Rinsho Shinkeigaku (Clinical Neurology)

The 44th Annual Meeting of the Japanese Society of Neurology

Educational Lecture 1:
Visual child neurology

Masaya Segawa, M.D.

Segawa Neurological Clinic for Children

In neurodevelopmental disorders, the characteristic symptoms appear age-dependently along with the functional and morphological development of the affected neurons and the neuronal pathways. Most of them have the primary lesion in the subcortical structures as these mature earlier, which include the aminergic neurons of the brainstem and the midbrain having important roles for development of the higher cortical function (HCF). Thus, to clarify the pathophysiologies of the symptoms appearing age-dependently makes it possible to demonsrate the process of development of the HCF. Here, I reviewed the characteristic symptoms and their pathophysiologies of Rett syndrome, DYT-1, autosomal dominant GTP cyclohydrolase I (ADGCH I) deficiency, Tourette syndrome (TS) and Early-onset ataxia with ocular motor apraxia and hypoalbuminemia (EAOH), and suggested that the brainstem aminergic neurons modulating the locomotion have roles for development of the frontal cortex, the dopaminergic neurons and basal ganglia pathways involving in the action dystonia for motor excution and the serotonergic and the dopaminergic neurons projectioning to the nonmotor basal ganglia thalamocortical circuits for development of the frontal area, the targets of the circuits. While, postural dystonia, tics in GTS and symptoms in EAOH reflect the development of the causative neurons and the neuronal systems.

(CLINICA NEUROL, 43: 739|743, 2003)
key words: age dependency, locomotion, postural dystonia, action dystonia, cerebellar symptoms

(Received: 15-May-03)