Clinical Description
Ataxia is the first sign of ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 2 (AOA2) and is the major cause of disability early in the disease course. Later, peripheral sensorimotor neuropathy, particularly of the lower limbs, plays a significant role in disease progression.
Cerebellar ataxia. All affected individuals, after initial normal development, show cerebellar ataxia, with slowly progressive gait imbalance. The first symptoms are recognized between age seven and 25 years (mean 14.6 years) [Anheim et al 2009, Hammer et al 2012]. In a study of ten affected individuals from Italy, age at onset ranged between three and 30 years (mean 20.3 years) [Criscuolo et al 2006].
Neuropathy. Ninety percent to 100% of individuals with AOA2 have sensorimotor neuropathy (i.e., absent or diminished tendon reflexes and sensorimotor deficit).
Oculomotor apraxia. Oculomotor apraxia is present in about 51% of individuals [Anheim et al 2009]. It is characterized by a dissociation of eye-head movements in the "head-free" condition, in which the head reaches the lateral target before the eyes. In an Italian cohort, this feature was present in only 20% of individuals [Criscuolo et al 2006], while in a study of 19 affected Algerian individuals oculomotor apraxia was present in 32% [Tazir et al 2009]. A study of five individuals with AOA2, without head thrusts, revealed that hypometric saccades with a staircase pattern could be a more reliable sign of oculomotor apraxia than head thrust movements [Panouillères et al 2013].
Saccadic pursuit, gaze-evoked nystagmus, poor horizontal optokinetic nystagmus, and square-wave jerks have also been observed in several individuals [Al-Kaabi et al 2011].
In an Algerian study, 37% of affected individuals presented with convergent strabismus [Tazir et al 2009] and in a study of 90 affected individuals worldwide, strabismus was found in 12.3% [Anheim et al 2009]. Unilateral strabismus combined with nystagmus was found in an affected Algerian individual [H'mida-Ben Brahim et al 2011].
Movement disorders. Dystonic posture of the hands, choreic movements, and head or postural tremor are observed in about 14% of individuals [Anheim et al 2009, Tazir et al 2009]. The severity of the movement disorders persists in individuals with AOA2 in contrast to the movement disorder in individuals with ataxia with oculomotor apraxia type 1 (AOA1; OMIM 208920), in which chorea tends to disappear with time [Le Ber et al 2004]. In the Italian study, extrapyramidal symptoms (including choreiform head movements, truncal dystonia, and head tremor) were reported in 20% of individuals; however, they rapidly disappeared as the disease progressed [Criscuolo et al 2006]. In the French-Canadian group of individuals tremor was an inconsistent feature present in 57% [Duquette et al 2005].
Rarely, involuntary movements have been reported as a prominent presenting sign of AOA2, although they are accompanied by ataxia in almost all individuals. Two individuals had upper limb dystonia as an initial sign. Two sibs presented with prominent chorea of the trunk and face. One individual had isolated head tremor as the initial sign at age nine years [Pearson 2016].
Pyramidal signs were found in 20.5% of individuals with AOA2 [Anheim et al 2009]. Plantar response was either flexor or neutral [Koenig & Moreira 2007]
Intellect. Mild cognitive impairment is present in some individuals [Le Ber et al 2004]; none have had severe intellectual disability or dementia, even after long disease duration [Le Ber et al 2004]. In the Criscuolo et al [2006] study, three of ten persons presented with mild intellectual impairment with onset around age 50 years. A study of the neuropsychological profile of an individual age 45 years with AOA2 indicated that the pathogenesis of the cerebrocerebellar circuit in AOA2 was responsible for the weaker coordination of complex cognitive functions such as working memory, executive functions, speech, and sequence learning [Klivényi et al 2012].
Other. Deep sensory loss [Le Ber et al 2004, Fogel et al 2009, H'mida-Ben Brahim et al 2011], extensor plantar reflexes, swallowing difficulties, and sphincter disturbances are observed in some individuals [Le Ber et al 2004]. Various signs of extraneurologic involvement including early-onset menopause [Criscuolo et al 2006], ovarian failure [Gazulla et al 2009], dermatofibrosarcoma protuberans [Schöls et al 2008], polycystic ovarian syndrome [Fogel et al 2009], and amenorrhea secondary to hypogonadotropic hypogonadism [Anheim et al 2009] have been reported.
Life span. In individuals studied to date, disease duration ranged between two and 53 years, corresponding to the maximum age of last examination, which was at 79 years.
Neuropathology. Chronic axonal neuropathy with preferential loss of large (and to a lesser degree small) myelinated fibers is detected in sural nerve biopsies [Al-Kaabi et al 2011].
Postmortem brain examination in an Italian individual age 79 years who died of heart failure revealed reduction in the overall size of the brain, including atrophy of the cerebellar folia and marked widening of the sulci [Criscuolo et al 2006]. Cerebellar atrophy was most evident at the level of the vermis and the anterior lobe. The brain stem and spinal cord were slightly reduced in size without other anomalies. The substantia nigra appeared normally pigmented. Atheromatous plaques were present in all the arteries of the circle of Willis. Histologic examination showed normal cortical neurons (both in number and shape), marked loss of Purkinje cells in the cerebellar cortex, and mild fibrous gliosis that was more severe in the vermis than in the hemispheres. No inclusions or torpedos were found. The neurons of the dentate nuclei were slightly reduced in number. Chromatolysis of the oculomotor and raphe nuclei was observed in the brain stem. The inferior and accessory olives appeared relatively spared. In the spinal cord severe demyelination of the gracilis and cuneatus funiculi and degeneration of Clarke's columns with gliosis were observed. A study of 3 Tesla (3T) brain MRI examinations of five individuals with AOA2 revealed significant atrophy of all cerebellar lobules. The degree of atrophy was highest in the vermis, consistent with the oculomotor presentation, and the anterior lobe, consistent with kinetic limb ataxia. An absence of hypointensity of the iron signal on susceptibility-weighted imaging (SWI) was seen in the dentate nucleus of all affected individuals [Frismand et al 2013].
Neurochemical patterns. Short-echo, single-voxel proton ((1)H) magnetic resonance spectroscopy performed in nine individuals with AOA2 showed total N-acetylaspartate levels in the cerebellum strongly correlated with the Friedreich Ataxia Rating Scale (FARS), which may be used as a measure of impairment in those with ataxia [Iltis et al 2010].