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Fahr syndrome, also known as primary Familial Brain Calcification is a rare, genetically heterogeneous neurodegenerative condition characterized by bilateral symmetrical intracranial calcifications, primarily affecting the basal ganglia and other brain regions, usually in the absence of secondary metabolic causes.

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Classification


Type Etiology
Primary Idiopathic/Familial Fahr Disease:
Autosomal dominant (most common): Mutations in SLC20A2, PDGFRB, PDGFB, XPR1, MYORG
• Presents typically between 3rd–5th decade
• Often asymptomatic early; penetrance increases with age
Secondary Secondary to systemic/metabolic disorders:
Hypoparathyroidism (most common)
Pseudohypoparathyroidism
Hyperparathyroidism
Mitochondrial diseases
Infectious causes (e.g., CMV, toxoplasmosis)
Toxins (e.g., lead poisoning, carbon monoxide)

Clinical features


Domain Common Manifestations
Extrapyramidal Parkinsonism, chorea, dystonia, tremor
Cognitive Dementia, psychosis, behavioral changes
Seizures Partial or generalized
Pyramidal signs Spasticity, weakness
Speech & Gait Dysarthria, ataxia, balance disturbances

Diagnosis


Diagnostic workup:

  1. Non-contrast CT head
  2. Serum calcium, phosphate, PTH, magnesium
  3. Vitamin D levels
  4. Genetic testing (if familial form suspected)
  5. Rule out secondary causes before labeling as idiopathic Fahr disease

Radiology


Modality Imaging feature
CT • ****Bilateral symmetric calcifications
MR • Early stages: Normal
Late stages: Low T2/FLAIR signal & SWI/GRE susceptibility
PET/SPECT • ****Reduced metabolism

Characteristic locations: