With the newly published article ‘Growth charts for pontocerebellar hypoplasia type 2A’, we are the first to create disease-specific percentiles for PCH2A.
In their recently published preprint “Brain morphometry and psychomotor development in children with PCH2A”, Pretzel et al. analyzed 78 brain MRIs from a total of 57 children with PCH2A.
The article originally titled “Human organoid model of PCH2a recapitulates brain region-specific pathology” shows for the first time how the pathology in certain brain regions in PCH2A can be simulated in a 3-dimensional neuronal tissue model (organoid).
The aim of the study “Natural course of pontocerebellar hypoplasia type 2A” by Sánchez-Albisua et al. was to describe the natural course of PCH2 using a uniform group of patients with the typical PCH2A mutation.
In their 2011 study “Clinical, neuroradiological and genetic findings in pontocerebellar hypoplasia”, Namavar et al. demonstrated the connection between genetic findings on the one hand, and brain abnormalities seen in imaging as well as clinical symptoms of patients with pontocerebellar hypoplasia on the other.
In their 1995 study “The syndrome of autosomal recessive pontocerebellar hypoplasia, microcephaly, and extrapyramidal dyskinesia (pontocerebellar hypoplasia type 2): Compiled data from 10 pedigrees”, Barth et al. collected data from 10 unrelated family pedigrees.
In their 1990 article “The inherited syndrome of microcephaly, dyskinesia and pontocerebellar hypoplasia: a systemic atrophy with early onset”, Barth et al. reported on a neurodegenerative disorder observed in seven children from five related families.