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Dive into the research topics where Laura Åberg is active.

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Featured researches published by Laura Åberg.


Neurological Sciences | 2000

Neuronal ceroid lipofuscinoses in childhood.

Pirkko Santavuori; Leena Lauronen; E. Kirveskari; Laura Åberg; Kimmo Sainio; Taina Autti

Abstract NCL disorders are progressive brain diseases with an autosomal recessive inheritance in all eleven childhood types. These occure world-wide but may be enriched in some countries. In Finland altogether about 400 patients have been diagnosed during the last forty years. The most common types are the infantile and classic juvenile forms with an incidence of 1: 20 000 and 1: 21 000, respectively Personally followed-up are patients with infantile, classic and Finnish variant late infantile and classic juvenile types. Clinical, neurophysiological and neuroimaging findings in these four NCL forms are reviewed including also management and diagnostic aspects.


Neuroradiology | 2007

Decreased T2 signal in the thalami may be a sign of lysosomal storage disease

Taina Autti; Raimo Joensuu; Laura Åberg

IntroductionLysosomal disorders are rare and are caused by genetically transmitted lysosomal enzyme deficiencies. A decreased T2 signal in the thalamus has occasionally been reported.AimsBecause the finding of bilateral abnormal signal intensity of the thalamus on T2-weighted images has not been systematically reviewed, and its value as a diagnostic tool critically evaluated, we carried out a systematic review of the literature.MethodsArticles in English with 30 trios of keywords were collected from PubMed. Exclusion criteria were lack of conventional T2-weighted images in the protocol and not being a human study. Finally, 111 articles were included. The thalamus was considered affected only if mentioned in the text or in the figure legends.ResultsSome 117 patients with various lysosomal diseases and five patients with ceruloplasmin deficiency were reported to have a bilateral decrease in T2 signal intensity. At least one article reported a bilateral decrease in signal intensity of the thalami on T2-weighted images in association with GM1 and GM2 gangliosidosis and with Krabbe’s disease, aspartylglucosaminuria, mannosidosis, fucosidosis, and mucolipidosis IV. Furthermore, thalamic alteration was a consistent finding in several types of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL) including CLN1 (infantile NCL), CLN2 (classic late infantile NCL), CLN3 (juvenile NCL), CLN5 (Finnish variant late infantile NCL), and CLN7 (Turkish variant late infantile NCL).ConclusionA decrease in T2 signal intensity in the thalami seems to be a sign of lysosomal disease.


Neurology | 2000

Decreased striatal dopamine transporter density in JNCL patients with parkinsonian symptoms.

Laura Åberg; K. Liewendahl; P. Nikkinen; Taina Autti; J.O. Rinne; Pirkko Santavuori

Objective: To explore whether striatal dopamine transporters are involved in juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (JNCL) with extrapyramidal signs. Methods: Seventeen patients with JNCL entered the study (mean age, 15 years; age range, 10 to 31 years). For clinical evaluation, the authors used the motor section of the Unified Parkinson’s Disease Rating Scale (UPDRS). For studying the density of dopamine transporters in the striatum, they employed iodine-123-labeled 2β-carbomethoxy-3β-(4-iodophenyl) tropane as a SPECT tracer. The SPECT images were evaluated visually, and tracer accumulation was semiquantified from transverse slices as striatum-to-cerebellum activity ratios. MRI (1.5-T) signal intensities of the striatum were measured and compared with those of the thalamus. Results: The mean UPDRS score was 20 (range, 2 to 41). On SPECT, the mean striatum-to-cerebellum uptake ratio was lower in patients than in control subjects (3.1 ± 0.6 versus 6.8 ± 1.0; p < 0.001), with the decrease being more pronounced in the putamen than in the caudate nucleus. On MRI, the mean striatum-to-thalamus signal intensity ratio was higher in patients than in control subjects (1.14 ± 0.02 versus 1.08 ± 0.02; p < 0.001). There was a negative correlation between uptake ratios in SPECT and UPDRS scores, and a positive correlation between the MRI ratios and UPDRS. The SPECT and MRI ratios also correlated significantly, providing additional evidence for the contributions of nigrostriatal, striatal, and thalamic dysfunction to the parkinsonian symptoms. Conclusions: The observed decrease in the striatal dopamine transporter density in JNCL offers a rational basis for a trial of dopaminergic drugs in this disease.


Epilepsia | 2000

Epilepsy and Antiepileptic Drug Therapy in Juvenile Neuronal Ceroid Lipofuscinosis

Laura Åberg; M. L. Bäckman; E. Kirveskari; Pirkko Santavuori

Purpose: To survey the characteristics of epilepsy in patients with juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (JNCL) and determine the antiepileptic drug (AED) treatment most suitable for these patients.


Neurology | 2001

A favorable response to antiparkinsonian treatment in juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis

Laura Åberg; Juha O. Rinne; Irmeli Rajantie; Pirkko Santavuori

To study the effect of dopaminergic drugs on the parkinsonism in juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis, the authors conducted an open study of 21 patients. According to the motor Unified PD Rating Scale (UPDRS) score, treatment was initiated with either levodopa (n = 10) or selegiline (n = 6). Five patients served as a control group. The UPDRS score after 1 year was compared with the score at onset. Both in the control group and in the selegiline group, the mean UPDRS score increased, whereas in the levodopa group, the mean UPDRS score decreased. The difference between the levodopa group and the control group was significant.


Epilepsia | 1999

Lamotrigine therapy in juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis.

Laura Åberg; E. Kirveskari; Pirkko Santavuori

Summary: Purpose: To evaluate the effects of lamotrigine (LTG) therapy on epileptic seizures and general well‐being in patients with juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (JNCL).


Journal of Neurology | 2008

JNCL patients show marked brain volume alterations on longitudinal MRI in adolescence

T. H. Autti; J. Hämäläinen; M. Mannerkoski; K. Van Leemput; Laura Åberg

AbstractJuvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (JNCL, CLN3) is an inherited lysosomal disease. We used longitudinal MRI, for the first time, to evaluate the rate of brain volume alterations in JNCL.Six patients (mean ages of 12.4 years and 17.3 years) and 12 healthy controls were studied twice with 1.5 T MRI. White matter (WM), gray matter (GM) and CSF volumes were measured from the sets of T1-weighted 3-dimensional MR images using a fully automated image-processing procedure. The brain volume alterations were calculated as percentage change per year. The GM and whole brain volumes decreased and the CSF volume increased significantly more in the patients than in controls (p-values for the null hypothesis of equal means were 0.001, 0.004, and 0.005, respectively). We found no difference in the WM volume change between the populations. In patients, the GM volume decreased 2.4 % (SD 0.5 %, p 0.0001 for the null hypothesis of zero mean change between observations), the whole brain volume decreased 1.1 % (SD 0.5 %, p = 0.003), and the CSF volume increased 2.7 % (SD 1.8 %, p = 0.01) per year. In normal controls, only the mean white matter volume was significantly altered (0.8 % increase, SD 0.7 %, and p = 0.001).ConclusionWe demonstrated by longitudinal MRI that the annual rate of the gray matter loss in adolescent JNCL patients is as high as 2.4 %.


Acta Neuropathologica | 1998

Atypical juvenile neuronal ceroid liposfuscinosis with granular osmiophilic deposit-like inclusions in the autonomic nerve cells of the gut wall

Laura Åberg; Irma Järvelä; Juhani Rapola; Taina Autti; E. Kirveskari; M. Lappi; L. Sipilä; Pirkko Santavuori

Abstract In this 8-year-old boy, who had been exposed to alcohol and oxazepam during pregnancy, visual failure was the first symptom of a neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis (NCL) disorder, noticed at the age of 5 years. Ophthalmological examinations revealed a cystic type of macular degeneration, which would be more likely to be found in variant late infantile NCL. However, vacuolated lymphocytes were found in peripheral blood films and a diagnosis of the juvenile form of NCL (JNCL) was made. Molecular genetic studies showed the patient to be homozygous for the major mutation of JNCL, a 1.02-kb deletion. In whole-night polysomnography, there was significantly more epileptiform activity than in other JNCL patients under 10 years of age. Using magnetic resonance imaging, the signal intensity of the white matter was increased, especially in the periventricular area. In addition, there were enlarged perivascular spaces in the watershead areas. The corpus callosum was thin. Finally, in the autonomic ganglion cells of the submucosal nerve plexus there were membrane-enclosed homogeneous and granular cytosomes resembling the granular osmiophilic deposits of infantile NCL. However, extraneural cells, including blood capillaries and smooth muscle, showed inclusions with fingerprint and curvilinear profiles. The features of the present case indicated a phenotypic variant of JNCL.


Pediatric Research | 2009

Subjects With Intellectual Disability and Familial Need for Full-Time Special Education Show Regional Brain Alterations: A Voxel-Based Morphometry Study

Minna Mannerkoski; Hannu Heiskala; Koen Van Leemput; Laura Åberg; Raili Raininko; Janne Hämäläinen; Taina Autti

Subjects attending full-time special education (SE) often have multifactorial background for their cognitive impairment, and brain MRI may show nonspecific changes. As voxel-based morphometry reveals regional volume differences, we applied this method to 119 subjects with cognitive impairments and familial need for full-time SE—graded into three levels from specific disorders of cognitive processes (level 1) to intellectual disability (IQ <70; level 3)—and to 43 age-matched controls attending mainstream education (level 0). Subjects in SE groups had smaller global brain white matter (WM), cerebrospinal fluid, and total brain volume than controls. Compared with controls, subjects with intellectual disabilities in SE level 3 showed greater regional gray matter volumes bilaterally in the ventral and dorsal anterior cingulate cortex and smaller regional gray matter volumes in the left thalamus and cerebellar hemisphere. Further, they had greater WM volume in the left frontoparietal region and smaller WM volumes in the posterior limbs of the internal capsules. Subjects in SE level 1 and 2 groups showed the same tendency, but the results were nonsignificant. In conclusion, compared with controls, subjects with intellectual disabilities showed in voxel-based morphometry analysis several regional brain alterations.


Journal of Neuroradiology | 2015

Brain MRI findings in aspartylglucosaminuria

Anna M. Tokola; Laura Åberg; Taina Autti

BACKGROUND AND PURPOSE The aim of this study was to identify characteristic 3.0 T brain MRI findings in patients with aspartylglucosaminuria (AGU), a rare lysosomal storage disorder. Previous AGU patient material imaged at 1.0 and 1.5 T was also re-evaluated. MATERIALS AND METHODS Twenty-five brain MRI examinations from 20 AGU patients were included in the study. Thirteen patients underwent a prospective 3.0 T MRI (5 male, 8 female, aged 9-45 years). Twelve examinations from nine patients (4 male, 5 female, aged 8-33 years) previously imaged at 1.0 or 1.5 T were re-evaluated. Two patients were included in both the prospective and the retrospective groups. Visual analysis of the T1- and T2-weighted images was performed by two radiologists. RESULTS The previously reported signal intensity changes in T2-weighted images were visible at all field strengths, but they were more distinct at 3.0 T than at 1.0 or 1.5 T. These included signal intensity decrease in the thalami and especially in the pulvinar nuclei, periventricular signal intensity increase and juxtacortical high signal foci. Poor differentiation between gray and white matter was found in all patients. Some degree of cerebral and/or cerebellar atrophy and mild ventricular dilatation were found in nearly all patients. This study also disclosed various unspecific findings, including a higher than normal incidence of dilated perivascular spaces, arachnoid cysts, pineal cysts and mildly dilated cavum veli interpositi. CONCLUSION This study revealed particular brain MRI findings in AGU, which can raise the suspicion of this rare disease in clinical practice.

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Taina Autti

University of Helsinki

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Anna M. Tokola

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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Eero Salli

Helsinki University Central Hospital

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