Infantile- and childhood-onset parkinsonism is mainly due to genetic alterations and is an exceedingly rare condition, unlike Parkinson's disease (PD), which is one of the most common neurologic disorders in adulthood. The clinical characterization of parkinsonism during early stages of neuromotor development is controversial due to the lack of consensus regarding the clinical criteria of PD or parkinsonism in the immature brain. The classification here proposed is based on a review of conditions that emerge during infancy and childhood, with key symptoms evocative of adult parkinsonism. The proposed nosography is based on age at presentation, clinical features, outcome, and etiological background. It includes developmental parkinsonism, infantile degenerative parkinsonism, parkinsonism in the setting of neurodevelopmental disorders, parkinsonism in the setting of multisystem brain diseases, juvenile parkinsonism and dystonia-parkinsonism, and acquired parkinsonism. The subgroups denoting peculiar clinical presentations as a consequence of disease impact on the immature brain are developmental parkinsonism due to monoamine metabolic disorders and infantile degenerative parkinsonism caused by DAT and WASR2 defects. More tardive parkinsonisms occur in genetic conditions that cause a generalized derangement of neurodevelopmental processes, such as those due to MECP2, NR4A2, SCN1A, and RAB39B. Some conditions presenting with neurodevelopmental disorder can progress later, disclosing their neurodegenerative nature (i.e. WDR45 and KCND3). Finally, new emerging conditions with childhood-onset parkinsonism arise from the cumulative effect of multiple genetic lesions.

Parkinsonism in children: Clinical classification and etiological spectrum / Leuzzi, Vincenzo; Nardecchia, Francesca; Pons, Roser; Galosi, Serena. - In: PARKINSONISM & RELATED DISORDERS. - ISSN 1353-8020. - (2020). [10.1016/j.parkreldis.2020.10.002]

Parkinsonism in children: Clinical classification and etiological spectrum

Leuzzi, Vincenzo
Primo
;
Nardecchia, Francesca
Secondo
;
Galosi, Serena
Ultimo
2020

Abstract

Infantile- and childhood-onset parkinsonism is mainly due to genetic alterations and is an exceedingly rare condition, unlike Parkinson's disease (PD), which is one of the most common neurologic disorders in adulthood. The clinical characterization of parkinsonism during early stages of neuromotor development is controversial due to the lack of consensus regarding the clinical criteria of PD or parkinsonism in the immature brain. The classification here proposed is based on a review of conditions that emerge during infancy and childhood, with key symptoms evocative of adult parkinsonism. The proposed nosography is based on age at presentation, clinical features, outcome, and etiological background. It includes developmental parkinsonism, infantile degenerative parkinsonism, parkinsonism in the setting of neurodevelopmental disorders, parkinsonism in the setting of multisystem brain diseases, juvenile parkinsonism and dystonia-parkinsonism, and acquired parkinsonism. The subgroups denoting peculiar clinical presentations as a consequence of disease impact on the immature brain are developmental parkinsonism due to monoamine metabolic disorders and infantile degenerative parkinsonism caused by DAT and WASR2 defects. More tardive parkinsonisms occur in genetic conditions that cause a generalized derangement of neurodevelopmental processes, such as those due to MECP2, NR4A2, SCN1A, and RAB39B. Some conditions presenting with neurodevelopmental disorder can progress later, disclosing their neurodegenerative nature (i.e. WDR45 and KCND3). Finally, new emerging conditions with childhood-onset parkinsonism arise from the cumulative effect of multiple genetic lesions.
2020
Classification of Parkinson disease; Global developmental delay and movement disorders; Inherited neurotransmitter disorders; Movement disorders in children; Neurodegenerative disorders and parkinsonism in children; Neurodevelopmental disorders and parkinsonism; Parkinson's disease in children; Rett syndrome
01 Pubblicazione su rivista::01g Articolo di rassegna (Review)
Parkinsonism in children: Clinical classification and etiological spectrum / Leuzzi, Vincenzo; Nardecchia, Francesca; Pons, Roser; Galosi, Serena. - In: PARKINSONISM & RELATED DISORDERS. - ISSN 1353-8020. - (2020). [10.1016/j.parkreldis.2020.10.002]
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Utilizza questo identificativo per citare o creare un link a questo documento: https://hdl.handle.net/11573/1450203
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