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Article Abstract

 Hypotonia occurs as a result of neurological dysfunction in the brain, brainstem, spinal cord, motor neurons, anterior horn cells, peripheral nerves, and muscles. Although the genotype-phenotype correlation can be established in 15 to 30% of patients, it is difficult to obtain a correlation in most cases.  This study was aimed to investigate the genetic etiology in cases of peripheral hypotonia that could not be diagnosed using conventional methods.  A total of 18 pediatric patients with peripheral hypotonia were included. They were referred to our genetic disorders diagnosis center from the Pediatric Neurology Department with a prediagnosis of hypotonia. A custom designed multigene panel, including , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , , and , was used for genetic analysis using next-generation sequencing (NGS).  In our study, we found 13 variants including pathogenic (two variants in LAMA2) and likely pathogenic variants (three variants in RYR1 and POMGnT1) and variants of uncertain clinical significance (eight variants in RYR1, COL6A3, COL6A2, POMGnT1 and POMT1) in 11 (61%) out of 18 patients. In one of our patients, a homozygous, likely pathogenic c.1649G > A, p.(Ser550Asn) variant was defined in the gene which was associated with a muscle-eye-brain disease phenotype.  The contribution of an in-house designed gene panel in the etiology of peripheral hypotonia with a clinical diagnosis was 5.5%. An important contribution with the clinical diagnosis can be made using the targeted multigene panels in larger samples.

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http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC9286875PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1055/s-0042-1745873DOI Listing

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