Atypical Course of Parkinson's disease with clinical manifestations of Huntington's disease in a patient with an allele of 27 CAG repeats in the HTT gene
Huntington’s disease (HD) is an autosomal dominant progressive neurodegenerative disease. Its molecular cause
is a cytosine-adenine-guanine (CAG) trinucleotide repeat dynamic expansion in the huntingtin (HTT) gene. Alleles
with 36–39 CAG-repeats are incompletely penetrant, as individuals might develop symptoms but typically with a
later age of onset. When repeats are equal or greater than 40, the symptoms of the disease occur. It is considered
that CAG-repeats in the “intermediate” alleles (27–35 repeats) also cause the symptoms of the HD.
We present here the case of a patient who has clinical phenotype and family history of Parkinson’s disease (PD),
but 27 CAG-repeats. The feature of this patient is early development of non-motor manifestations such as cognitive
impairment, psychotic disorders, early dystonia in a hand, camptocormia and poor response to levodopa. It is
believed that the intermediate allele of HTT gene might modify the clinical phenotype of PD in this patient.
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