Network


Latest external collaboration on country level. Dive into details by clicking on the dots.

Hotspot


Dive into the research topics where Inês Carrilho is active.

Publication


Featured researches published by Inês Carrilho.


Neurology | 2008

Neurodegeneration associated with genetic defects in phospholipase A2

Allison Gregory; Shawn K. Westaway; I. E. Holm; Paul T. Kotzbauer; Penny Hogarth; Scott Sonek; J. C. Coryell; T. M. Nguyen; Nardo Nardocci; Giovanna Zorzi; D. Rodriguez; Isabelle Desguerre; Enrico Bertini; Alessandro Simonati; Barbara Levinson; Cristina Dias; Clara Barbot; Inês Carrilho; Manuela Santos; Ibrahim Malik; Jane Gitschier; Susan J. Hayflick

Objective: Mutations in the gene encoding phospholipase A2 group VI (PLA2G6) are associated with two childhood neurologic disorders: infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy (INAD) and idiopathic neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation (NBIA). INAD is a severe progressive psychomotor disorder in which axonal spheroids are found in brain, spinal cord, and peripheral nerves. High globus pallidus iron is an inconsistent feature of INAD; however, it is a diagnostic criterion of NBIA, which describes a clinically and genetically heterogeneous group of disorders that share this hallmark feature. We sought to delineate the clinical, radiographic, pathologic, and genetic features of disease resulting from defective phospholipase A2. Methods: We identified 56 patients clinically diagnosed with INAD and 23 with idiopathic NBIA and screened their DNA for PLA2G6 mutations. Results: Eighty percent of patients with INAD had mutations in PLA2G6, whereas mutations were found in only 20% of those with idiopathic NBIA. All patients with two null mutations had a more severe phenotype. On MRI, nearly all mutation-positive patients had cerebellar atrophy, and half showed brain iron accumulation. We observed Lewy bodies and neurofibrillary tangles in association with PLA2G6 mutations. Conclusion: Defects in phospholipase A2 lead to a range of phenotypes. PLA2G6 mutations are associated with nearly all cases of classic infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy but a minority of cases of idiopathic neurodegeneration with brain iron accumulation, and genotype correlates with phenotype. Cerebellar atrophy predicts which patients are likely to be mutation-positive. The neuropathologic changes that are caused by defective phospholipase A2 suggest a shared pathogenesis with both Parkinson and Alzheimer diseases.


Brain & Development | 2009

Evaluation of CSF neurotransmitters and folate in 25 patients with Rett disorder and effects of treatment

Teresa Temudo; M. Rios; C. Prior; Inês Carrilho; Manuela Santos; P. Maciel; Jorge Sequeiros; Maria José Fonseca; José Paulo Monteiro; Pedro Cabral; José Pedro Vieira; Aida Ormazabal; Rafael Artuch

BACKGROUND Rett disorder (RD) is a progressive neurodevelopmental entity caused by mutations in the MECP2 gene. It has been postulated that there are alterations in the levels of certain neurotransmitters and folate in the pathogenesis of this disease. Here we re-evaluated this hypothesis. PATIENTS AND METHODS We evaluated CSF folate, biogenic amines and pterines in 25 RD patients. Treatment with oral folinic acid was started in those cases with low folate. Patients were clinically evaluated and videotaped up to 6 months after therapy. RESULTS CSF folate was below the reference values in 32% of the patients. Six months after treatment no clinical improvement was observed. Three of the four patients with the R294X mutation had increased levels of a dopamine metabolite associated to a particular phenotype. Three patients had low levels of a serotonin metabolite. Two of them were treated with fluoxetine and one showed clinical improvement. No association was observed between CSF folate and these metabolites, after adjusting for the patients age and neopterin levels. CONCLUSION Our results support that folinic acid supplementation has no significant effects on the course of the disease. We report discrete and novel neurotransmitter abnormalities that may contribute to the pathogenesis of RD highlighting the need for further studies on CSF neurotransmitters in clinically and genetically well characterized patients.


European Journal of Paediatric Neurology | 2008

Infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy: What's most important for the diagnosis?

Inês Carrilho; Manuela Santos; A.A. Guimarães; João Teixeira; Rui Chorão; Márcia Martins; Cristina Dias; Allison Gregory; Shawn K. Westaway; T.H. Nguyen; Susan J. Hayflick; Clara Barbot

BACKGROUND AND AIMS Infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy is a rare neurodegenerative disorder, with onset in the first 2 years of life. Mutations in the PLA2G6 gene were identified in patients with infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy. Our purpose was to review clinical, neurophysiologic, neuroradiologic and neuropathological features of our patients in order to identify the earliest signs of disease. We also correlate these data with the genotype in the mutation positive patients. METHODS We reviewed the clinical reports, neurophysiologic and neuropathological studies and brain imaging of our patients. In five patients molecular analysis of the PLA2G6 gene was performed. RESULTS We report 10 patients with infantile neuroaxonal dystrophy. Earliest symptoms presented between 6 and 18 months of age. The first manifestations were arrest in the acquisition of milestones or regression. The first neurological signs were generalized hypotonia and pyramidal signs. Fast rhythms on EEG were observed in all patients. Brain imaging studies showed cerebellar atrophy in all patients, with signal hyperintensity in the cerebellar cortex on T2-weighted images in five. All cases had characteristic axonal spheroids on skin biopsy. Mutations in the PLA2G6 gene were identified in the five patients studied. Three of them had the same homozygous mutations 2370T> G, Y790X. CONCLUSIONS Though mutations were detected in the patients studied, a clear genotype-phenotype correlation could not be ascertained. In the appropriate clinical context, characteristic brain imaging and fast rhythms on EEG can support the decision to perform molecular analysis and avoid skin biopsy to confirm diagnosis.


Neurology | 2007

Stereotypies in Rett syndrome Analysis of 83 patients with and without detected MECP2 mutations

Teresa Temudo; Pedro Oliveira; Mónica Santos; Karin Dias; José Pedro Vieira; Ana Moreira; Eulália Calado; Inês Carrilho; Guiomar Oliveira; António Levy; Clara Barbot; Maria José Fonseca; Alexandra Cabral; Ana I. Dias; Pedro Cabral; José Paulo Monteiro; Luís Borges; Roseli Gomes; C. Barbosa; G. Mira; F. Eusébio; Jorge Sequeiros; P. Maciel

Background: Hand stereotypies are considered a hallmark of Rett syndrome (RTT) and are usually described as symmetric movements at the midline. However, related pathologies may show the same type of involuntary movement. Furthermore, patients with RTT also have stereotypies with other localizations that are less well characterized. Methods: We analyzed stereotypies in 83 patients with RTT, 53 with and 30 without a mutation detected in the MECP2 gene. Patients were observed and videotaped always by the same pediatric neurologist. Stereotypies were classified, and data were submitted to statistical analysis for comparison of mutation-positive and -negative patients and analysis of their evolution with the disease. Results: All the patients showed hand stereotypies that coincided with or preceded the loss of purposeful hand movements in 62% of the patients with MECP2 mutations.The hair pulling stereotypy was more frequent in the group with detected mutations, whereas hand washing was not. Hand gaze was absent in all RTT patients with MECP2 mutations. Patients with MECP2 mutations also had more varied stereotypies, and the number of stereotypies displayed by each patient decreased significantly with age in this group. In all patients, stereotypies other than manual tended to disappear with the evolution of the disease. Conclusions: Although symmetric midline hand stereotypies were not specific to patients with an MECP2 mutation, some of the other stereotypies seemed to be more characteristic of this group. In patients younger than 10 years and meeting the necessary diagnostic criteria of Rett syndrome, the association of hand stereotypies without hand gaze, bruxism, and two or more of the other stereotypies seemed to be highly indicative of the presence of an MECP2 mutation.


Movement Disorders | 2008

Movement disorders in Rett syndrome: an analysis of 60 patients with detected MECP2 mutation and correlation with mutation type.

Teresa Temudo; Elisabete Ramos; Karin Dias; Clara Barbot; José Pedro Vieira; Ana Moreira; Eulália Calado; Inês Carrilho; Guiomar Oliveira; António Levy; Maria José Fonseca; Alexandra Cabral; Pedro Cabral; Joao P Monteiro; Luís Borges; Roseli Gomes; Manuela Santos; Jorge Sequeiros; Patrícia Maciel

Rett syndrome (RS) is one of the best human models to study movement disorders. Patients evolve from a hyperkinetic to a hypokinetic state, and a large series of abnormal movements may be observed along their lives such as stereotypies, tremor, chorea, myoclonus, ataxia, dystonia, and rigidity. The aim of this work was to analyze movement disorders in RS patients with a detected MECP2 mutation, as well as their correlation with genotype, in a clinically and genetically well‐characterized sample of patients, and thus contribute to redefine the clinical profile of this disease. In this study, we included 60 patients with detected MECP2 mutations. These were categorized and grouped for analysis, according to (1) type of change (missense or truncating, including nonsense and frameshift but also large deletions) and (2) location of the mutation. Differences were found concerning the frequency of independent gait, dystonia, type of tremor, and global score severity when comparing the group of patients with missense and truncating mutations. We also found differences in the presence, distribution, severity, or type of movement disorders in the two groups of patients according to the median duration of the disease (less than 60 months; 60 months or more). We conclude that movement disorders seem to reflect the severity and rate of progression of Rett disorder, patients with truncating mutations presenting a higher rate and more severe dystonia and rigid‐akinetic syndrome, when comparing groups with similar time of disease evolution.


Brain & Development | 2011

Rett syndrome with and without detected MECP2 mutations: An attempt to redefine phenotypes

Teresa Temudo; Mónica Santos; Elisabete Ramos; Karin Dias; José Pedro Vieira; Ana Moreira; Eulália Calado; Inês Carrilho; Guiomar Oliveira; António Levy; Clara Barbot; Maria José Fonseca; Alexandra Cabral; Pedro Cabral; José Paulo Monteiro; Luís Borges; Roseli Gomes; Graça Mira; Susana Pereira; Manuela Santos; Anabela Fernandes; Jörg T. Epplen; Jorge Sequeiros; Patrícia Maciel

BACKGROUND The diagnosis of Rett syndrome (RTT) is based on a set of clinical criteria, irrespective of mutation status. The aims of this study were (1) to define the clinical differences existing between patients with Rett syndrome with (Group I) and without a MECP2 mutation (Group II), and (2) to characterize the phenotypes associated with the more common MECP2 mutations. PATIENTS AND METHODS We analyzed 87 patients fulfilling the clinical criteria for RTT. All were observed and videotaped by the same paediatric neurologist. Seven common mutations were considered separately, and associated clinical features analysed. RESULTS Comparing Group I and II, we found differences concerning psychomotor development prior to onset, acquisition of propositive manipulation and language, and evolving autistic traits. Based on age at observation, we found differences in eye pointing, microcephaly, growth, number of stereotypies, rigidity, ataxia and ataxic-rigid gait, and severity score. Patients with truncating differed from those with missense mutations regarding acquisition of propositive words and independent gait, before the beginning of the disease, and microcephaly, growth, foot length, dystonia, rigidity and severity score, at the time of observation. Patients with the R168X mutation had a more severe phenotype, whereas those with R133C showed a less severe one. Patients with R294X had a hyperactive behaviour, and those with T158M seemed to be particularly ataxic and rigid. CONCLUSION A clear regressive period (with loss of prehension and language, deceleration of growth) and the presence of more than three different stereotypies, rigidity and ataxic-rigid gait seemed to be very helpful in differentiating Group I from Group II.


Journal of Child Neurology | 2009

Mutations in the MECP2 Gene Are Not a Major Cause of Rett Syndrome-Like or Related Neurodevelopmental Phenotype in Male Patients

Mónica Santos; Teresa Temudo; Teresa Kay; Inês Carrilho; Ana Medeira; Helena Cabral; Roseli Gomes; Maria Teresa Lourencço; Margarida Venâncio; Eulália Calado; Ana Moreira; Guiomar Oliveira; Patrícia Maciel

Rett syndrome is a genetic neurodevelopmental disorder that affects mainly girls, but mutations in the causative MECP2 gene have also been identified in boys with classic Rett syndrome and Rett syndrome-like phenotypes. We have studied a group of 28 boys with a neurodevelopmental disorder, 13 of which with a Rett syndrome-like phenotype; the patients had diverse clinical presentations that included perturbations of the autistic spectrum, microcephaly, mental retardation, manual stereotypies, and epilepsy. We analyzed the complete coding region of the MECP2 gene, including the detection of large rearrangements, and we did not detect any pathogenic mutations in the MECP2 gene in these patients, in whom the genetic basis of disease remained unidentified. Thus, additional genes should be screened in this group of patients.


Anales De Pediatria | 2014

Esclerosis tuberosa: caracterización clínica e intento de correlación fenotipo/genotipo

T. Monteiro; C. Garrido; S. Pina; R. Chorão; Inês Carrilho; S. Figueiroa; M. Santos; T. Temudo

INTRODUCTION Tuberous sclerosis (TS) is an inherited disorder with multisystemic involvement and a high phenotypic variability. There are two genes that cause this condition: TSC1 and TSC2. OBJECTIVES Our goal was to clinically characterize patients with TS followed up in the Pediatric Neurology Clinic of a tertiary hospital during the last 10 years, and correlate the genotype with the severity of neurological manifestations and imaging studies. PATIENTS AND METHODS Retrospective analysis of patients with TS, including review of medical records and available MRI imaging. RESULTS We studied 35 cases with a median age at diagnosis of ten months. Seizures were the first manifestation in 91.4% of cases, with a predominance of epileptic spasms. Over 50% had cognitive impairment and 49% behavioral disorders. A genetic study was performed on 24 children, and TSC2 mutations identified in 58.3% of them. Of the 11 cases of refractory epilepsy, six had the TSC2 gene mutation. In the group of eight patients with moderate/severe cognitive deficits, five had TSC2 mutations. We reviewed 26 MRI scans, in which it was observed that 76.9% had diffuse involvement of cerebral lobes, which reflects a greater burden of injury. Of the patients who had an MRI scan performed and had TSC2 mutations, all had a high tuber load, and5 of them had refractory epilepsy. DISCUSSION In our sample we observe a high percentage of mutations in the TSC2 gene. This mutation carries a worse neurological prognosis, with drug-resistant epilepsy and a more severe cognitive impairment.


Anales De Pediatria | 2012

Síndrome de Sturge-Weber: variabilidad clínica y de neuroimagen

M. Rios; Clara Barbot; P.S. Pinto; L. Salício; Manuela Santos; Inês Carrilho; Teresa Temudo

Sturge Weber Syndrome is a rare neurocutaneous syndrome in which the severity is determined by degree of brain involvement and control of epilepsy. The authors describe and analyse clinical and imaging features of this syndrome, through a retrospective study of 13 patients (8 girls; aged between 15 days and 9 years at first visit). Twelve had facial angioma and one had atrichia corresponding to the area of brain involvement. Epilepsy was diagnosed in 6 cases, hemiplegia in 4, psychomotor delay in 7, and glaucoma in 4. Cerebral abnormalities were found in 10 children, 3 without neurological symptoms. The clinical signs and symptoms vary and there is not always a relationship between the severity of the clinical and neuroimaging abnormalities, which may occur even in the absence of neurological symptoms.


Archive | 2017

Movement Disorders in Children

Teresa Temudo; Inês Carrilho

Movement disorders (MDs) in children have some peculiarities compared with adults. In front of a pediatric patient with a specific type of movement disorder, usually the etiologies are different from those considered in an adult, and by the other hand, the clinical manifestations are different because they are influenced by the age of onset of a certain disease. In children with movement disorders, hyperkinetic movements predominate; in adults bradykinesia is much more prevalent. Moreover, certain disorders occur almost exclusively in children, as is the case of transient movement disorders, or are much more frequent as metabolic and autoimmune diseases.

Collaboration


Dive into the Inês Carrilho's collaboration.

Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Manuela Santos

Université de Montréal

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

Rui Chorão

Boston Children's Hospital

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar

José Pedro Vieira

Universidade Federal de Viçosa

View shared research outputs
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Top Co-Authors

Avatar
Researchain Logo
Decentralizing Knowledge