6533b7d1fe1ef96bd125cb31

RESEARCH PRODUCT

Indication of a common origin of German and American Families with Familial Amyloidneuropathy Typ II

H. C. HopfNorbert DahmenHans-hilmar GoebelBensonS Seddigh

subject

Geneticscongenital hereditary and neonatal diseases and abnormalitiesMutationPathologymedicine.medical_specialtybusiness.industryAmyloidosisHaplotypeGeneral Medicinemedicine.disease_causemedicine.diseaseTransthyretin Genedigestive system diseaseslanguage.human_languageGermanPsychiatry and Mental healthAmyloid NeuropathyNeurologyGenetic linkagemedicinelanguageNeurology (clinical)businessneoplasms

description

Abstract The classification of familial amyloid neuropathies (FAP) is traditionally based on clinical and regional aspects. In the last 10 years more than 40 mutations of the transthyretin gene have been found to be responsible for different clinical forms of amyloidosis including familial FAP.FAP II is caused by a mutation on the codon 58 of the transthyretin gene. Only two american kindreds (the Maryland/German and the Ohio family) have previously been reported with FAP II starting in the 3rd or 4th decade by sensory disturbances of the hands typically as a carpal tunnel syndrome. We report on a german family with FAP II from the rhine river area south of Mainz. Four members with typical clinical symptoms showed the histidine 58 mutation like the american families with FAP II. Haplotype analysis showed that all of them were haplotype III like the american patients indicating that the american and german kindreds have a genetic linkage and common familial roots.

https://doi.org/10.1007/s001150050593