👤 P E Uvebrant

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Also published as: P Uvebrant
articles
L B Eksandh, V B Ponjavic, P B Munroe +5 more · 2000 · Ophthalmic genetics · added 2026-04-24
To investigate, using full-field ERG, the retinal function in patients with Batten/Spielmeyer-Vogt disease caused by mutations in the CLN(3) gene. Batten disease status of five patients was confirmed Show more
To investigate, using full-field ERG, the retinal function in patients with Batten/Spielmeyer-Vogt disease caused by mutations in the CLN(3) gene. Batten disease status of five patients was confirmed by the presence of vacuolated lymphocytes in peripheral blood and the identification of mutations in the Batten disease gene (CLN(3)). Visual acuity, fundus appearance, and full-field ERG were examined in all patients (age 4-19 years). The examination was repeated in one patient after 16 months. Three unrelated patients were homozygous for the most common mutation in CLN(3), the 1.02 kb deletion; two patients (sisters) were heterozygous for the 1.02 kb deletion and an as yet unidentified mutation in the CLN(3) gene. Full-field ERG recordings in all five patients demonstrated no rod responses and only small remaining cone responses, which could be detected with 30 Hz-flicker stimulation. Re-examination of a six-year-old girl after 16 months revealed a fast progression of the retinal degeneration. Full-field ERG recordings in Batten disease patients, both homozygous and heterozygous for the 1.02 kb deletion in the CLN( 3) gene, confirm retinal degeneration to be severe, widespread, and with a rapid progression early in the disease course. The onset of visual failure may be delayed when compared to the classic disease course, particularly in patients who are not homozygous for the most common CLN(3) mutation, a 1.02 kb deletion. In that case, the disease progression in terms of other symptoms may also be further delayed. Show less
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CLN3
P Uvebrant, E Björck, N Conradi +3 more · 1993 · Prenatal diagnosis · Wiley · added 2026-04-24
A family with two siblings, 10 and 8 years old, both with clinical and ultrastructural evidence of juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis is described. The family was found to be informative for the Show more
A family with two siblings, 10 and 8 years old, both with clinical and ultrastructural evidence of juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis is described. The family was found to be informative for the restriction fragment length polymorphisms (RFLPs) detected by the probes pCJ52-95M1 (locus D16S148) and pCJ52-94T1 (locus D16S159) flanking the juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis locus, CLN3. The parents were both heterozygous using these probes, while their two children with juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis were both homozygous. Chorionic villi analysis showed that the fetus was heterozygous and had inherited the one allele of the mother which was not found in the two siblings. This suggested that the fetus had derived one healthy allele from the mother, the risk for a double crossing-over being less than 1 per cent. Electron microscopy showed no fingerprint inclusions in chorionic villi. The child was investigated at 6 months of age and found to be healthy, as new fingerprint inclusions were found at electron microscopy and no vacuolated lymphocytes were found in the blood smear. Due to the risk of heterogeneity, both DNA-based analysis and electron microscopy on chorionic villi are recommended for prenatal examination for juvenile neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis. Show less
no PDF DOI: 10.1002/pd.1970130717
CLN3