TY - JOUR
T1 - Brain glucose supply and the syndrome of infantile neuroglycopenia
AU - Pascual, Juan M.
AU - Wang, Dong
AU - Hinton, Veronica
AU - Engelstad, Kristin
AU - Saxena, Chitra M.
AU - Van Heertum, Ronald L.
AU - De Vivo, Darryl C.
PY - 2007/4
Y1 - 2007/4
N2 - Objective: To describe neuroglycopenia as a specific syndrome caused by insufficient glucose availability during brain development. Design: Neurologic examinations, neuropsychologic tests, biochemical methods, and functional imaging. Participants: Patients afflicted by genetic mutation of the cerebral glucose transporter type 1 and a patient afflicted by persistent infantile hypoglycemia (hyperinsulinism) matched to her healthy twin. Results: The hallmark of the phenotype is the combination of infantile epilepsy and cerebellar and pyramidal tract dysfunction, together with permanent neuropsychologic abnormalities and reduced thalamocortical glucose uptake despite subsequent supply of energetic substrate. Conclusions: When neuroglycopenia - the lack of adequate glucose supply to the nervous system - occurs in the developing brain, thalamic and cortical metabolism mature aberrantly, causing epilepsy associated with other characteristic neurologic and behavioral disturbances, a pattern also reflected in functional images, as if there were a temporal window during which glucose were crucial for brain development. When maturation is complete, glucose merely serves as a fuel, and then, when deficient, it only causes unrelated disturbances.
AB - Objective: To describe neuroglycopenia as a specific syndrome caused by insufficient glucose availability during brain development. Design: Neurologic examinations, neuropsychologic tests, biochemical methods, and functional imaging. Participants: Patients afflicted by genetic mutation of the cerebral glucose transporter type 1 and a patient afflicted by persistent infantile hypoglycemia (hyperinsulinism) matched to her healthy twin. Results: The hallmark of the phenotype is the combination of infantile epilepsy and cerebellar and pyramidal tract dysfunction, together with permanent neuropsychologic abnormalities and reduced thalamocortical glucose uptake despite subsequent supply of energetic substrate. Conclusions: When neuroglycopenia - the lack of adequate glucose supply to the nervous system - occurs in the developing brain, thalamic and cortical metabolism mature aberrantly, causing epilepsy associated with other characteristic neurologic and behavioral disturbances, a pattern also reflected in functional images, as if there were a temporal window during which glucose were crucial for brain development. When maturation is complete, glucose merely serves as a fuel, and then, when deficient, it only causes unrelated disturbances.
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U2 - 10.1001/archneur.64.4.noc60165
DO - 10.1001/archneur.64.4.noc60165
M3 - Article
C2 - 17296829
AN - SCOPUS:34247166194
SN - 0003-9942
VL - 64
SP - 507
EP - 513
JO - Archives of Neurology
JF - Archives of Neurology
IS - 4
ER -