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Startle Disease, or Hyperrekplexia:Clonazepam and Assign of Gene (STHE) to Chromosoma 5q by Linkage Analysis
Ann Neurol 31:663-668, Ryan,S.G.,et al, 1992
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Article Abstract
Familial startle disease(also known as hyperekplexia and congenital"stiff- man"syndrome)is an autosomal dominant disorder characterized by an exaggerated startle reaction to sudden,unexpected auditory or tactile stimuli;affected neonates also have severe and occasionally fatal hypertonia.We recently encountered a large,five-generation family with startle disease,and treated 16 patients(including 1 neonate)with clonazepam;all experienced dramatic and sustained improvement.We performed systemic linkage analysis in this family,and found tight linkage between the disease locus and a polymorphic genetic marker locus(colony- stimulating factor receptor,or CSF1R)that has been physically mapped to chromosome 5q33-q35.The maximum odds ratio favoring linkage over nonlinkage is greater than 10,000,000:1(lod score,7.10)at 3%recombination. Several genes encoding neurotransmitter receptor components have been physically mapped to the subtelomeric region of chromosome 5q,and are thus candidates for the startle disease gene.The availability of additional large pedigrees with startle disease should facilitate identification and characterization of the gene for this disorder.
 
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chromosomal abnormality
clonazepam
familial
gene
genetic linkage
genetic neurologic disorders
hyperekplexia
startle reaction
treatment of neurologic disorder

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