Journal article

An autosomal dominant ataxia maps to 19q13:: Allelic heterogeneity of SCA13 or novel locus?


Authors listWaters, MF; Fee, D; Figueroa, KP; Nolte, D; Müller, U; Advincula, J; Coon, H; Evidente, VG; Pulst, SM

Publication year2005

Pages1111-1113

JournalNeurology

Volume number65

Issue number7

ISSN0028-3878

eISSN1526-632X

DOI Linkhttps://doi.org/10.1212/01.wnl.0000177490.05162.41

PublisherLippincott, Williams & Wilkins


Abstract
The autosomal dominant spinocerebellar ataxias (ADCAs) represent a growing and heterogeneous disease phenotype. Clinical characterization of a three-generation Filipino family segregating a dominant ataxia revealed cerebellar signs and symptoms. After elimination of known spinocerebellar ataxia (SCA) loci, a genome-wide linkage scan revealed a disease locus in a 4-cM region of 19q13, with a 3.89 lod score. This region overlaps and reduces the SCA13 locus. However, this ADCA is clinically distinguishable from SCA13.



Citation Styles

Harvard Citation styleWaters, M., Fee, D., Figueroa, K., Nolte, D., Müller, U., Advincula, J., et al. (2005) An autosomal dominant ataxia maps to 19q13:: Allelic heterogeneity of SCA13 or novel locus?, Neurology, 65(7), pp. 1111-1113. https://doi.org/10.1212/01.wnl.0000177490.05162.41

APA Citation styleWaters, M., Fee, D., Figueroa, K., Nolte, D., Müller, U., Advincula, J., Coon, H., Evidente, V., & Pulst, S. (2005). An autosomal dominant ataxia maps to 19q13:: Allelic heterogeneity of SCA13 or novel locus?. Neurology. 65(7), 1111-1113. https://doi.org/10.1212/01.wnl.0000177490.05162.41


Last updated on 2025-21-05 at 18:44