Extrastriatal changes in patients with late-onset glutaric aciduria type I highlight the risk of long-term neurotoxicity.
Nikolas BoyJana HeringerRenate BrackmannOlaf BodamerAngelika SeitzStefan KölkerInga HartingPublished in: Orphanet journal of rare diseases (2017)
While clinical findings are non-specific, frontotemporal hypoplasia and subependymal nodules are characteristic MRI findings of late-onset GA1 and should trigger diagnostic investigation for this rare disease. Apart from their apparent non-susceptibility for striatal injury despite lack of treatment, patients with late-onset GA1 are not categorically different from early treated control patients. Differences between late-onset patients and early treated control patients most likely reflect greater cumulative neurotoxicity in individuals remaining undiagnosed and untreated for years, even decades as well as the higher long-term risk of high excretors for intracerebral accumulation of neurotoxic metabolites compared to low excretors.