PKAN
| Classic PKAN | Early (w/rapid progression) | Gait abnormalities at age ~3 yrs | Progressive dystonia, dysarthria, rigidity, spasticity, hyperreflexia, & extensor toe signs Retinal degeneration is common & may be detected by ERG several yrs before onset of visual symptoms. Neuropsychiatric symptoms (more frequent in later-onset form)
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Atypical PKAN | >10 yrs (w/slower progression) | Dysarthria |
PLAN (Parkinson disease 14; PARK14) | Infantile PLAN (INAD) | 6 mos - 3 yrs | Developmental regression, initial hypotonia, progressive psychomotor delay, & progressive spastic tetraparesis | Progressive cognitive decline Strabismus, nystagmus, & optic atrophy Rapid disease progression
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Juvenile PLAN 1 | Typically early childhood | Gait instability, ataxia, or speech delay & autistic features |
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Adult PLAN | Early adulthood | Gait disturbance or neuropsychiatric changes |
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MPAN 2 | Childhood to early adulthood | Children: gait abnormalities, limb spasticity, optic atrophy Adults: gait abnormalities, acute neuropsychiatric changes | Progressive cognitive decline in most individuals (unlike most NBIA) Neuropsychiatric changes Spasticity (more prominent than dystonia), motor neuronopathy w/early upper-motor neuron findings followed by signs of lower-motor neuron dysfunction Optic atrophy Slowly progressive course w/survival well into adulthood
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BPAN
| Childhood | DD w/slow motor & cognitive gains & little to no expressive language | Seizures of various types more prominent in childhood & may resolve in later adolescence Abnormal behaviors similar to ASD & Rett syndrome Motor dysfunction incl broad-based or ataxic gait, hypotonia, mild spasticity During late adolescence or adulthood, relatively sudden onset of progressive dystonia-parkinsonism & dementia
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FAHN
| Childhood | Most common presentation is subtle change in gait that may lead to increasingly frequent falls | Slowly progressive ataxia, dysarthria, dystonia, & tetraparesis Optic atrophy leading to progressive loss of visual acuity Seizures in later disease course Progressive intellectual decline in most affected individuals
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Kufor-Rakeb syndrome 3 (Parkinson disease 9; PARK9) | Juvenile | Gait abnormalities, neuropsychiatric changes |
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Neuroferritinopathy 5 | Adult | May be similar to Huntington disease w/chorea or dystonia & cognitive changes |
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Aceruloplasminemia
| Adult (25-60 yrs) | Clinical triad of retinal degeneration, diabetes mellitus, & neurologic disease | Facial & neck dystonia, dysarthria, tremors, chorea, ataxia, & blepharospasm ↓ serum concentrations of copper & iron & ↑ serum concentrations of ferritin can distinguish aceruloplasminemia from other forms of NBIA.
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Woodhouse-Sakati syndrome (hypogonadism, alopecia, diabetes mellitus, ID, & extrapyramidal syndrome) 6 | Childhood | Alopecia may be earliest symptom; ID & delayed puberty | Progressive extrapyramidal disorder, generalized & focal dystonia, dysarthria, & cognitive decline Endocrine abnormalities (hypogonadism, alopecia, & diabetes mellitus)
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CoPAN 7 | Childhood | Childhood-onset dystonia & spasticity w/cognitive impairment | Oromandibular dystonia, dysarthria, axonal neuropathy, parkinsonism, cognitive impairment, & obsessive-compulsive behavior Slow progression; non-ambulatory in 3rd decade
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