Filter by keywords:



Retrieving documents. Please wait...

1/3. A female case of type VIII glycogenosis who developed cirrhosis of the liver and hepatocellular tumor.

    The case of a 17-year-old female with a rare form of type VIII glycogenosis who developed cirrhosis of the liver and hepatocellular tumor is reported. laparoscopy showed a tumor 50 mm in diameter in the lower portion of the right lobe of the liver. The tumor was biopsied under ultrasonic guidance, and tentatively diagnosed as adenomatous hyperplasia. The patient was also diagnosed as having type VIII glycogenosis (phosphorylase kinase deficiency). ( info)

2/3. Transient acute cortical blindness associated with hypoglycemia.

    A 7-year-old boy with glycogen storage disease type iii developed transient acute cortical blindness associated with hypoglycemia on two separate occasions; the patient also demonstrated transient high-voltage slowing on the electroencephalogram over both occipital areas. This patient is the second examined in our pediatric department during a 5 year period with acute cortical blindness associated with hypoglycemia. ( info)

3/3. Glycogenosis type VIII.

    Glycogenosis Type VIII, characterized ultrastructurally by an accumulation of rosettes (alpha-particles) of glycogen in the central nervous system, is an extremely rare condition; only two sporadic cases are on record. The first complete autopsy on a patient with cerebral alpha-particle glycogenosis, a 20-year-old American-Indian female, is the subject of this report. The case was clinically unique because of long survival and presumable familial incidence. The gross pathology was characterized by severe brain atrophy but preserved thickness of the cortical mantle. Vacuolation of the neuropil was the main histological abnormality and was most extensive in the striatum and less so in the cerebral cortex and some brain stem nuclei. Biochemical analysis showed glycogen levels elevated fiftyfold in the striatum and eightfold in the cerebral cortex in comparison with control tissue. Ultrastructural observations and evidence obtained from the Golgi method suggest that the distal axon was the principal site of storage. Two prominent additional abnormalities, spheroids, not previously observed in this disease, and massive accumulation of lipofuscin, were probably both related to the prolonged course of illness. The viscera, including the liver were morphologically free of storage. ( info)


Leave a message about 'Glycogen Storage Disease Type Viii'


We do not evaluate or guarantee the accuracy of any content in this site. Click here for the full disclaimer.