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Dive into the research topics where Harold Marks is active.

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Featured researches published by Harold Marks.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2010

5q14.3 Deletion Manifesting as Mitochondrial Disease and Autism: Case Report

Herbert Ezugha; Michael J. Goldenthal; Ignacio Valencia; Carol E. Anderson; Agustin Legido; Harold Marks

Mitochondrial disorders are usually associated with defects of 1 or more of the 5 complexes (I to V) of the electron transport chain, or respiratory chain. Complex I and IV are the 2 most frequent abnormalities of the electron transport chain in humans. The authors report the case of a 12-year-old boy with dysmorphic facies, mental retardation, autism, epilepsy, and leg weakness. Buccal swab electron transport chain analysis revealed severe decrease in complex IV and mild reduction in complex I activity levels. Chromosomal microarray studies, using array-based comparative genomic hybridization, revealed a 1-Mb deletion in the 5q14.3 region. This case illustrates that this deletion can be associated with complex I and IV deficits, hence manifesting as a mitochondrial disease. It could be hypothesized that genes that either encode or regulate the expression and/or assembly of complex IV or I subunits are located within the deleted region of 5q14.3.


Pediatric Neurology | 2009

Sleep Study Abnormalities in Children With Attention Deficit Hyperactivity Disorder

Jatinder S. Goraya; Marcos Cruz; Ignacio Valencia; Joseph Kaleyias; Divya S. Khurana; H. Huntley Hardison; Harold Marks; Agustin Legido; Sanjeev V. Kothare

The study objective was to describe polysomnographic findings in children with attention deficit hyperactivity disorder (ADHD) with diverse sleep problems. Polysomnographic data were retrospectively analyzed for 33 children (age 3-16 years) with ADHD who had sleep studies performed for diverse sleep complaints. Eight patients (24%) had obstructive sleep apnea, 10 (30%) had periodic limb movements of sleep, 8 (24%) had upper airway resistance syndrome, and 5 (15%) had obstructive hypoventilation. The ADHD group showed decreased sleep efficiency, increased arousal index, increased wake after sleep onset, decreased oxygen saturation nadir, and increased snoring, compared with control subjects. Compared with ADHD children without sleep disordered breathing, those who had sleep disordered breathing were significantly more obese and had more sleep architectural abnormalities (including increased sleep latency, increased rapid eye movement latency, increased wake after sleep onset, and increased arousal index with more oxygen desaturations), although total sleep time and sleep efficiency were not significantly different. Sleep disordered breathing and periodic limb movements of sleep appear to be common among children with ADHD who have symptoms of disturbed sleep.


European Journal of Paediatric Neurology | 2009

Efficacy and safety of lamotrigine monotherapy in children and adolescents with epilepsy.

Ignacio Valencia; Gerard Piñol-Ripoll; Divya S. Khurana; H. Huntley Hardison; Sanjeev V. Kothare; Joseph J. Melvin; Harold Marks; Agustin Legido

Lamotrigine (LTG) has shown to confer broad-spectrum, well-tolerated control of epilepsy. Monotherapy is preferable over polytherapy because of better compliance, fewer adverse events, less interactions, lower teratogenicity and lower cost. The aim of this study is to evaluate the efficacy and safety of LTG monotherapy on seizure control in a cohort of children and adolescents with epilepsy. We retrospectively reviewed the records of children and adolescents treated with LTG monotherapy at our institution between 2001 and 2006. Data collected included demographics, seizure type, etiology of seizures, age at onset of seizures and at initiation of LTG treatment, number of antiepileptic drugs (AEDs) prior to LTG, dose of LTG, length of follow-up, treatment response, and adverse events. Seventy-two children and adolescents were identified (mean age 12.1 years); 37.5% had mental retardation. Age at onset of epilepsy was 5.7 years (0-16). Twenty three percent had symptomatic focal epilepsy, 15.5% idiopathic focal epilepsy, 19.4% symptomatic generalized epilepsy and 41.6% idiopathic generalized epilepsy. LTG was used as first-line monotherapy in 26.4% of patients and as a second-line monotherapy in 73.6%. Age at initiation of LTG therapy was 10 years (2.8-19). Mean number of AEDs tried prior to LTG was 1.3 (0-6). Mean dose of LTG was 5.5mg/kg/day (1.1-13.7). Mean follow-up period was 33 months (3 weeks to 11.5 years). The degree of seizure reduction was as follows: seizure free in 42%, 75-90% reduction in 17.4%, 50-74% in 11.6%, 25-49% in 10%. Sixteen percent had no change in seizure control and 3% became worse. The most common adverse event was rash (6.9%). Six (8.3%) patients discontinued LTG because of the adverse events. No patient had Stevens-Johnson syndrome. In conclusion, LTG was effective and well-tolerated as monotherapy in children and adolescents for both focal and generalized epilepsies.


Pediatric Neurology | 2009

Efficacy and Tolerability of Topiramate in Pediatric Migraine

Marcos Cruz; Ignacio Valencia; Agustin Legido; Sanjeev V. Kothare; Divya S. Khurana; Sabrina W. Yum; H. Huntley Hardison; Joseph J. Melvin; Harold Marks

About 5-10% of school-age children manifest migraine headaches. Treatment options for pediatric migraine are limited. Topiramate is approved for migraine prophylaxis in adults, but its use in children is limited. We retrospectively reviewed the records of 37 patients, i.e., 22 (60%) girls and 15 (40%) boys (mean age, 14 years; range, 7.3-20.5 years), diagnosed with migraine without aura in 30 (81%), with aura in four (11%), and abdominal, ophthalmoplegic, and catamenial in one each. The mean follow-up was 12 +/- 5 months standard deviation (S.D.). Clinical response was qualified as excellent, good, no change, or worse. Numbers of headaches per month were 15 +/- 7 S.D. prior to treatment and 3 +/- 3.4 S.D. (P < 0.001) after treatment. An excellent or good response (>50% migraine reduction) was attained in 28 patients (76%). Ten (27%) patients exhibited adverse effects. Patients taking >2 mg/kg/day were more likely to demonstrate side effects. The mean dose for patients without adverse effects was 1.27 +/- 0.7 mg/kg/day S.D. Those who reported adverse effects were taking a mean dose of 2.8 +/- 1.5 mg/kg/day S.D. This study demonstrated that topiramate is an effective, safe alternative for the prophylaxis of pediatric migraine. An acceptable risk/benefit maintenance dose was < or =2 mg/kg/day.


Molecular Genetics and Metabolism | 2012

Non-invasive evaluation of buccal respiratory chain enzyme dysfunction in mitochondrial disease: comparison with studies in muscle biopsy.

Michael J. Goldenthal; Teddy Kuruvilla; Shirish Damle; Leon Salganicoff; Sudip Sheth; Nidhi Shah; Harold Marks; Divya S. Khurana; Ignacio Valencia; Agustin Legido

Making a diagnosis of mitochondrial disease (MD) is extremely challenging and often employs the analysis of respiratory complex (RC) activities in biopsied skeletal muscle. Given both the invasive nature and expense of biopsied-muscle based testing for mitochondrial defects, buccal swab enzyme analysis has been explored as an alternative approach to the more invasive muscle biopsy. Case studies have recently suggested that buccal swabs from patients can be used to accurately assess mitochondrial enzyme activities including RC I and RC IV using a dipstick methodology combined with spectrophotometric analysis. In this study, forty patients with suspected MD who have previously been found to have significant defects in either RC I or RC IV in skeletal muscle were assessed by buccal swab analysis and compared to enzyme values obtained with unaffected controls (n=106) in the same age range. Buccal citrate synthase was used as an indicator of overall mitochondrial content, correlating well with overall buccal mitochondrial frataxin levels and was found to be elevated above control levels in 28% of the patients in this cohort. Of 26 cases with significant muscle RC I deficiency, 20 displayed significantly reduced levels of buccal RC I activity. All 7 of the patients with muscle RC IV deficiency showed significant buccal RC IV defect and 6 of the 7 patients with combined defects in muscle RC I and IV activity levels also exhibited analogous deficiencies in both buccal RC I and RC IV activities. In conclusion, the relatively high correlation (over 82%) of buccal and muscle RC deficiencies further supports the validity of this non-invasive approach as a potentially useful tool in the diagnosis of MD.


Pediatric Neurology | 2010

Microarray analysis in children with developmental disorder or epilepsy.

Herbert Ezugha; Carol E. Anderson; Harold Marks; Divya S. Khurana; Agustin Legido; Ignacio Valencia

The technique of chromosomal microarray analysis identifies genetic imbalance. Evaluation of its diagnostic role in pediatrics is still underway. We describe our experience with chromosomal microarrays. We retrospectively reviewed the charts of children in the Sections of Neurology and Clinical Genetics at St. Christophers Hospital for Children who had undergone microarray analysis between 2006 and 2009. Collected data included age, sex, and the presence of mental retardation, developmental delay, autism, learning disability, hypotonia, dysmorphic features, and epilepsy, and the use of microarray technique. Statistical analysis was performed using SPSS. There were 82 children (mean age ± S.D., 5.7 ± 5 years), including 45 (55%) boys and 37 (45%) girls. All patients exhibited a normal karyotype. Microarray analysis produced abnormal results in 20 (23.5%). Deletions comprised 74% of all abnormalities. Patients with ≥ 4 clinical variables demonstrated a 30.5% incidence of abnormal chromosomal microarray findings, compared with 8.7% of patients with ≤ 3 clinical variables (P = 0.039, χ(2) test). Logistic regression indicated that motor impairment (P = 0.039) and presence of epilepsy (P = 0.024) independently contributed to the model. The likelihood of an abnormal microarray result increased with the number of clinical abnormalities. Microarray analysis will likely become the diagnostic genetic test of choice in children with neurodevelopmental disorders or epilepsy.


Biomarkers in Medicine | 2015

Mitochondrial enzyme dysfunction in autism spectrum disorders; a novel biomarker revealed from buccal swab analysis

Michael J. Goldenthal; Shirish Damle; Sudip Sheth; Nidhi Shah; Joseph J. Melvin; Reena Jethva; H. Huntley Hardison; Harold Marks; Agustin Legido

AIM Mitochondrial function studies in autism spectrum disorders (ASD) have detected skeletal muscle mitochondrial enzyme deficiencies in respiratory complex (RC) activities. As a muscle biopsy is expensive and invasive, we assessed RC-I and RC-IV activities in buccal swabs. METHODS 92 children with ASD and 68 controls were studied with immunocapture for RC-I and microspectrophotometry for RC-IV. RESULTS Significant RC activity deficiencies were found in 39 (42%) ASD patients (p < 0.01) and more prevalent in more severe cases. Aberrant RC overactivity was seen in 9 children. RC-I/RC-IV activity ratio was significantly increased in 64% of the entire ASD cohort including 76% of those more severely affected (p < 0.05). CONCLUSION Buccal swab analysis revealed extensive RC abnormalities in ASD providing a noninvasive biomarker to assess mitochondrial function in ASD patients.


Epilepsia | 2008

Epilepsy and respiratory chain defects in children with mitochondrial encephalopathies

Divya S. Khurana; Leon Salganicoff; Joseph J. Melvin; Elizabeth Hobdell; Ignacio Valencia; H. Huntley Hardison; Harold Marks; Warren D. Grover; Agustin Legido

Aker R, Aktekin B, Andermann E, Andermann F, Atakli D, Ates N, Avanzini G, Baulac M, Baykan B, Bebek N, Berkman K, Bertram EH, Bialer M, Caglayan H, Cavdar S, Capovilla G, Covanis A, Cine N, Cokar O, Crunelli V, Demiralp T, Dervent A, Eskazan E, Genton P, Gokyigit A, Goren Z, Guillery R, Gutierrez R, Halasz P, Huguenard JR, Kasteleijn-Nolst Trenite D, Khazipov R, Kostopoulos GK, Koutroumanidis M, Lerche H, Lopes da Silva F, van Luijtelaar G, Moshe SL, Nehlig A, Noebels J, Onat F, Onur R, Ozbek U, Ozkara C, Pinault D, Potschka H, San T, Savic I, Saygi S, Schmitz B, Shorvon SD, Snead OC, Stefan H, Vezzani A, Vigevano F, Wolf P, Yalcin D, Yeni N, Yilmaz Y, Zara F.


Genetics in Medicine | 2012

Correction of a short cardiac PR interval in a 12-year-old girl with late-onset Pompe disease following enzyme replacement therapy

Cristina Fernández; Agustin Legido; Reena Jethva; Harold Marks

Correction of a short cardiac PR interval in a 12-year-old girl with late-onset Pompe disease following enzyme replacement therapy


Journal of the Neurological Sciences | 2008

Spinocerebellar ataxia type 7 mimicking Kearns-Sayre syndrome : A clinical diagnosis is desirable

Surya N. Gupta; Harold Marks

Spinocerebellar ataxias are a group of autosomal dominant cerebellar degenerative disorders, which are characterized by clinical and genetic variability. Spinocerebellar ataxia type 7 (SCA7) is less variable in clinical presentation than other SCAs. We present a pediatric patient with 13 and 70 trinucleotide CAG repeats within SCA7 gene and no family history, whose presentation mimicked Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS). We review the differential diagnosis of cerebellar ataxia with vision loss secondary to retinal pigmentary dystrophy. This paper supports concept of a desirable clinical diagnosis to avoid multiple genetic or invasive testing in children with neurodegenerative disorders.

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Ignacio Valencia

Boston Children's Hospital

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