ABSTRACT
Neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease (NIID) is a neurodegenerative disease, characterized by eosinophilic transparent inclusions in the central and peripheral nervous systems, and internal organs. NIID clinical characteristics are varied, including cognitive impairment, muscle weakness, episodic symptoms, movement disorders and autonomic dysfunction. This article reports a patient with NIID who manifested with episodes of aphasia, dysgraphia and dyslexia without fever, headache, nausea and vomiting confirmed by genetic testing. The patient was a 62-year-old female with acute onset who was diagnosed with transient ischemic attack. This article aims to improve the knowledge of NIID with stroke-like onset by this case presentation and avoid misdiagnosis.
ABSTRACT
Objective:To summarize the clinical and imaging features of 10 patients with genetically diagnosed neuronal intranuclear inclusion disease (NIID) to avoid clinical misdiagnosis and mismanagement of NIID.Methods:Ten patients with NIID, admitted to our hospital from January 2020 to March 2022, were chosen in our study. All patients were confirmed as having NIID by NOTCH2NLC gene assay. Their clinical data, gene detection results and skin pathological results were collected and anlyzed. Results:These patients aged from 57 to 84 years, including 8 females. The episodic symptoms as main symptoms were noted in 6 patients, including 3 patients with encephalopathy, 1 patient with TGA, 1 patient with stroke-like episode, and 1 patient with migraine-like symptoms. Chronic progressive symptoms as main symptoms were noted in 4 patients, including 3 patients with dementia and 1 patient with Parkinson's disease. There were characteristic linear hyper-intensities in diffusion weighted imaging (DWI) in the corticomedullary junction predominantly in the frontal lobes. White matter lesions appeared in T2 Flair might have been noted years before lesions appeared in DWI, with wider ranges. All had GGC repeated expansion in NOTCH2NLC gene in non-coding area, with mutation number>60. Skin biopsy was performed in 6 patients, showing the formation of intranuclear inclusion bodies in different cells; and ubiquitin and P62 were found positive in immunohistochemical staining. Conclusions:NIID patients have large clinical heterogeneity; most patients have episodic symptoms as main manifestations, often accompanied by chronic progressive symptoms; stroke attack and migraine are rare clinical phenotypes of NIID. The high signal at the cortical medullary junction in DWI is a characteristic imaging change.