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Original Article

SOD1 gene mutations in ALS patients from British Columbia, Canada: Clinical features, neurophysiology and ethical issues in management

, , , , &
Pages 108-119 | Received 13 Sep 2007, Accepted 23 Nov 2007, Published online: 10 Jul 2009
 

Abstract

Two hundred and fifty‐four ALS patients from British Columbia, Canada were screened for mutations in the gene encoding the enzyme superoxide dismutase type 1 (SOD1). Thirteen patients (5.1%) carried one of six missense mutations (A4V, G72C, D76Y, D90A, C111Y, I113T). Mutations were found both in sporadic and familial ALS cases. Atypical clinical features delayed diagnosis in some cases. The demographic and clinical features of the mutation carrying index cases are summarized, and compared with those of screened patients without mutations. The phenotypic variability between SOD1 mutation carrying patients in this study is dramatic, even among patients with the same mutation This underlines the hypothesis that ALS is a biologically heterogeneous disorder in which genetics, environment and ageing all interrelate to form the final clinical phenotype.

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