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Ophthalmic features of ataxia telangiectasia-like disorder.

INTRODUCTION: Ataxia telangiectasia (AT) is a recessive neurodegenerative disease due to a faulty repair mechanism for breaks in double-stranded DNA (ATM mutation). Ophthalmic features of AT include conjunctival telangiectasia, strabismus, saccadic dysfunction with head thrusts, and convergence insufficiency. Ataxia telangiectasia-like syndrome (ATLD) is a more recently recognized condition due to homozygous mutation in MRE11, a gene also involved in the cellular repair response to double-stranded DNA breaks; ophthalmic features of ATLD are not well described. The purpose of this article is to describe the ophthalmic features of ATLD.

METHODS: Full ophthalmologic and orthoptic evaluations were obtained in 13 individuals: 10 previously reported ATLD patients, an additional related ATLD patient, and 3 nonaffected relatives. All individuals were from three unrelated consanguineous Saudi Arabian families harboring an MRE11 mutation (W210C). Age range was from 2 to 40 years of age.

RESULTS: No affected patient had structural ocular abnormality (eg, conjunctival telangiectasia), manifest strabismus at distance, or duction limitation. All but one (the youngest) had saccadic dysfunction (without head thrusts). Most patients had abnormal convergence. Older patients had nystagmus with abnormalities in smooth pursuit and vestibular ocular reflex. All patients had cerebellar atrophy by neuroimaging and slowly progressive ataxia. The unaffected heterozygous relatives had unremarkable ophthalmic and neurologic examinations.

CONCLUSIONS: Saccadic dysfunction without head thrusts and convergence abnormality are common in ATLD secondary to homozygous W210C MRE11 mutation. Older patients have nystagmus with abnormalities in smooth pursuit and vestibular ocular reflex. Eye movement control systems apparently deteriorate with time in this rare neurological disease. Ophthalmic features of AT that were not observed in any of our ATLD patients include conjunctival telangiectasia, head thrusting, and manifest strabismus at distance.

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