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  1. McKinlay JB, Digruttolo L, Glasser D, Sweeney M, Shirai MF
    Int J Clin Pract Suppl, 1999 Jun;102:35.
    PMID: 10665122
  2. Giunti P, Sweeney MG, Spadaro M, Jodice C, Novelletto A, Malaspina P, et al.
    Brain, 1994 Aug;117 ( Pt 4):645-9.
    PMID: 7922453
    Affected members of 73 families with a variety of autosomal dominant late onset cerebellar ataxias (ADCAs) were investigated for the trinucleotide (CAG) repeat expansion which is found in pedigrees exhibiting linkage to the SCA1 locus on chromosome 6. Most of the families were too small for linkage analysis. The mutation was only found in ADCA type I, in 19 out of 38 such kindreds investigated (50%). It was slightly more common in Italian (59%) than British (50%) families, and was also found in Malaysian, Bangladeshi and Jamaican kindreds. Overall, ADCA type I patients with the expansion had a lower incidence of hyporeflexia and facial fasciculation than those without. The trinucleotide expansion was not found in eight families with ADCA and maculopathy or 24 kindreds with a pure type of ADCA, confirming that these syndromes are genetically distinct. It was also not detected in 12 patients with sporadic degenerative ataxias. DNA analysis for the SCA1 mutation is useful diagnostically in single patients or small families, and can be used for presymptomatic testing where appropriate.
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