Poretti Boltshauser Syndrome

Glossary

When you see a medical journey about PTBHS, or even when you read an MRI or medical report about yourself or your child, it is filled with words that are not that easy to understand. To make it more easy, I made this glossary filled with medical words, sorted by theme.

The MRI

CerebellumThe part of the brain that controls balance and coordination.
VermisThe central part of the cerebellum that connects the two halves.
HypoplasiaUnderdevelopment or smaller size of a part of the body or brain.
DysplasiaAbnormal development or structure of a tissue or organ.
Molar tooth signA typical MRI finding seen in some brain disorders, where the brainstem and cerebellum look like a tooth shape.
Cerebellar cystA small fluid-filled space inside or near the cerebellum.
BrainstemThe lower part of the brain that connects to the spinal cord and controls vital functions like breathing and heart rate.
White matterThe part of the brain that connects different brain regions and helps send signals.
Grey matterThe outer layer of the brain involved in thinking, movement, and sensory processing.

Symptoms

AtaxiaUncoordinated movements or difficulty with balance.
ApraxiaTrouble planning or performing movements, even though the muscles work normally.
HypotoniaLow muscle tone; muscles feel soft or floppy.
NystagmusFast, uncontrolled eye movements.
Developmental delaySlower than usual development in skills such as walking, talking, or coordination.
Speech delayWhen a child starts speaking later than expected.
Fine motor skillsSmall movements using the hands and fingers (e.g., picking up small objects).
Gross motor skillsBig movements like crawling, walking, or jumping.
Ocular Motor ApraxiaDifficulty moving the eyes to look at something on command.
Cognitive functionThinking abilities like memory, understanding, and problem-solving.

Genetics

LAMA1 geneThe gene in which some changes (mutations) cause Poretti-Boltshauser syndrome.
Mutation / VariantA change in a gene’s DNA sequence.
PathogenicA variant known to cause disease.
Heterozygous / HomozygousHaving one (hetero) or two (homo) copies of a gene variant.
Autosomal recessiveA condition that occurs when both copies of a gene have a change.
Genetic testingA test to look for changes in DNA that explain symptoms.
CarrierA person who has one copy of a gene variant but does not have symptoms.
CongenitalThis means it is already present when you are born
ChromosomeThe structures in cells that contain genes.