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. 2022 Mar 10;12:4222. doi: 10.1038/s41598-022-08206-z

Table 3.

Summary of main clinical phenotypes of mitochondrial disorders, with relative clinical clues and genotypes.

TAG Phenotype Clinical features Genotype
CPEO Chronic Progressive External Ophthalmoplegia Progressive bilateral ptosis and diffuse reduction in ocular motility Large-scale mtDNA deletions OR multiple mtDNA deletions (due to mutations in TWNK, POLG, TK2, RRM2b, DGUOK genes or others) OR point mtDNA mutations
CPEO plus Chronic Progressive External Ophthalmoplegia Plus Progressive bilateral ptosis and ophthalmoparesis associated to multiple features of neuromuscular and multisystem involvement See “CPEO” Genotype
KSS Kearns-Sayre syndrome Early onset CPEO with cardiac conduction block and pigmentary retinopathy, w/o multisystem involvement; Ataxia, Psychomotor regression Large-scale mtDNA deletions
ADOA Autosomal Dominant Optic Atrophy Visual loss starting during 1st decade of life, color vision defects nDNA mutations (OPA1OPA3OPA 4–5-8 gene)
MELAS Mitochondrial Encephalomyopathy Lactic Acidosis and Stroke-like episodes Seizures, Ataxia, Myoclonus, Psychomotor regression, Cortical blindness, Dystonia, Weakness, Sensorineural hearing loss, Short stature, Lactic acidosis, hemiparesis/hemianopia tRNA point mutation (m.3243A > G)
MM Other Mitochondrial Myopathy All other combinations of muscle weakness w/o multisystem involvement nDNA mutations OR mtDNA depletions OR mtDNA deletions