Productos ANID
Permanent URI for this collection
Browse
Browsing Productos ANID by Department "Facultad de Medicina Clínica Alemana Universidad del Desarrollo"
Now showing 1 - 20 of 36
Results Per Page
Sort Options
- Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication A dual treatment blocks alcohol binge-drinking relapse: Microbiota as a new player(2022); ;María Elena Quintanilla ;Paola Morales ;Daniela Santapau; ;Mario Herrera-Marschitz; ;Francisco Moya-FloresYedy IsraelScopus© Citations 11 21 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Acquisition of resistance to ceftazidime-avibactam during infection treatment in Pseudomonas aeruginosa through D179Y mutation in one of two blaKPC-2 gene copies without losing carbapenem resistance(2022-09) ;García, Patricia ;Brito, Bárbara; ; ;Martínez, José R.W. ;Olivares-Pacheco, Jorge ;Quiroz, ValeriaWozniak, AnielaScopus© Citations 4 10 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Analysis of REM sleep without atonia in 22q11.2 deletion syndrome determined by domiciliary polysomnography: a cross sectional study(2021) ;Jorge Mauro ;Mario Diaz ;Teresa Córdova ;Katiuska Villanueva ;Tania Cáceres ;Alejandro Bassi ;Rosemarie Fritsch; Adrián Ocampo-GarcésAbstract Study Objectives Our aim is to evaluate the presence of REM sleep without atonia (RWA), the objective hallmark of REM sleep Behaviour Disorder (RBD), as prodromal marker of Parkinson’s disease (PD), in an adult cohort of 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22qDS). Methods Sleep quality was assessed by means of Pittsburgh quality scale index (PSQI), and RBD symptoms by means of RBD questionnaire-Hong-Kong (RBDQ-HK). Attended domiciliary video-Polysomnography (v-PSG) were performed in 26 adults (18–51 years, 14 females) 22qDS patients. Electromyogram during REM sleep was analyzed by means of SINBAR procedure at 3-second time resolution (miniepochs). Results An overall poor sleep quality was observed in the cohort and high RBDQ-HK score in 7 of the 26 patients, two additional patients with positive dream enactment reported by close relatives had low score of RBDQ-HK. Nevertheless, SINBAR RWA scores were lower than cut-off threshold for RWA (mean 5.5%, range 0–12.2%). TST and the percentage of light sleep (N1) were increased, with preserved proportions of N2 and N3. Participants reported poor quality of sleep (mean PSQI > 5), with prolonged sleep latency in the v-PSG. No subjects exhibit evident dream enactment episodes during recording sessions. Conclusions RWA was absent in the studied cohort of 22qDS adult volunteers according to validated polysomnographic criteria. High RBDQ-HK scores do not correlate with v-PSG results among 22qDS individuals.Scopus© Citations 5 3 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication 12 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Antioxidant Biomolecules and Their Potential for the Treatment of Difficult-to-Treat Depression and Conventional Treatment-Resistant Depression(2022); ;Alba Ávila ;Koen SchruersMajor depression is a devastating disease affecting an increasing number of people from a young age worldwide, a situation that is expected to be worsened by the COVID-19 pandemic. New approaches for the treatment of this disease are urgently needed since available treatments are not effective for all patients, take a long time to produce an effect, and are not well-tolerated in many cases; moreover, they are not safe for all patients. There is solid evidence showing that the antioxidant capacity is lower and the oxidative damage is higher in the brains of depressed patients as compared with healthy controls. Mitochondrial disfunction is associated with depression and other neuropsychiatric disorders, and this dysfunction can be an important source of oxidative damage. Additionally, neuroinflammation that is commonly present in the brain of depressive patients highly contributes to the generation of reactive oxygen species (ROS). There is evidence showing that pro-inflammatory diets can increase depression risk; on the contrary, an anti-inflammatory diet such as the Mediterranean diet can decrease it. Therefore, it is interesting to evaluate the possible role of plant-derived antioxidants in depression treatment and prevention as well as other biomolecules with high antioxidant and anti-inflammatory potential such as the molecules paracrinely secreted by mesenchymal stem cells. In this review, we evaluated the preclinical and clinical evidence showing the potential effects of different antioxidant and anti-inflammatory biomolecules as antidepressants, with a focus on difficult-to-treat depression and conventional treatment-resistant depression.Scopus© Citations 30 29 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Astroglial gliotransmitters released via Cx43 hemichannels regulate NMDAR‐dependent transmission and short‐term fear memory in the basolateral amygdala(2022) ;Sergio Linsambarth ;Francisco J. Carvajal ;Rodrigo Moraga‐Amaro ;Luis Mendez ;Giovanni Tamburini ;Ivanka Jimenez ;Daniel Antonio Verdugo ;Gonzalo I. Gómez ;Nur Jury ;Pablo Martínez ;Brigitte Zundert ;Lorena Varela‐Nallar; ;Claire Martin ;Guillermo A. Altenberg ;Mariana C. Fiori ;Waldo Cerpa ;Juan A. OrellanaJimmy StehbergScopus© Citations 19 25 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Autoantibodies Against Proteins Previously Associated With Autoimmunity in Adult and Pediatric Patients With COVID-19 and Children With MIS-C(2022) ;Peter D. Burbelo ;Riccardo Castagnoli ;Chisato Shimizu ;Ottavia M. Delmonte ;Kerry Dobbs ;Valentina Discepolo ;Andrea Lo Vecchio ;Alfredo Guarino ;Francesco Licciardi ;Ugo Ramenghi; ; ;Gian Luigi Marseglia ;Amelia Licari ;Daniela Montagna ;Camillo Rossi ;Gina A. Montealegre Sanchez ;Karyl Barron ;Blake M. Warner ;John A. Chiorini ;Yazmin Espinosa ;Loreani Noguera ;Lesia Dropulic ;Meng Truong ;Dana Gerstbacher ;Sayonara Mató ;John Kanegaye ;Adriana H. Tremoulet ;Eli M. Eisenstein ;Helen C. Su ;Luisa Imberti; ;Jane C. Burns ;Luigi D. NotarangeloJeffrey I. CohenThe antibody profile against autoantigens previously associated with autoimmune diseases and other human proteins in patients with COVID-19 or multisystem inflammatory syndrome in children (MIS-C) remains poorly defined. Here we show that 30% of adults with COVID-19 had autoantibodies against the lung antigen KCNRG, and 34% had antibodies to the SLE-associated Smith-D3 protein. Children with COVID-19 rarely had autoantibodies; one of 59 children had GAD65 autoantibodies associated with acute onset of insulin-dependent diabetes. While autoantibodies associated with SLE/Sjögren’s syndrome (Ro52, Ro60, and La) and/or autoimmune gastritis (gastric ATPase) were detected in 74% (40/54) of MIS-C patients, further analysis of these patients and of children with Kawasaki disease (KD), showed that the administration of intravenous immunoglobulin (IVIG) was largely responsible for detection of these autoantibodies in both groups of patients. Monitoring in vivo decay of the autoantibodies in MIS-C children showed that the IVIG-derived Ro52, Ro60, and La autoantibodies declined to undetectable levels by 45-60 days, but gastric ATPase autoantibodies declined more slowly requiring >100 days until undetectable. Further testing of IgG and/or IgA antibodies against a subset of potential targets identified by published autoantigen array studies of MIS-C failed to detect autoantibodies against most (16/18) of these proteins in patients with MIS-C who had not received IVIG. However, Troponin C2 and KLHL12 autoantibodies were detected in 2 of 20 and 1 of 20 patients with MIS-C, respectively. Overall, these results suggest that IVIG therapy may be a confounding factor in autoantibody measurements in MIS-C and that antibodies against antigens associated with autoimmune diseases or other human proteins are uncommon in MIS-C.Scopus© Citations 14 22 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Characteristics of Medically Transported Critically Ill Children with Respiratory Failure in Latin America: Implications for Outcomes(2021) ;Jesus A. Serra ;Franco Díaz ;Pablo Cruces; ;Maria J. Nuñez ;A. Donoso ;J.A. Bravo-Serrano ;M. Carbonell ;C. Courtie ;A. Fernández ;L. Martínez-Arroyo ;J. Martínez ;S. Menta ;Luis Pedrozo-Ortiz ;A. Wegner ;Nicolas Monteverde-Fernández ;Juan C. Jaramillo-Bustamante ;Roberto Jabornisky ;Sebastián González-Dambrauskas ;Sapna R. KudchadkarPablo Vásquez-HoyosAbstractSeveral challenges exist for referral and transport of critically ill children in resource-limited regions such as Latin America; however, little is known about factors associated with clinical outcomes. Thus, we aimed to describe the characteristics of critically ill children in Latin America transferred to pediatric intensive care units for acute respiratory failure to identify risk factors for mortality. We analyzed data from 2,692 patients admitted to 28 centers in the Pediatric Collaborative Network of Latin America Acute Respiratory Failure Registry. Among patients referred from another facility (773, 28%), nonurban transports were independently associated with mortality (adjusted odds ratio = 9.4; 95% confidence interval: 2.4–36.3).4 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Childhood adversity increases risk of psychotic experiences in patients with substance use disorder(2022) ;Ignacio Bórquez-Infante ;Javiera Vasquez ;Sofía Dupré ;Eduardo A. Undurraga ;Nicolás A. CrossleyScopus© Citations 5 17 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Contemporary Clinical and Molecular Epidemiology of Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcal Bacteremia: A Prospective Multicenter Cohort Study (VENOUS I)(2021) ;German A Contreras; ;Shelby Simar ;Courtney Luterbach ;An Q Dinh ;Kirsten Rydell ;Pranoti V Sahasrabhojane ;Rafael Rios ;Lorena Diaz ;Katherine Reyes ;Marcus Zervos ;Helina M Misikir ;Gabriela Sanchez-Petitto ;Catherine Liu ;Yohei Doi ;Lilian M Abbo ;Luis Shimose ;Harald Seifert ;Carlota Gudiol ;Fernanda Barberis ;Claudia Pedroza ;Samuel L Aitken ;Samuel A Shelburne ;David van Duin ;Truc T Tran ;Blake M HansonCesar A AriasAbstract Background Vancomycin-resistant enterococci (VRE) are major therapeutic challenges. Prospective contemporary data characterizing the clinical and molecular epidemiology of VRE bloodstream infections (BSIs) are lacking. Methods The Vancomycin-Resistant Enterococcal BSI Outcomes Study (VENOUS I) is a prospective observational cohort of adult patients with enterococcal BSI in 11 US hospitals. We included patients with Enterococcus faecalis or Enterococcus faecium BSI with ≥1 follow-up blood culture(s) within 7 days and availability of isolate(s) for further characterization. The primary study outcome was in-hospital mortality. Secondary outcomes were mortality at days 4, 7, 10, 12, and 15 after index blood culture. A desirability of outcome ranking was constructed to assess the association of vancomycin resistance with outcomes. All index isolates were subjected to whole genome sequencing. Results Forty-two of 232 (18%) patients died in hospital and 39 (17%) exhibited microbiological failure (lack of clearance in the first 4 days). Neutropenia (hazard ratio [HR], 3.13), microbiological failure (HR, 2.4), VRE BSI (HR, 2.13), use of urinary catheter (HR, 1.85), and Pitt BSI score ≥2 (HR, 1.83) were significant predictors of in-hospital mortality. Microbiological failure was the strongest predictor of in-hospital mortality in patients with E faecium bacteremia (HR, 5.03). The impact of vancomycin resistance on mortality in our cohort changed throughout the course of hospitalization. Enterococcus faecalis sequence type 6 was a predominant multidrug-resistant lineage, whereas a heterogeneous genomic population of E faecium was identified. Conclusions Failure of early eradication of VRE from the bloodstream is a major factor associated with poor outcomes.Scopus© Citations 19 5 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Copy Number Variation Analysis from SNP Genotyping Microarrays in Large Cohorts of Neurological Disorders(2022); ;Lisa-Marie Niestroj ;Miguel Inca-Martínez ;Camilo Villaman ;Dennis LalIgnacio Mata45 1 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Deep immunophenotyping reveals biomarkers of multisystemic inflammatory syndrome in children in a Latin American cohort(2022); ;Yazmin Espinosa ;Camila Astudillo; ; ;Fernanda Cofré ;Cecilia Piñera ;Loreani P. Noguera ;Ricardo González ;Alexander Bataszew; ;Dona Benadof ;Patricia Álvarez ;Valeria Acevedo; ; Scopus© Citations 10 55 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Differences of affective and non-affective psychoses in early intervention services from Latin America(2022) ;Raphael O. Cerqueira ;Carolina Ziebold ;Daniel Cavalcante ;Giovany Oliveira ;Javiera Vásquez; ;Alfonso González-Valderrama ;Ruben Nachar ;Carlos Lopez-Jaramillo ;Cristiano Noto ;Nicolas CrossleyAry GadelhaScopus© Citations 4 17 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Effects of socioeconomic status in cognition of people with schizophrenia: results from a Latin American collaboration network with 1175 subjects(2021) ;Letícia Sanguinetti Czepielewski ;Luz Maria Alliende ;Carmen Paz Castañeda ;Mariana Castro ;Salvador M. Guinjoan ;Raffael Massuda ;Arthur A. Berberian ;Ana Olivia Fonseca ;Ary Gadelha ;Rodrigo Bressan ;Marisa Crivelaro ;Mario Louzã; ;Alfonso González-Valderrama ;Rubén Nachar ;Rodrigo R. Nieto ;Cristian Montes ;Hernan Silva ;Álvaro I. Langer ;Carlos Schmidt ;Rocío Mayol-Troncoso ;Ana M. Díaz-Zuluaga ;Johanna Valencia-Echeverry ;Carlos López-Jaramillo ;Rodolfo Solís-Vivanco ;Francisco Reyes-Madrigal ;Camilo de la Fuente-Sandoval ;Nicolás A. CrossleyClarissa S. GamaAbstractBackgroundCognition heavily relies on social determinants and genetic background. Latin America comprises approximately 8% of the global population and faces unique challenges, many derived from specific demographic and socioeconomic variables, such as violence and inequality. While such factors have been described to influence mental health outcomes, no large-scale studies with Latin American population have been carried out. Therefore, we aim to describe the cognitive performance of a representative sample of Latin American individuals with schizophrenia and its relationship to clinical factors. Additionally, we aim to investigate how socioeconomic status (SES) relates to cognitive performance in patients and controls.MethodsWe included 1175 participants from five Latin American countries (Argentina, Brazil, Chile, Colombia, and Mexico): 864 individuals with schizophrenia and 311 unaffected subjects. All participants were part of projects that included cognitive evaluation with MATRICS Consensus Cognitive Battery and clinical assessments.ResultsPatients showed worse cognitive performance than controls across all domains. Age and diagnosis were independent predictors, indicating similar trajectories of cognitive aging for both patients and controls. The SES factors of education, parental education, and income were more related to cognition in patients than in controls. Cognition was also influenced by symptomatology.ConclusionsPatients did not show evidence of accelerated cognitive aging; however, they were most impacted by a lower SES suggestive of deprived environment than controls. These findings highlight the vulnerability of cognitive capacity in individuals with psychosis in face of demographic and socioeconomic factors in low- and middle-income countries.Scopus© Citations 11 4 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Evaluation of the Immune Response Induced by CoronaVac 28-Day Schedule Vaccination in a Healthy Population Group(2022) ;Alejandro Escobar ;Felipe E. Reyes-López ;Mónica L. Acevedo ;Luis Alonso-Palomares ;Fernando Valiente-Echeverría ;Ricardo Soto-Rifo ;Hugo Portillo ;Jimena Gatica ;Ivan Flores ;Estefanía Nova-Lamperti ;Carlos Barrera-Avalos ;María Rosa Bono ;Leonardo Vargas ;Valeska Simon ;Elias Leiva-Salcedo; ;Daniel Valdés ;Ana M. Sandino; ; ;Mónica ImaraiClaudio Acuña-CastilloCoronaVac vaccine from Sinovac Life Science is currently being used in several countries. In Chile, the effectiveness of preventing hospitalization is higher than 80% with a vaccination schedule. However, to date, there are no data about immune response induction or specific memory. For this reason, we recruited 15 volunteers without previous suspected/diagnosed COVID-19 and with negative PCR over time to evaluate the immune response to CoronaVac 28 and 90 days after the second immunization (dpi). The CoronaVac administration induces total and neutralizing anti-spike antibodies in all vaccinated volunteers at 28 and 90 dpi. Furthermore, using ELISpot analysis to assay cellular immune responses against SARS-CoV-2 spike protein, we found an increase in IFN-gamma- and Granzyme B-producing cells in vaccinated volunteers at 28 and 90 dpi. Together, our results indicate that CoronaVac induces a robust humoral immune response and cellular immune memory of at least 90 dpi.Scopus© Citations 13 23 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Food Availability in Different Food Environments Surrounding Schools in a Vulnerable Urban Area of Santiago, Chile: Exploring Socioeconomic Determinants(2022); ; ;Jacqueline Araneda Flores ;Claudio Álvarez ;Mónica Suárez-Reyes ;José Luis Palacios ;Tito Pizarro QuevedoMaria Rita Marques de OliveiraThe analysis of the food environment is used to identify areas with gaps in the availability of healthy foods and can be used as a public policy assessment tool. In recent decades, Chile has implemented several strategies and regulations to improve food environments, with encouraging results. Little is known about the scope of these measures in socially vulnerable environments. This study is part of a project that seeks to build an integrated intervention model for healthy school environments in a vulnerable area of Santiago, Chile. The objective of this study was to evaluate the availability of healthy and unhealthy foods around schools and the relationship between it and socioeconomic determinants of the school community in the Chilean context. A cross-sectional study to measure the food environment of informal markets (street food), formal markets (stores), and institutions (schools) was conducted in and around 12 schools (100 m surrounding schools) in a vulnerable urban area of Santiago, Chile. A lack of healthy foods was observed, which was related to some socio-economic determinants and the multidimensional poverty was the most relevant. The diagnosis of food environments around schools can represent an important target for governments to implement policies focused at improving the availability of healthy foods.Scopus© Citations 11 4 1 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Food insecurity and its determinants in a vulnerable area of Santiago, Chile(2022); ; ;Jacqueline Araneda-Flores ;Rogerio Antonio de Oliveira ;Tito Pizarro ;Mónica Suarez-ReyesMaria Rita Marques de OliveiraThis study aims to identify the determinants associated to food insecurity in a group of households composed of schoolchildren and their mothers/caregivers, who lived in a low-to-medium community development index area of the city of Santiago, Chile with a high presence of migrant population. The non-probabilistic and convenience sample was made up of 646 people, who answered a series of surveys with the aim of characterizing this group in sociodemographic terms (sex, age, number of inhabitants in the household, place of food purchase, conditional or non-conditional state transfer program beneficiary status, persons in charge of purchasing food for the household, mothers/caregivers education level and basic knowledge of food and nutrition). To assess moderate-to-severe food insecurity and severe food insecurity, the Food Insecurity Experience Scale-FIES was applied between September and October 2021. Logistic regression analysis were used to carry out multivariate analyses, with the use of stepwise back-and-forward strategies for the selected variables and defining p < 0.05. These models were adjusted per number of inhabitants in the household. The results indicate that 25.4% of households presented moderate-to-severe food insecurity, and 6.4% severe food insecurity experience. The variables that presented significant odds of risk to food insecurity were being a migrant, low maternal education level, low performance on basic knowledge in nutrition and when the father was responsible for food purchases. Several public policies have been implemented in Chile during the most recent decades aimed at increasing access to healthier foods and the implementation of healthier food environments. Despite this, there are still social and economic health determinants that contribute to the risk of odds insecurity for the most vulnerable groups in the country, thus putting at risk the fulfillment of the human right to adequate food at risk.25 1 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Functional Dysconnectivity in Ventral Striatocortical Systems in 22q11.2 Deletion Syndrome(2021) ;Ángeles Tepper ;Analía Cuiza ;Luz María Alliende ;Carlos Mena ;Juan Pablo Ramirez-Mahaluf ;Barbara Iruretagoyena ;Claudia Ornstein ;Rosemarie Fritsch ;Ruben Nachar ;Alfonso González-Valderrama; ;Juan Pablo Cruz ;Cristian Tejos ;Alex Fornito; Nicolas CrossleyAbstract 22q11.2 deletion syndrome (22q11.2DS) is a genetic neurodevelopmental disorder that represents one of the greatest known risk factors for psychosis. Previous studies in psychotic subjects without the deletion have identified a dopaminergic dysfunction in striatal regions, and dysconnectivity of striatocortical systems, as an important mechanism in the emergence of psychosis. Here, we used resting-state functional MRI to examine striatocortical functional connectivity in 22q11.2DS patients. We used a 2 × 2 factorial design including 125 subjects (55 healthy controls, 28 22q11.2DS patients without a history of psychosis, 10 22q11.2DS patients with a history of psychosis, and 32 subjects with a history of psychosis without the deletion), allowing us to identify network effects related to the deletion and to the presence of psychosis. In line with previous results from psychotic patients without 22q11.2DS, we found that there was a dorsal to ventral gradient of hypo- to hyperstriatocortical connectivity related to psychosis across both patient groups. The 22q11.2DS was additionally associated with abnormal functional connectivity in ventral striatocortical networks, with no significant differences identified in the dorsal system. Abnormalities in the ventral striatocortical system observed in these individuals with high genetic risk to psychosis may thus reflect a marker of illness risk.Scopus© Citations 2 8 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Gender, age and geographical representation over the past 50 years of schizophrenia research(2022) ;Luz María Alliende ;Leticia S. Czepielewski ;David Aceituno ;Carmen Paz Castañeda ;Camila Diaz ;Barbara Iruretagoyena ;Carlos Mena ;Cristian Mena ;Juan Pablo Ramirez-Mahaluf ;Ángeles Tepper ;Javiera Vasquez ;Lais Fonseca ;Viviane Machado ;Camilo E. Hernández ;Cristian Vargas-Upegui ;Gladys Gomez-Cruz ;Luis F. Kobayashi-Romero ;Tomas Moncada-Habib ;Sara Evans-Lacko ;Rodrigo Bressan ;Clarissa S. Gama ;Carlos Lopez-Jaramillo ;Camilo de la Fuente-Sandoval ;Alfonso Gonzalez-Valderrama; ;Ary GadelhaNicolas A. CrossleyScopus© Citations 3 15 - Some of the metrics are blocked by yourconsent settings
Publication Gene variant effects across sodium channelopathies predict function and guide precision therapy(2022) ;Andreas Brunklaus ;Tony Feng ;Tobias Brünger; ;Henrike Heyne ;Emma Matthews ;Christopher Semsarian ;Joseph D Symonds ;Sameer M Zuberi ;Dennis LalStephanie SchorgeAbstract Pathogenic variants in the voltage-gated sodium channel gene family lead to early onset epilepsies, neurodevelopmental disorders, skeletal muscle channelopathies, peripheral neuropathies and cardiac arrhythmias. Disease-associated variants have diverse functional effects ranging from complete loss-of-function to marked gain-of-function. Therapeutic strategy is likely to depend on functional effect. Experimental studies offer important insights into channel function but are resource intensive and only performed in a minority of cases. Given the evolutionarily conserved nature of the sodium channel genes, we investigated whether similarities in biophysical properties between different voltage-gated sodium channels can predict function and inform precision treatment across sodium channelopathies. We performed a systematic literature search identifying functionally assessed variants in any of the nine voltage-gated sodium channel genes until 28 April 2021. We included missense variants that had been electrophysiologically characterized in mammalian cells in whole-cell patch-clamp recordings. We performed an alignment of linear protein sequences of all sodium channel genes and correlated variants by their overall functional effect on biophysical properties. Of 951 identified records, 437 sodium channel-variants met our inclusion criteria and were reviewed for functional properties. Of these, 141 variants were epilepsy-associated (SCN1/2/3/8A), 79 had a neuromuscular phenotype (SCN4/9/10/11A), 149 were associated with a cardiac phenotype (SCN5/10A) and 68 (16%) were considered benign. We detected 38 missense variant pairs with an identical disease-associated variant in a different sodium channel gene. Thirty-five out of 38 of those pairs resulted in similar functional consequences, indicating up to 92% biophysical agreement between corresponding sodium channel variants (odds ratio = 11.3; 95% confidence interval = 2.8 to 66.9; P < 0.001). Pathogenic missense variants were clustered in specific functional domains, whereas population variants were significantly more frequent across non-conserved domains (odds ratio = 18.6; 95% confidence interval = 10.9–34.4; P < 0.001). Pore-loop regions were frequently associated with loss-of-function variants, whereas inactivation sites were associated with gain-of-function (odds ratio = 42.1, 95% confidence interval = 14.5–122.4; P < 0.001), whilst variants occurring in voltage-sensing regions comprised a range of gain- and loss-of-function effects. Our findings suggest that biophysical characterisation of variants in one SCN-gene can predict channel function across different SCN-genes where experimental data are not available. The collected data represent the first gain- versus loss-of-function topological map of SCN proteins indicating shared patterns of biophysical effects aiding variant analysis and guiding precision therapy. We integrated our findings into a free online webtool to facilitate functional sodium channel gene variant interpretation (http://SCN-viewer.broadinstitute.org).Scopus© Citations 37 3 1