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Items: 8

1.

Autosomal dominant optic atrophy classic form

Optic atrophy type 1 (OPA1, or Kjer type optic atrophy) is characterized by bilateral and symmetric optic nerve pallor associated with insidious decrease in visual acuity (usually between ages 4 and 6 years), visual field defects, and color vision defects. Visual impairment is usually moderate (6/10 to 2/10), but ranges from mild or even insignificant to severe (legal blindness with acuity <1/20). The visual field defect is typically centrocecal, central, or paracentral; it is often large in those with severe disease. The color vision defect is often described as acquired blue-yellow loss (tritanopia). Other findings can include auditory neuropathy resulting in sensorineural hearing loss that ranges from severe and congenital to subclinical (i.e., identified by specific audiologic testing only). Visual evoked potentials are typically absent or delayed; pattern electroretinogram shows an abnormal N95:P50 ratio. Tritanopia is the classic feature of color vision defect, but more diffuse nonspecific dyschromatopsia is not uncommon. Ophthalmoscopic examination discloses temporal or diffuse pallor of the optic discs, sometimes associated with optic disc excavation. The neuroretinal rim shows some pallor in most cases, sometimes associated with a temporal pigmentary gray crescent. [from GeneReviews]

MedGen UID:
137902
Concept ID:
C0338508
Disease or Syndrome
2.

Optic atrophy with or without deafness, ophthalmoplegia, myopathy, ataxia, and neuropathy

Syndromic optic atrophy, also known as DOA+ syndrome, is a neurologic disorder characterized most commonly by an insidious onset of visual loss and sensorineural hearing loss in childhood with variable presentation of other clinical manifestations including progressive external ophthalmoplegia (PEO), muscle cramps, hyperreflexia, and ataxia. There appears to be a wide range of intermediate phenotypes (Yu-Wai-Man et al., 2010). [from OMIM]

MedGen UID:
478179
Concept ID:
C3276549
Disease or Syndrome
3.

Retinitis pigmentosa 37

Any retinitis pigmentosa in which the cause of the disease is a mutation in the NR2E3 gene. [from MONDO]

MedGen UID:
410004
Concept ID:
C1970163
Disease or Syndrome
4.

Macular dystrophy with central cone involvement

MedGen UID:
863808
Concept ID:
C4015371
Disease or Syndrome
5.

Optic atrophy 9

Optic atrophy-9 (OPA9) is characterized by onset of decreased visual acuity and optic disc pallor in the first decade of life, with severely reduced visual acuity and color vision deficits observed in the third decade. Although initially described as an autosomal recessive disease (Metodiev et al., 2014; Kelman et al., 2018; Gibson et al., 2020), autosomal dominant cases of OPA9 have also been reported (Charif et al., 2021). Mutation in the ACO2 gene also causes a neurodegenerative disorder, infantile cerebellar-retinal degeneration (ICRD; 614559), of which optic atrophy is a feature. Dominant and Recessive OPA9 From a cohort of approximately 1,000 patients with optic atrophy, Charif et al. (2021) identified 50 probands with dominant mutations in the ACO2 gene, and 11 patients with biallelic variants. There was no significant difference in distribution of mutation type, with two-thirds of all variants being missense mutations in both groups, and nonsense, frameshift, and splice site mutations comprising the remaining third. Age at onset of symptoms occurred during the first 2 decades, without significant difference between dominant and recessive cases. Visual acuity was significantly more affected in recessive cases than in dominant ones, with more than 60% of eyes from the recessive group having a visual acuity lower than 20/200, whereas more than 80% of eyes from the dominant group had a visual acuity above 20/200. Analysis of the optic disc as well as retinal nerve fiber layer thickness measurements indicated a preferential involvement of the temporal quadrant in both patient groups. Assessment of color vision revealed highly variable alterations, including protan, deutan, and tritan types of dyschromatopsia. Some patients had additional retinal changes, including macular microcysts as well as macular dystrophy in 1 case. Extraocular symptoms were observed in 6 (12%) of the dominant cases and in 3 (27%) of the recessive cases, including hearing impairment in 2 dominant cases, and late-onset cerebellar ataxia in 1 dominant case and in 1 recessive case. [from OMIM]

MedGen UID:
898858
Concept ID:
C4225384
Disease or Syndrome
6.

Leber-like hereditary optic neuropathy, autosomal recessive 2

Autosomal recessive Leber-like hereditary optic neuropathy-2 (LHONAR2) is characterized by subacute bilateral or asymmetrical visual loss, optic nerve pseudoedema and peripapillary telangiectasia in the early phase of the disease, and eventual partial recovery in some patients (Gerber et al., 2017). For a discussion of genetic heterogeneity of autosomal recessive Leber-like hereditary optic neuropathy, see LHONAR1 (619382). [from OMIM]

MedGen UID:
1845294
Concept ID:
C5882713
Disease or Syndrome
7.

Optic atrophy 6

MedGen UID:
338012
Concept ID:
C1850281
Disease or Syndrome
8.

Red-green dyschromatopsia

Difficulty with discriminating red and green hues. [from HPO]

MedGen UID:
102324
Concept ID:
C0155016
Disease or Syndrome
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