Historical paper
Ramblings in the history of spinal muscular atrophy

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Introductory background

The term Spinal Muscular Atrophy is usually applied to an autosomal recessive disorder, characterised by symmetrical muscle weakness, affecting the lower limbs more than the upper, proximal muscle more than distal and also selectively affecting the axial and intercostal muscles in the more severe forms, but sparing the diaphragm.

Two classical syndromes have been recognised (Fig. 1). A severe infantile form, with onset at birth or in the first few months of life and usually fatal in the first

Classical papers

With this introductory background, one can now review the classical papers.

In 1891 Guido Werdnig (1844–1919) of the department of Pathological Anatomy in the University of Graz in Austria described two brothers with onset of weakness around 10 months [5]. One had complicating pertussis and hydrocephalus and died at three years. The other survived till six years. At autopsy he found degeneration of the anterior horn cells of the cord. Werdnig wrote a further review in 1894 [6], but subsequently

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References (28)

  • K. Fried et al.

    Spinal muscular atrophy type II. A separate genetic and clinical entity from type I (Werdnig–Hoffmann disease) and type III (Kugelberg–Welander disease)

    Clin Genet

    (1971)
  • G. Werdnig

    Zwei frühinfantile hereditäre Fälle von progressiver Muskelatrophie unter dem Bilde der Dystrophie, aber auf neurotischer Grundlage

    Archic fur Psychiatrie and Nervenkrankheiten, Berlin

    (1891)
  • G. Werdnig

    Die frühinfantile progressive spinale Amyotrophie

    Archic fur Psychiatrie and Nervenkrankheiten, Berlin

    (1894)
  • J. Hoffmann

    Über chronische spinale Muskelatrophie im Kindesalter auf familiärer Basis

    Deut Zeitsch Nervenheilkd

    (1893)
  • Cited by (60)

    • Central synaptopathy is the most conserved feature of motor circuit pathology across spinal muscular atrophy mouse models

      2021, iScience
      Citation Excerpt :

      Spinal muscular atrophy (SMA) is the second most common autosomal recessive disorder and most frequent genetic cause of infant mortality. The clinical phenotype of patients with SMA is determined by the disruption of motor circuits causing a proximo-distal progressing muscle atrophy, paralysis, and eventually death in severe cases (Dubowitz, 2009; Tisdale and Pellizzoni, 2015; Wirth, 2021). These impairments of the motor system are caused by homozygous deletion or mutation of the survival motor neuron 1 (SMN1) gene with the retention of the hypomorphic SMN2 gene leading to the ubiquitous deficiency of SMN protein.

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