scholarly journals Congenital insensitivity to pain: Fracturing without apparent skeletal pathobiology caused by an autosomal dominant, second mutation in SCN11A encoding voltage-gated sodium channel 1.9

Bone ◽  
2016 ◽  
Vol 84 ◽  
pp. 289-298 ◽  
Author(s):  
Voraluck Phatarakijnirund ◽  
Steven Mumm ◽  
William H. McAlister ◽  
Deborah V. Novack ◽  
Deborah Wenkert ◽  
...  
Author(s):  
Bas Stunnenberg ◽  
Charlotte Haaxma ◽  
Mieke van Haelst ◽  
Maria Ponson-Wever ◽  
Eline Verberne ◽  
...  

AbstractCongenital Insensitivity to Pain (CIP) is a rare disorder that is characterized by the inability to perceive pain. It is caused by bi-allelic inactivating mutations in the SCN9A gene, which encodes the pore-forming α-subunit of the nerve voltage-gated sodium channel (Nav1.7). Patients with CIP are unable to feel pain from noxious stimuli, including heat, but all other peripheral somatosensory modalities function normally. Often anosmia is present as an additional feature. We report a patient with CIP caused by compound heterozygous SCN9A mutations: a novel in-frame deletion of exon 7 and a novel frameshift mutation. The identification of these mutations expands the spectrum of mutations associated with CIP.


2021 ◽  
pp. 135-139
Author(s):  
Leema Reddy Peddareddygari ◽  
Raji P. Grewal

The SCN9A gene encodes a voltage gated sodium channel Nav1.7 in which mutations can result in a wide variety of phenotypes ranging from congenital insensitivity to pain to small fiber neuropathy. We report the genotype phenotype analysis in a family carrying a specific mutation, I1739V, in the SCN9A gene. Neurophysiological studies have documented the gain of function impact of this mutation on this sodium channel. Interestingly, there is significant interfamilial phenotypic variability in individuals carrying this mutation. In our family, a father daughter combination had identical genotypes analyzing the SCN9A gene and multiple other genes known to cause neuropathy. Both of them carry the I1739V mutation but exhibit significant phenotypic variability with complaints of decreased sensitivity to discomfort in the father while the daughter has the clinical and laboratory features consistent with a small fiber neuropathy. We hypothesize that there are modifiers of the I1739V mutation that could involve intronic or exonic gene variants which contribute to this intrafamilial phenotypic variability. Our study has implications for genetic counseling, personalized medicine and the development of drugs to treat neuropathic pain.


2016 ◽  
Vol 47 (S 01) ◽  
Author(s):  
W. Fazeli ◽  
B. Schattling ◽  
B. Engeland ◽  
M. Friese ◽  
D. Isbrand

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