Susana Teijeira
University of California, San Francisco
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Publication
Featured researches published by Susana Teijeira.
Journal of Neurology, Neurosurgery, and Psychiatry | 2012
Lucia A; Ruiz; Santalla A; Nogales-Gadea G; Juan C. Rubio; García-Consuegra I; Ana Cabello; Pérez M; Susana Teijeira; Irene Vieitez; Carmen Navarro; Joaquín Arenas; Miguel A. Martín; Antonio L. Andreu
Background Published genotype/phenotype data on McArdle disease are limited in sample size. A single national (Spanish) registry of patients with McArdle disease was created with the purpose of analysing their genotypic and phenotypic characteristics. Methods A cross sectional study was conducted, collecting demographic, family history, clinical, genotype and functional capacity data from all patients diagnosed with McArdle disease in the Spanish National Health System up to December 2010. Results 239 cases were recorded (all of Caucasian descent, 102 women; mean±SD age 44±18 years (range 9, 93)); prevalence of ∼1/167 000 people. Two mutant PYGM alleles were identified in 99.6% of cases. Although there was heterogeneity in the severity of symptoms, there were four common diagnostic features: (1) 99.5% of patients reported a history of acute crises of exercise intolerance (accompanied by recurrent myoglobinuria in 50% of cases); (2) in 58% of patients, symptoms started in the first decade of life; (3) 86% of patients repeatedly experienced the ‘second wind’ phenomenon over life; and (4) 99% of patients had a high basal serum level of total creatine kinase (>200 U/l). Clinical presentation of the disease was similar in men and women and worsened with age. Patients who were physically active had higher levels of cardiorespiratory fitness (by 23%, p=0.003) and were more likely to improve their clinical course over a 4 year period compared with inactive patients (OR 225; 95% CI 20.3 to 2496.7). Conclusions The main clinical features of McArdle disease are generally homogeneous and frequently appear during childhood; clinical condition deteriorates with ageing. Active patients have a better clinical outcome and functional capacity.
Annals of Neurology | 2001
Miguel A. Martín; Juan C. Rubio; Jenny L. Buchbinder; Roberto Fernandez-Hojas; Pilar del Hoyo; Susana Teijeira; Josep Gamez; Carmen Navarro; José M. Fernández; Ana Cabello; Yolanda Campos; Carlos Cervera; José M. Culebras; Antoni L. Andreu; Robert J. Fletterick; Joaquín Arenas
We report on 54 Spanish patients with McArdles disease from 40 unrelated families. Molecular analysis revealed that the most common R49X mutation was present in 70% of patients and 55% of alleles. The G204S mutation was less frequent and found in 14.8% of patients and 9% of mutant alleles. The W797R mutation was observed in 16.5% of patients, accounting for 13.7% of mutant alleles. Moreover, 78% of mutant alleles among Spanish patients can be identified by using polymerase chain reaction‐restriction fragment length polymorphism analysis for the R49X, G204S, and W797R mutations, which makes noninvasive diagnosis possible through molecular genetic analysis of blood DNA. Six novel mutations were found. Three were missense mutations, E348K, R601W, and A703V; two nonsense mutations, E124X and Q754X; and one single base pair deletion, 533 delA. No clear genotype‐phenotype correlation emerges from our study. Most of the mutations of uncharged and solvent inaccessible residues and the truncations must disrupt the basic structure of the protein. The mutations of charged residues would be expected to interfere with internal hydrogen bonding networks, introducing severe incompatible partnering that is caused by poor packing or electrostatic repulsions.
Muscle & Nerve | 2009
Aleksandra Nadaj-Pakleza; Carlo M. Vincitorio; P. Laforêt; Bruno Eymard; Elisabeth Dion; Susana Teijeira; Irene Vietez; Marc Jeanpierre; Carmen Navarro; Tanya Stojkovic
McArdle disease is an autosomal recessive muscle glycogenosis. In the typical clinical presentation, only exercise‐related symptoms are noted. Nevertheless, permanent weakness may occur, usually late in life. In this study we report on the clinical and genetic features of fixed muscle weakness in McArdle disease. Among the 80 McArdle patients being followed at the Institute of Myology of the Salpêtrière Hospital, 9 patients have permanent weakness. The diagnosis of McArdle disease was confirmed by muscle biopsy and genetic investigations. Two patterns of muscle weakness and wasting were noted: (1) proximal and symmetric in 5patients; and (2) asymmetric, mimicking facioscapulohumeral dystrophy (FSHD) in 4 patients. Computerized tomography scan showed fatty infiltration in the shoulder and pelvic girdle muscles. There was no clear correlation between genotype and the severity of muscle weakness. Proximal muscle weakness appeared after the age of 40 years and affected 11% of subjects in our series of 80 McArdle patients. Among patients over 40 years of age, 37.5% had muscle weakness. Muscle Nerve, 2009
Neuromuscular Disorders | 2011
Saida Ortolano; Rosa Tarrío; Patricia Blanco-Arias; Susana Teijeira; Francisco Rodríguez-Trelles; María García-Murias; Valérie Delague; Nicolas Lévy; José M. Fernández; Beatriz Quintáns; Beatriz San Millán; Angel Carracedo; Carmen Navarro; María-Jesús Sobrido
This study aimed to identify the genetic defect in a multigenerational family presenting an autosomal dominant myopathy with histological features of congenital fiber type disproportion. Linkage analysis and genetic sequencing identified, in all affected members of the family, the c.5807A>G heterozygous mutation in MYH7, which encodes the slow/β-cardiac myosin heavy chain. This mutation causes skeletal but not cardiac involvement. Myosin heavy chain expression pattern was also characterized by immunohistochemistry, western blot and q-PCR in muscle biopsies from two patients aged 25 and 62, respectively. While only congenital fiber type disproportion was observed in the younger patient, older patients biopsy presented aggregates of slow myosin heavy chains, in fiber sub-sarcolemmal region. These clinico-pathologic findings suggest a novel phenotype within the emerging group of hereditary myosin myopathies, which in this family presents typical characteristics of congenital fiber type disproportion in early stages and later evolves to myosin storage myopathy.
Neuromuscular Disorders | 2000
Francisco Calvo; Susana Teijeira; José M. Fernández; Alfonso Teijeiro; Roberto Fernandez-Hojas; Xesus A Fernandez-Lopez; Enrique Martin; Carmen Navarro
Thorough non-invasive cardiovascular studies were conducted in a series of ten gamma-sarcoglycanopathy Gypsy patients with the founder C283Y mutation in 13q12. Results were compared with those obtained in an age-matched group of normal boys and girls. The studies included electrocardiographic and echocardiographic evaluations using pulsed wave Doppler tissue imaging to assess regional diastolic function and myocardial velocities at various levels. This study confirms the significant electrocardiographic abnormalities described in previous studies. Furthermore, measurement of myocardial velocity at different levels demonstrated an abnormal relaxation pattern in the tricuspid annulus in four of the oldest patients, which strongly suggests intrinsic myocardial involvement of the right ventricle. To our knowledge, these specific studies have not been previously performed in a clinically and genetically homogeneous group of gamma-sarcoglycanopathy patients and suggest primary myocardial involvement probably due to gamma-sarcoglycan deficiency in cardiac muscle fibres. Our results could be of interest in the follow-up of these patients and the prevention and treatment of late cardiological complications.
Neuromuscular Disorders | 2011
Irene Vieitez; Susana Teijeira; José M. Fernández; Beatriz San Millán; Sara Miranda; Saida Ortolano; Sarah Louis; P. Laforêt; Carmen Navarro
McArdles disease is the most common muscle glycogenosis. It is caused by the deficiency of myophosphorylase, encoded by the PYGM gene. We studied 123 patients previously diagnosed with McArdles disease and we identified 20 novel mutations (10 missense and 3 nonsense mutations, 3 small deletions, 2 gross deletions and 2 small insertions). Most patients of this cohort belong to Spanish and French populations. This allowed us to determine the differences between the allelic frequencies of the common mutations R50X and G205S of these populations. The R50X has an allelic frequency in this cohort of about 61.7%, being 68.5% in French and 53.7% in Spanish patients. The G205S had a higher allelic frequency in the Spanish (10.2%) than in the French population (3.2%). Moreover, a clinical study of 91 patients was performed to establish both genotype-phenotype correlation and gender influence in the severity of the disease. We conclude that no genotype-phenotype correlation is evident and that no gender effect is related to the phenotype.
Acta Neuropathologica | 2006
Carmen Navarro; Susana Teijeira; Carmen Domínguez; José M. Fernández; Eloy Rivas; Carmen Fachal; Soraya Barrera; Carmen Rodriguez; Pilar Iranzo
Fabry disease is a rare X-linked lysosomal storage disorder due to alpha galactosidase A deficiency, better known after the advent of a promising treatment, a periodical enzyme replacement. As other hereditary X-linked disorders, females have historically been considered non-affected carriers, although they are, actually, clinically and pathologically affected to a variable degree. Some women are asymptomatic, but the majority present milder forms of the disease and later onset. This wide range of disease expression is supposed to be related to the levels of enzymatic activity, probably in accordance with a skewing of X inactivation. Lysosomal deposits of ceramide trihexoside have been repeatedly documented in a wide range of tissues, including those found in angiokeratoma, the characteristic cutaneous lesion which allowed the definition of Fabry disease. The aim of this study was to investigate whether there was any difference in the amount of dermal lysosomal storage in males and females, thus accounting for the difference in clinical severity of both groups. For that purpose, with electron microscopy and quantitative methods, we studied the extent of lysosomal deposits in dermal fibroblasts of normal-appearing skin in six females and nine men, enzymatically and genetically proven as to have Fabry disease, and results were compared. Our results indicate a statistically significant difference between the two groups regarding both the percentage of dermal fibroblasts bearing stored material, and the storage surface occupied in 100 fibroblasts per case. We suggest that periodical ultrastructural examination of normal-appearing skin could be an indicator of the efficacy of enzyme replacement therapy and could help to evaluate results.
Neuromuscular Disorders | 1999
Roberto Fernández; José M. Fernández; Carlos Cervera; Susana Teijeira; Alfonso Teijeiro; Carmen Domínguez; Carmen Navarro
Hirano bodies constitute eosinophilic intracytoplasmic inclusions, typically seen in the central nervous system, where they are related to senility and certain dementias such as Alzheimers disease or the Parkinson-dementia complex. They have been found in different tissues of experimental animals and, on rare occasions, in extraocular muscles of elderly individuals. However, to our knowledge they have not been described in skeletal muscle in locations other than extraocular muscles or associated with muscle pathology. Glycogenosis II or Pompes disease, is a metabolic disorder caused by acid maltase deficiency and is characterized by glycogen accumulation in lysosomes in various tissues, including skeletal muscle. There are three clinical forms depending on age at onset, the most frequent being the childhood form. We present the histopathological and ultrastructural findings of a muscle biopsy performed in a case of the adult form of glycogenosis II which showed, in addition to characteristic lysosomal glycogen storage, paracrystalline mitochondrial inclusions and, as an exceptional finding, intracytoplasmic Hirano bodies in some muscle fibres.
Clinical Neuropathology | 2009
Susana Teijeira; B. San Millan; José M. Fernández; Eloy Rivas; Irene Vieitez; S. Miranda; F. Gonzalez; Carmen Navarro
Myoadenylate deaminase deficiency (MADD) is the most common metabolic muscle disorder. Here we report the largest study to date of MADD in Spanish patients, including clinical, histological, and molecular data. Most of the patients presented with moderate clinical symptoms of exercise intolerance, including myalgia, fatigability and cramps. In 70% of the patients, serum creatine kinase (CK) was elevated. Muscle biopsy showed mild, nonspecific alterations with absent histochemical reaction for MAD. Eight cases ofMADD were coincidental with other associated diseases, and had more severe tissue alterations upon muscle biopsy. The mutation C34T in the MAD gene was present in a homozygous state in 26 of the 27 patients. One patient was a compound heterozygote for the C34T/G468T mutations. We conclude that MADD should be suspected in patients with exercise intolerance and with idiopathic hyperCKemia. Since symptoms may be subtle, we recommend routine histochemical analysis of MAD in all muscle biopsies, followed by molecular analysis in MAD-negative cases.
Neuropathology | 2005
Eloy Rivas; Joaquin Sanchez‐Herrero; Miguel Alonso; Maria J. Alvarez; Susana Teijeira; Claudio Ballestín; Antoni Tardio; Carmen Navarro
We report the case of a 79‐year‐old woman who developed a rapidly progressive dementia (RPD) with severe memory impairment, early visual hallucinations and extrapyramidal signs. Symptoms started suddenly after hip replacement surgery following an accidental fall. Motor epileptic seizures appeared at the end of the illness. Dementia worsened gradually leading to akinetic mutism. She died five and a half months after the onset of symptoms. MRI showed cerebral atrophy but failed to detect any other lesion. Results of all laboratory tests performed were negative. After the most frequent treatable diseases were excluded, the diagnosis of dementia with Lewy bodies was initially considered. CJD was also suggested based on the rapid evolution of the disease and the positivity of 14‐3‐3 protein in CSF. Neuropathological examination revealed an extensive miliary metastatic dissemination from an unknown primary adenocarcinoma. Pulmonary origin was suggested according to the immunohistochemical profile. Histopathological changes of Alzheimers disease were also observed in the cerebral cortex and hippocampus. Neither Lewy bodies nor PrP deposits were found. The sudden onset of the dementia just after the hip replacement surgery raises the possibility of a pathological fracture with secondary tumoral microembolic dissemination. Despite its rarity, this entity should be included in the differential diagnosis of RPD. This case illustrates the definite importance of neuropathological post‐mortem examination in order to elucidate the different types of dementia.