(Created page with "{{BioPsy}} [[File:Lissencephaly.png|thumb|Brain MRI, T1 weighted on a transversal plane, of a 8-month old boy with lissencephaly. Note the scarce and wide gyri, mostly on the ...") |
m (Dr Joe Kiff moved page Neuronal migration disorder to Neuronal migration disorders) |
Revision as of 12:53, 14 October 2013
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Neuronal migration disorder refers to a heterogenous group of disorders that, it is supposed, share the same etiopathological mechanism: a variable degree of disruption in the migration of neuroblasts during neurogenesis.[1] The neuronal migration disorders are cerebral dysgenesis, brain malformations caused by primary alterations during neurogenesis; on the other hand, brain malformations are highly diverse and refer to any insult to the brain during its formation and maturation due to intrinsic or extrinsic causes that ultimately will alter the normal brain anatomy. However, there is some controversy in the terminology because virtually any malformation will involve neuroblast migration, either primarily or secondarily.
Some specific disorders considered as alterations in neuronal migration are lissencephaly, schizencephaly, pachygyria, polymicrogyria and focal cortical dysplasia. Miller-Dieker syndrome, muscle-brain-eye syndrome, Fukuyama congenital muscular dystrophy and Walker Warburg syndrome are genetic disorders associated with lissencephaly.[2]