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Hereditary hyperekplexia (disorder)
Hereditary hyperekplexia
Hereditary hyperexplexia
Congenital stiff man syndrome
Familial startle disease
Kok disease
Stiff baby syndrome
A hereditary neurological disorder with characteristics of excessive startle responses. The disease manifests shortly after birth with violent jerking to noise and touch, and massive and sustained stiffening of the trunk and limbs, clenching fists, and attacks of a high frequency trembling. Motor milestones are often mildly delayed, but intellectual development is usually normal. Mutations in the GLRA1 gene (5q32) are found in about 30% of patients. These mutations are transmitted as an autosomal dominant or recessive trait. The GLRA1 gene encodes the alpha1 subunit of the juvenile neuronal receptor for the inhibitory neurotransmitter, glycine. Mutations of this subunit cause a variety of dysfunctions of the neuronal chloride (Cl-) channel. Mutations in the GLRB, GPHN and SLC6A5 genes (4q31.3, 14q24 and 11p15.2-p15.1) have also been observed.
hereditaire hyperekplexie
startle disease
stiff baby syndrome
Id724351008
StatusPrimitive
Finding siteMuscle structure
OccurrenceCongenital
Has interpretationAbnormal
InterpretsReflex
InterpretsMovement
DHD Diagnosis thesaurus reference set
ICD-10 complex map reference set
TargetG25.8
RuleTRUE
AdviceALWAYS G25.8
CorrelationSNOMED CT source code to target map code correlation not specified