF LATE POTENTIALS [J].
BUCKINGHAM, TA ;
THESSEN, CC ;
STEVENS, LL ;
REDD, RM ;
KENNEDY, HL .
AMERICAN JOURNAL OF CARDIOLOGY, 1988, 61 (15) :1265-1271
[7]   DETECTION OF AN UNSTABLE FRAGMENT OF DNA SPECIFIC TO INDIVIDUALS WITH MYOTONIC-DYSTROPHY [J].
BUXTON, J ;
SHELBOURNE, P ;
DAVIES, J ;
JONES, C ;
VANTONGEREN, T ;
ASLANIDIS, C ;
DEJONG, P ;
JANSEN, G ;
ANVRET, M ;
RILEY, B ;
WILLIAMSON, R ;
JOHNSON, K .
NATURE, 1992, 355 (6360) :547-548
[8]   CLINICAL AND INDUCED VENTRICULAR-TACHYCARDIA IN A PATIENT WITH MYOTONIC-DYSTROPHY [J].
CANNOM, DS ;
WYMAN, MG ;
GOLDREYER, BN .
JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN COLLEGE OF CARDIOLOGY, 1984, 4 (03) :625-628
[9]   HEART IN MYOTONIA ATROPHICA [J].
CHURCH, SC .
ARCHIVES OF INTERNAL MEDICINE, 1967, 119 (02) :176-+
[10]   TWO-DIMENSIONAL ECHOCARDIOGRAPHIC MITRAL-VALVE PROLAPSE - EVIDENCE FOR A RELATIONSHIP OF ECHOCARDIOGRAPHIC MORPHOLOGY TO CLINICAL FINDINGS AND TO MITRAL ANNULAR SIZE [J].
COHEN, IS .
AMERICAN HEART JOURNAL, 1987, 113 (04) :859-868