Baziel van Engelen

Baziel van Engelen

Radboud Universiteit

H-index: 94

Europe-Netherlands

About Baziel van Engelen

Baziel van Engelen, With an exceptional h-index of 94 and a recent h-index of 58 (since 2020), a distinguished researcher at Radboud Universiteit, specializes in the field of Neuromuscular Diseases.

His recent articles reflect a diverse array of research interests and contributions to the field:

Bone quality in LAMA2-related muscular dystrophy and SELENON-related congenital myopathy, a one-year prospective natural history study

FSHD muscle shows perturbation in fibroadipogenic progenitor cells, mitochondrial function and alternative splicing independently of inflammation

The complementary use of muscle ultrasound and MRI in FSHD: Early versus later disease stage follow-up

Quality of life and support needs in children, adolescents, and young adults with facioscapulohumeral dystrophy, a mixed-method study

Respiratory function in LAMA2-related muscular dystrophy and SELENON-related congenital myopathy, a 1.5-year natural history study

The capability approach in rehabilitation: developing capability care

An up-to-date myopathologic characterisation of facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy type 1 muscle biopsies shows sarcolemmal complement membrane attack complex deposits and …

Living with facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy during the first two COVID-19 outbreaks: a repeated patient survey in the Netherlands

Baziel van Engelen Information

University

Radboud Universiteit

Position

Radboud University Medical Centre, Nijmegen, The Netherlands

Citations(all)

32043

Citations(since 2020)

12270

Cited By

24624

hIndex(all)

94

hIndex(since 2020)

58

i10Index(all)

417

i10Index(since 2020)

281

Email

University Profile Page

Radboud Universiteit

Baziel van Engelen Skills & Research Interests

Neuromuscular Diseases

Top articles of Baziel van Engelen

Bone quality in LAMA2-related muscular dystrophy and SELENON-related congenital myopathy, a one-year prospective natural history study

Authors

Karlijn Bouman,Anne TM Dittrich,Jan T Groothuis,Baziel GM van Engelen,Heidi Zweers-van Essen,Anja de Baaij-Daalmeyer,Mirian CH Janssen,Corrie E Erasmus,Jos MT Draaisma,Nicol C Voermans

Journal

Neuromuscular Disorders

Published Date

2024/1/1

Fragility fractures are frequently reported in neuromuscular diseases and negatively influence functional prognosis, quality of life and survival. In LAMA2-related muscular dystrophy (LAMA2-MD) and SELENON(SEPN1)-related congenital myopathy (SELENON-RM) cross-sectional and prospective natural history studies on bone quality and fragility long bone fractures (LBFs) are lacking. We therefore aim to systematically assess bone quality and provide recommendations for clinical care. We performed a one-year prospective natural history study in 21 LAMA2-MD and 10 SELENON-RM patients including a standardized fracture history and bone quality assessment through dual energy Xray absorptiometry scan (DEXA-scan) and/or bone health index (BHI). Ninety percent of the LAMA2-MD and SELENON-RM patients showed low bone quality. Eight (38%) LAMA2-MD and five (50%) SELENON-RM patients had a …

FSHD muscle shows perturbation in fibroadipogenic progenitor cells, mitochondrial function and alternative splicing independently of inflammation

Authors

Elise N Engquist,Anna Greco,Leo AB Joosten,Baziel GM van Engelen,Peter S Zammit,Christopher RS Banerji

Journal

Human Molecular Genetics

Published Date

2024/1/15

Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is a prevalent, incurable myopathy. FSHD is highly heterogeneous, with patients following a variety of clinical trajectories, complicating clinical trials. Skeletal muscle in FSHD undergoes fibrosis and fatty replacement that can be accelerated by inflammation, adding to heterogeneity. Well controlled molecular studies are thus essential to both categorize FSHD patients into distinct subtypes and understand pathomechanisms. Here, we further analyzed RNA-sequencing data from 24 FSHD patients, each of whom donated a biopsy from both a non-inflamed (TIRM−) and inflamed (TIRM+) muscle, and 15 FSHD patients who donated peripheral blood mononucleated cells (PBMCs), alongside non-affected control individuals. Differential gene expression analysis identified suppression of mitochondrial biogenesis and up-regulation of fibroadipogenic progenitor (FAP …

The complementary use of muscle ultrasound and MRI in FSHD: Early versus later disease stage follow-up

Authors

Sanne CC Vincenten,Nicol C Voermans,Donnie Cameron,Baziel GM van Engelen,Nens van Alfen,Karlien Mul

Journal

Clinical Neurophysiology

Published Date

2024/3/7

ObjectivesMuscle MRI and ultrasound provide complementary techniques for characterizing muscle changes and tracking disease progression in facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD). In this cohort study, we provide longitudinal data that compares both imaging modalities head-to-head.MethodsFSHD patients were assessed at baseline and after five years. Standardized muscle MRI and ultrasound images of five leg muscles were assessed bilaterally. Fat replacement was quantified using MRI fat-fraction (FF) and ultrasound Heckmatt and echogenicity z-scores (EZ-score). Muscle edema was evaluated using T2-weighted turbo inversion recovery magnitude (TIRM) MRI.ResultsTwenty FSHD patients were included. Muscles with normal baseline imaging showed increases in ultrasound EZ-scores (≥1; in 17%) more often than MRI FF increases (≥10%; in 7%) over time. Muscles with only baseline …

Quality of life and support needs in children, adolescents, and young adults with facioscapulohumeral dystrophy, a mixed-method study

Authors

Jildou N Dijkstra,Nathaniël B Rasing,Helena TM Boon,Sandra Altena-Rensen,Edith HC Cup,Anke Lanser,Ietske J Siemann,Baziel G van Engelen,Corrie E Erasmus,Nicol C Voermans

Journal

European Journal of Paediatric Neurology

Published Date

2024/4/21

Background and ObjectivesQuality of life (QoL) in children with facioscapulohumeral dystrophy (FSHD) seems plausible decreased. Little is known about factors influencing QoL in children with FSHD. Our objective is to explore factors contributing to the QoL of children, adolescents, and young adults with FSHD, to describe how they experience life with FSHD, and to report their support needs.MethodsWe performed a mixed-method study with individual age-appropriate semi-structured interviews assessing QoL in children, adolescents, and young adults with FSHD and their parents. To characterize the sample, quantitative data on QoL, pain, fatigue and participation were collected. Interview data was analyzed using a thematic analysis.ResultsFourteen patients participated (age between 9-26 years old, eight males and six females). The degree of FSHD severity, as indicated by the FSHD-score, did not correlate …

Respiratory function in LAMA2-related muscular dystrophy and SELENON-related congenital myopathy, a 1.5-year natural history study

Authors

Karlijn Bouman,Jeroen LM van Doorn,Jan T Groothuis,Peter J Wijkstra,Baziel GM van Engelen,Corrie E Erasmus,Jonne Doorduin,Nicol C Voermans

Journal

European Journal of Paediatric Neurology

Published Date

2024/1/1

IntroductionLAMA2-related muscular dystrophy (LAMA2-MD) and SELENON(SEPN1)-related congenital myopathy (SELENON-RM) are rare neuromuscular diseases with respiratory impairment from a young age. Prospective natural history studies are needed for prevalence estimations, respiratory characterization, optimizing clinical care and selecting outcome measures for trial readiness.MethodsOur prospective 1.5-year natural history study included spirometry (forced vital capacity (FVC); difference between upright and supine vital capacity (dVC)), respiratory muscle strength tests (sniff nasal inspiratory pressure (SNIP)) (age≥5 years), and diaphragm ultrasound (thickness; thickening; echogenicity; all ages).ResultsTwenty-six LAMA2-MD patients (M = 8, median 21 [9; 31] years) and 11 SELENON-RM patients (M = 8, 20 [10; 33] years) were included. At baseline, 17 (85 %) LAMA2-MD (FVC%: 59 % [33; 68 …

The capability approach in rehabilitation: developing capability care

Authors

Eirlys J Pijpers,Bart Bloemen,Edith HC Cup,Jan T Groothuis,Wija J Oortwijn,Baziel GM van Engelen,Gert Jan van der Wilt

Journal

Disability and Rehabilitation

Published Date

2024/4/15

PurposeTo develop a multidisciplinary outpatient rehabilitation intervention for people with neuromuscular diseases (NMD) based on the capability approach: capability care for persons with NMD.Materials and methodsThe development process is described using a framework of actions for intervention development. It has been an iterative process consisting of a design phase based on theoretical insights and project group discussions, and a refine phase involving input from relevant stakeholders.ResultsMultidisciplinary efforts have resulted in the development of capability care for rehabilitation of persons with NMD. It can focus both on facilitating and achieving functionings (beings and doings), as well as looking for alternative functionings that fulfil the same underlying value, thereby contributing to the persons’ well-being. To facilitate a conversation on broader aspects that impact on well-being, persons with …

An up-to-date myopathologic characterisation of facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy type 1 muscle biopsies shows sarcolemmal complement membrane attack complex deposits and …

Authors

Lisanne Hubregtse,Karlijn Bouman,Chéryane Lama,Saskia Lassche,Nicolas de Graaf,Valentina Taglietti,Benno Küsters,Baptiste Periou,Frédéric Relaix,Baziel van Engelen,François-Jerôme Authier,Nicol C Voermans,Edoardo Malfatti

Journal

Neuromuscular Disorders

Published Date

2024/3/1

The aim of this study was to identify key routinely used myopathologic biomarkers of FSHD1. Needle muscle biopsies were taken in 34 affected muscles (m. quadriceps femoris (QF), n = 20, m. tibialis anterior (TA), n = 13, m. biceps brachii, n = 1) from 22 patients (age, 53.5 (10) years; M = 12, F = 10). Eleven patients had more than one biopsy (2xQF, n = 1; QF+TA, n = 9; 2xQF+TA, n = 1). Histochemistry, immunoperoxidase, and immunofluorescence stainings were performed and compared to age and muscle type matched muscle specimens of 11 healthy controls. Myopathologic features observed in our FSHD1 cohort were internalized nuclei, type 1 fibre hypertrophy and NADH central clearances/cores. We observed a prominent inflammatory response with MAC deposits, MHC I expression, and muscle regeneration that correlated with the inflammatory score. Our up-to-date characterization of FSHD1 points towards …

Living with facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy during the first two COVID-19 outbreaks: a repeated patient survey in the Netherlands

Authors

Johanna CW Deenen,Joost Kools,Anna Greco,Renée Thewissen,Wiecke van de Put,Anke Lanser,Leo AB Joosten,Andre LM Verbeek,Baziel GM van Engelen,Nicol C Voermans

Journal

Acta Neurologica Belgica

Published Date

2024/1/13

BackgroundPatients with facioscapulohumeral dystrophy (FSHD) suffer from slowly progressive muscle weakness. Approximately 20% of FSHD patients end up wheelchair-dependent. FSHD patients benefit from physical activity to maintain their muscle strength as much as possible. The impact of the COVID-19 pandemic on the health of FSHD patients was unknown.ObjectiveThis study assessed changes in daily care received, perceived psychosocial stress, and worsening of FSHD complaints in 2020. Furthermore, we compared COVID-19 infection incidence and severity of symptoms between FSHD patients and non-FSHD housemates.MethodsThree online survey rounds were sent out to all adult participants of the Dutch FSHD registry regarding daily care received, perceived psychosocial stress, COVID-19 infection rate, and COVID-19 symptoms severity. They also included COVID-19-related questions …

IL-6 and TNF are Potential Inflammatory Biomarkers in Facioscapulohumeral Muscular Dystrophy

Authors

Anna Greco,Karlien Mul,Martin H Jaeger,Jéssica C Dos Santos,Hans Koenen,Leon de Jong,Ritse Mann,Jurgen Fütterer,Mihai G Netea,Ger JM Pruijn,Baziel GM van Engelen,Leo AB Joosten

Journal

Journal of Neuromuscular Diseases

Published Date

2024/1/12

Background: FSHD is a highly prevalent inherited myopathy with a still poorly understood pathology. Objective: To investigate whether proinflammatory cytokines are associated with FSHD and which specific innate immune cells are involved in its pathology.Methods: First, we measured circulating cytokines in serum samples: IL-6 (FSHD, n= 150; HC, n= 98); TNF (FSHD, n= 150; HC, n= 59); IL-1α (FSHD, n= 150; HC, n= 66); IL-1ß (FSHD, n= 150; HC, n= 98); MCP-1 (FSHD, n= 14; HC, n= 14); VEGF-A (FSHD, n= 14; HC, n= 14). Second, we tested trained immunity in monocytes (FSHD, n= 15; HC, n= 15) and NK cells (FSHD, n= 11; HC, n= 11). Next, we explored the cytokine production capacity of NK cells in response to different stimuli (FSHD, n= 39; HC, n= 22). Lastly, we evaluated the cytokine production of ex vivo stimulated MRI guided inflamed (TIRM+) and paired MRI guided non inflamed (TIRM–) muscle …

PABPN1 loss-of-function causes APA-shift in oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy

Authors

Milad Shademan,Hailiang Mei,Baziel van Engelen,Yavuz Ariyurek,Susan Kloet,Vered Raz

Journal

Human Genetics and Genomics Advances

Published Date

2024/4/11

Alternative polyadenylation (APA) at the 3′ UTR of transcripts contributes to the cell transcriptome. APA is suppressed by the nuclear RNA-binding protein PABPN1. Aging-associated reduced PABPN1 levels in skeletal muscles lead to muscle wasting. Muscle weakness in oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD) is caused by short alanine expansion in PABPN1 exon1. The expanded PABPN1 forms nuclear aggregates, an OPMD hallmark. Whether the expanded PABPN1 affects APA and how it contributes to muscle pathology is unresolved. To investigate these questions, we developed a procedure including RNA library preparation and a simple pipeline calculating the APA-shift ratio as a readout for PABPN1 activity. Comparing APA-shift results to previously published PAS utilization and APA-shift results, we validated this procedure. The procedure was then applied on the OPMD cell model and on RNA …

KBTBD13 is an actin-binding protein that modulates muscle kinetics (vol 130, pg 754, 2020)

Authors

Josine M de Winter,Joery P Molenaar,Michaela Yuen,Robbert van der Pijl,Shengyi Shen,Stefan Conijn,Martijn van de Locht,Menne Willigenburg,Sylvia JP Bogaards,Esmee SB van Kleef,Saskia Lassche,Malin Persson,Dilson E Rassier,Tamar E Sztal,Avnika A Ruparelia,Viola Oorschot,Georg Ramm,Thomas E Hall,Zherui Xiong,Christopher N Johnson,Frank Li,Balazs Kiss,Noelia Lozano-Vidal,Reinier A Boon,Manuela Marabita,Leonardo Nogara,Bert Blaauw,Richard J Rodenburg,Benno Küsters,Jonne Doorduin,Alan H Beggs,Henk Granzier,Ken Campbell,Weikang Ma,Thomas Irving,Edoardo Malfatti,Norma B Romero,Robert J Bryson-Richardson,Baziel GM van Engelen,Nicol C Voermans,Coen AC Ottenheijm

Journal

The Journal of Clinical Investigation

Published Date

2024/2/1

The mechanisms that modulate the kinetics of muscle relaxation are critically important for muscle function. A prime example of the impact of impaired relaxation kinetics is nemaline myopathy caused by mutations in KBTBD13 (NEM6). In addition to weakness, NEM6 patients have slow muscle relaxation, compromising contractility and daily life activities. The role of KBTBD13 in muscle is unknown, and the pathomechanism underlying NEM6 is undetermined. A combination of transcranial magnetic stimulation–induced muscle relaxation, muscle fiber–and sarcomere-contractility assays, low-angle x-ray diffraction, and superresolution microscopy revealed that the impaired muscle-relaxation kinetics in NEM6 patients are caused by structural changes in the thin filament, a sarcomeric microstructure. Using homology modeling and binding and contractility assays with recombinant KBTBD13, Kbtbd13-knockout and …

Muscle MRI in Patients With Oculopharyngeal Muscular Dystrophy: A Longitudinal Study

Authors

Rosemarie HMJM Kroon,Johanna G Kalf,Bert JM de Swart,Linda Heskamp,Jacky WJ de Rooy,Baziel GM van Engelen,Corinne GC Horlings

Journal

Neurology

Published Date

2024/1/9

Background and ObjectivesOculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD) is a rare progressive neuromuscular disease. MRI is one of the techniques that is used in neuromuscular disorders to evaluate muscle alterations. The aim of this study was to describe the pattern of fatty infiltration of orofacial and leg muscles using quantitative muscle MRI in a large national cohort and to determine whether MRI can be used as an imaging biomarker of disease progression in OPMD.MethodsPatients with OPMD (18 years or older) were invited from the national neuromuscular database or by their treating physicians and were examined twice with an interval of 20 months, with quantitative MRI of orofacial and leg muscles to assess fatty infiltration which were compared with clinical measures.ResultsIn 43 patients with genetically confirmed OPMD, the muscles that were affected most severely were the tongue (mean fat fraction …

Effective IMT Starts With a Feasible Training Protocol and Identification of Clinical Relevant Outcome Parameters.

Authors

Charlotte GW Seijger,Jellie Nieuwenhuis,Baziel GM Van Engelen,Peter J Wijkstra

Journal

Archivos de Bronconeumologia

Published Date

2024/2/1

Effective IMT Starts With a Feasible Training Protocol and Identification of Clinical Relevant Outcome Parameters. - Abstract - Europe PMC Sign in | Create an account https://orcid.org Europe PMC Menu About Tools Developers Help Contact us Helpdesk Feedback Twitter Blog Tech blog Developer Forum Europe PMC plus Search life-sciences literature (43,645,967 articles, preprints and more) Search Advanced search Feedback This website requires cookies, and the limited processing of your personal data in order to function. By using the site you are agreeing to this as outlined in our privacy notice and cookie policy. Abstract Full text Effective IMT Starts With a Feasible Training Protocol and Identification of Clinical Relevant Outcome Parameters. Seijger CGW 1 , Nieuwenhuis J 1 , van Engelen BGM 2 , Wijkstra PJ 1 Author information Affiliations 1. Department of Pulmonary Diseases and Home Mechanical …

Treatment Approaches for Altered Facial Expression: A Systematic Review in Facioscapulohumeral Muscular Dystrophy and Other Neurological Diseases

Authors

Nathaniël B Rasing,Willianne A van de Geest-Buit,On Ying A Chan,Karlien Mul,Anke Lanser,Baziel GM van Engelen,Corrie E Erasmus,Agneta H Fischer,Koen JAO Ingels,Bart Post,Ietske Siemann,Jan T Groothuis,Nicol C Voermans

Published Date

2024/3/21

Background: Facial weakness is a key feature of facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) and may lead to altered facial expression and subsequent psychosocial impairment. There is no cure and supportive treatments focus on optimizing physical fitness and compensation of functional disabilities.Objective: We hypothesize that symptomatic treatment options and psychosocial interventions for other neurological diseases with altered facial expression could be applicable to FSHD. Therefore, the aim of this review is to collect symptomatic treatment approaches that target facial muscle function and psychosocial interventions in various neurological diseases with altered facial expression in order to discuss the applicability to FSHD. Methods: A systematic search was performed. Selected studies had to include FSHD, Bell’s palsy, Moebius syndrome, myotonic dystrophy type 1, or Parkinson’s disease and …

and Vered Raz

Authors

Milad Shademan,Hailiang Mei,Baziel van Engelen,Yavuz Ariyurek,Susan Kloet

Published Date

2024

Alternative polyadenylation (APA) at the 30 UTR of transcripts contributes to the cell transcriptome. APA is suppressed by the nuclear RNA-binding protein PABPN1. Aging-associated reduced PABPN1 levels in skeletal muscles lead to muscle wasting. Muscle weakness in oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD) is caused by short alanine expansion in PABPN1 exon1. The expanded PABPN1 forms nuclear aggregates, an OPMD hallmark. Whether the expanded PABPN1 affects APA and how it contributes to muscle pathology is unresolved. To investigate these questions, we developed a procedure including RNA library preparation and a simple pipeline calculating the APA-shift ratio as a readout for PABPN1 activity. Comparing APA-shift results to previously published PAS utilization and APA-shift results, we validated this procedure. The procedure was then applied on the OPMD cell model and on RNA from OPMD muscles. APA-shift was genome-wide in the mouse OPMD model, primarily affecting muscle transcripts. In OPMD individuals, APA-shift was enriched with muscle transcripts. In an OPMD cell model APA-shift was not significant. APA-shift correlated with reduced expression levels of a subset of PABPN1 isoforms, whereas the expression of the expanded PABPN1 did not correlate with APA-shift. PABPN1 activity is not affected by the expression of expanded PABPN1, but rather by reduced PABPN1 expression levels. In muscles, PABPN1 activity initially affects muscle transcripts. We suggest that muscle weakness in OPMD is caused by PABPN1 loss-of-function leading to APA-shift that primarily affects in muscle transcripts.

Brody Disease, an Early-Onset Myopathy With Delayed Relaxation and Abnormal Gait: A Case Series of 9 Children

Authors

Jamie I Verhoeven,Jasper Kramer,Juergen Seeger,Joery P Molenaar,Hilde Braakman,Erik-Jan Kamsteeg,Richard J Rodenburg,Benno Kusters,Suzanne Koudijs,Baziel G Van Engelen,Corrie E Erasmus,Nicol C Voermans

Journal

Neurology

Published Date

2024/3/12

Brody disease is a rare autosomal recessive myopathy, caused by pathogenic variants in the ATP2A1 gene. It is characterized by an exercise-induced delay in muscle relaxation, often reported as muscle stiffness. Children may manifest with an abnormal gait and difficulty running. Delayed relaxation is commonly undetected, resulting in a long diagnostic delay. Almost all published cases so far were adults with childhood onset and adult diagnosis. With diagnostic next-generation sequencing, an increasing number of patients are diagnosed in childhood. We describe the clinical and genetic features of 9 children from 6 families with Brody disease. All presented with exercise-induced delayed relaxation, reported as difficulty running and performing sports. Muscle strength and mass was normal, and several children even had an athletic appearance. However, the walking and running patterns were abnormal. The …

Autosomal dominant in cis D4Z4 repeat array duplication alleles in facioscapulohumeral dystrophy

Authors

Richard JLF Lemmers,Russell Butterfield,Patrick J van der Vliet,Jan L de Bleecker,Ludo van der Pol,Diane M Dunn,Corrie E Erasmus,Marc D'Hooghe,Kristof Verhoeven,Judit Balog,Anne Bigot,Baziel van Engelen,Jeffrey Statland,Enrico Bugiardini,Nienke van der Stoep,Teresinha Evangelista,Chiara Marini-Bettolo,Peter van den Bergh,Rabi Tawil,Nicol C Voermans,John Vissing,Robert B Weiss,Silvère M van der Maarel

Journal

Brain

Published Date

2024/2

Facioscapulohumeral dystrophy (FSHD) has a unique genetic aetiology resulting in partial chromatin relaxation of the D4Z4 macrosatellite repeat array on 4qter. This D4Z4 chromatin relaxation facilitates inappropriate expression of the transcription factor DUX4 in skeletal muscle. DUX4 is encoded by a retrogene that is embedded within the distal region of the D4Z4 repeat array. In the European population, the D4Z4 repeat array is usually organized in a single array that ranges between 8 and 100 units. D4Z4 chromatin relaxation and DUX4 derepression in FSHD is most often caused by repeat array contraction to 1–10 units (FSHD1) or by a digenic mechanism requiring pathogenic variants in a D4Z4 chromatin repressor like SMCHD1, combined with a repeat array between 8 and 20 units (FSHD2). With a prevalence of 1.5% in the European population, in cis duplications of the D4Z4 repeat array, where …

Safety and efficacy of losmapimod in facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (ReDUX4): a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2b trial

Authors

Rabi Tawil,Kathryn R Wagner,Johanna I Hamel,Doris G Leung,Jeffrey M Statland,Leo H Wang,Angela Genge,Sabrina Sacconi,Hanns Lochmüller,David Reyes-Leiva,Jordi Diaz-Manera,Jorge Alonso-Perez,Nuria Muelas,Juan J Vilchez,Alan Pestronk,Summer Gibson,Namita A Goyal,Lawrence J Hayward,Nicholas Johnson,Samantha LoRusso,Miriam Freimer,Perry B Shieh,SH Subramony,Baziel van Engelen,Joost Kools,Olof Dahlqvist Leinhard,Per Widholm,Christopher Morabito,Christopher M Moxham,Diego Cadavid,Michelle L Mellion,Adefowope Odueyungbo,William G Tracewell,Anthony Accorsi,Lucienne Ronco,Robert J Gould,Jennifer Shoskes,Luis Alejandro Rojas,John G Jiang

Journal

The Lancet Neurology

Published Date

2024/5/1

BackgroundFacioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy is a hereditary progressive myopathy caused by aberrant expression of the transcription factor DUX4 in skeletal muscle. No approved disease-modifying treatments are available for this disorder. We aimed to assess the safety and efficacy of losmapimod (a small molecule that inhibits p38α MAPK, a regulator of DUX4 expression, and p38β MAPK) for the treatment of facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy.MethodsWe did a randomised, double-blind, placebo-controlled phase 2b trial at 17 neurology centres in Canada, France, Spain, and the USA. We included adults aged 18–65 years with type 1 facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (ie, with loss of repression of DUX4 expression, as ascertained by genotyping), a Ricci clinical severity score of 2–4, and at least one skeletal muscle judged using MRI to be suitable for biopsy. Participants were randomly …

Facioscapulohumeral Disease as a myodevelopmental disease: Applying Ockham’s razor to its various features

Authors

GW Padberg,BGM van Engelen,NC Voermans

Journal

Journal of Neuromuscular Diseases

Published Date

2023/1/1

Facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy (FSHD) is an exclusively human neuromuscular disease. In the last decades the cause of FSHD was identified: the loss of epigenetic repression of the D4Z4 repeat on chromosome 4q35 resulting in inappropriate transcription of DUX4. This is a consequence of a reduction of the array below 11 units (FSHD1) or of a mutation in methylating enzymes (FSHD2). Both require the presence of a 4qA allele and a specific centromeric SSLP haplotype. Muscles become involved in a rostro-caudally order with an extremely variable progression rate. Mild disease and non-penetrance in families with affected individuals is common. Furthermore, 2% of the Caucasian population carries the pathological haplotype without clinical features of FSHD.

O12 Muscle imaging in natural history of FSHD: quantitative MRI and ultrasound results compared head-to-head

Authors

S Vincenten,N Voermans,B van Engelen,K Mul,N van Alfen

Journal

Neuromuscular Disorders

Published Date

2023/10/1

Muscle MRI and muscle ultrasound provide complementary techniques to characterize structural muscle changes and track disease progression. Few cross-sectional studies, describing, the relationship between muscle MRI and ultrasound results in FSHD suggest that ultrasound detects early muscle changes in muscles that appear normal on MR images, while MRI is better at capturing end stage muscle pathology. In this study, we provide follow-up data from one of these studies, comparing longitudinal muscle MRI and ultrasound data head-to-head, aiming to assess the additional value of both techniques. We included 20 FSHD patients (male=55%, mean age 54±11, mean FSHD-CS 6±4). All patients were assessed twice: at baseline and at approximately 5-year follow-up. Muscle MRI and muscle ultrasound images of five leg muscles were assessed bilaterally. Fatty replacement was quantified using MRI as fat …

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Baziel van Engelen FAQs

What is Baziel van Engelen's h-index at Radboud Universiteit?

The h-index of Baziel van Engelen has been 58 since 2020 and 94 in total.

What are Baziel van Engelen's top articles?

The articles with the titles of

Bone quality in LAMA2-related muscular dystrophy and SELENON-related congenital myopathy, a one-year prospective natural history study

FSHD muscle shows perturbation in fibroadipogenic progenitor cells, mitochondrial function and alternative splicing independently of inflammation

The complementary use of muscle ultrasound and MRI in FSHD: Early versus later disease stage follow-up

Quality of life and support needs in children, adolescents, and young adults with facioscapulohumeral dystrophy, a mixed-method study

Respiratory function in LAMA2-related muscular dystrophy and SELENON-related congenital myopathy, a 1.5-year natural history study

The capability approach in rehabilitation: developing capability care

An up-to-date myopathologic characterisation of facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy type 1 muscle biopsies shows sarcolemmal complement membrane attack complex deposits and …

Living with facioscapulohumeral muscular dystrophy during the first two COVID-19 outbreaks: a repeated patient survey in the Netherlands

...

are the top articles of Baziel van Engelen at Radboud Universiteit.

What are Baziel van Engelen's research interests?

The research interests of Baziel van Engelen are: Neuromuscular Diseases

What is Baziel van Engelen's total number of citations?

Baziel van Engelen has 32,043 citations in total.

What are the co-authors of Baziel van Engelen?

The co-authors of Baziel van Engelen are Nicol Voermans.

    Co-Authors

    H-index: 45
    Nicol Voermans

    Nicol Voermans

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