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1/14. Clinical, pathologic, and neurochemical studies of an unusual case of neuronal storage disease with lamellar cytoplasmic inclusions: a new genetic disorder?

    A child of first-cousin Puerto Rican parents had global developmental delay, failure to thrive, and hypotonia since early infancy. At 1 1/2 years of age, she developed clinical and electrophysiologic evidence of progressive motor and sensory neuropathy. At 2 1/2 years, she developed visual impairment and optic atrophy followed by gradual involvement of the 7th, 9th, 10th, and 12th cranial nerves. Uncontrollable myoclonic seizures began at 4 years and she died at 6 years of age. Motor nerve conduction velocities were initially normal and later became markedly slowed. Sensory distal latency responses were absent. Lysosomal enzyme activities in leukocytes and fibroblasts were normal. sural nerve and two muscle biopsies showed only nondiagnostic abnormalities. Electron microscopy of lymphocytes, skin, and fibroblasts showed cytoplasmic inclusions. light microscopy of frontal cortex biopsy showed neuronal storage material staining positively with Luxol fast blue, and electron microscopy showed cytoplasmic membranous bodies in neurons, suggesting an accumulation of a ganglioside. At autopsy, all organs were small but otherwise normal and without abnormal storage cells in the liver, spleen, or bone marrow. Anterior spinal nerve roots showed loss of large myelinated axons. The brain was small and atrophic; cortical neurons showed widespread accumulation of storage material, most marked in the pyramidal cell layer of the hippocampus. Subcortical white matter was gliotic with loss of axons and myelin sheaths. In cortical gray matter there was a 35% elevation of total gangliosides, with a 16-fold increase in GM3, a three- to four-fold increase in GM2 gangliosides, and a 15-fold elevation of lactosyl ceramide. GM3 sialidase activity was normal in gray matter at 3.1 nmols/mg protein per hour and lactosyl ceraminidase I and II activities were 70% to 80% of normal. In white matter, total myelin was reduced by 50% but its composition was normal. Phospholipid distribution and sphingomyelin content were normal in gray matter, white matter, and in the liver. These biochemical findings were interpreted as nonspecific abnormalities. The nature of the neuronal storage substance remains to be determined.
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2/14. Vascular pathology in galactosialidosis.

    This article immunohistochemically and ultrastructurally examines a brain with galactosialidosis, focusing on the structure of blood vessel endothelium. lysosomes were observed in the expanded cytoplasm of the endothelial cells, which were vacuolated by light microscopy. Immunoreactivity for CD31, one of the vascular cell adhesion molecules, was minimal to faint in endothelial cells with vacuolations. The loss of CD31 immunoreactivity and breakdown of vascular cell adhesion molecules in vacuolated endothelial cells seem to promote the development of brain infarctions. Moreover, diffuse and various degrees of axonal damage, most likely caused by vascular disorder in cerebral or cerebellar white matter, was reported using the amyloid precursor protein (APP) immunohistochemical method.
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keywords = white
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3/14. bone marrow transplantation for infantile ceramidase deficiency (Farber disease).

    Infantile ceramidase deficiency (Farber disease) is an uncommon, progressive lysosomal storage disease characterized by multiple ceramide-containing nodules (lipogranulomata) in the subcutaneous tissue and upper aerodigestive tract, painful periarticular swelling, psychomotor retardation, and varying degrees of ocular, pulmonary or hepatic involvement. Management of Farber disease has been limited to symptomatic supportive care, and few affected infants survive beyond 5 years of age. We performed an allogeneic bone marrow transplant (BMT) from an HLA-identical heterozygous sister in a 9.5-month-old female with minimally symptomatic Farber disease who received a pre-transplant regimen of busulfan and cyclophosphamide. Ceramidase activity in peripheral blood leukocytes increased from 6% before transplant to 44% (donor heterozygote level) by 6 weeks after BMT. By 2 months after transplant, the patient's subcutaneous lipogranulomata, pain on joint motion, and hoarseness had resolved. Despite modest gains in cognitive and language development, hypotonia and delayed motor skills persisted. Gradual loss of circulating donor cells with autologous hematopoietic recovery occurred; VNTR analyses showed 50% donor dna in peripheral blood cells at 8.5 months after BMT and only 1% at 21 months after transplant. Interestingly, leukocyte ceramidase activity consistently remained in the heterozygous range despite attrition of donor cells in peripheral blood. This novel observation indicates ongoing hydrolase production by non-circulating donor cells, possibly in the mononuclear phagocytic system, and uptake by recipient leukocytes. Although lipogranulomata and hoarseness did not recur, the patient's neurological and neurocognitive status progressively declined. She died 28 months after BMT (age 37.5 months) with pulmonary insufficiency caused by recurrent aspiration pneumonias. Allogeneic BMT improves the peripheral manifestations of infantile ceramidase deficiency, but may not prevent the progressive neurological deterioration, even when carried out in minimally symptomatic patients.
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keywords = leukocytes, blood cell
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4/14. Intrauterine fetal death due to Farber disease: case report.

    We report a case of Farber disease in a fetus who died in utero at a gestational age of 29 weeks. Macroscopic examination showed moderate postmortem changes in a microcephalic female fetus (46,XX) with mild internal hydrops, two vessels in the umbilical cord, and a moderately enlarged, relatively well-preserved spleen. Microscopic examination showed foamy cells in the spleen. Electron microscopic examination revealed the presence of Farber bodies within these foamy cells. Enzyme studies of the fetus were not possible because all tissues were formalin fixed. lipids were extracted from formalin-fixed tissues and increased levels of ceramide and the presence of hydroxyceramide in tissue of the spleen, liver, and lung were found. Glucosylceramide was not increased excluding saposin-precursor-deficiency. Because of these findings, both parents were tested for acid ceramidase activity in their leukocytes. They both had markedly reduced enzyme activity consistent with heterozygosity for Farber disease. To the best of our knowledge, this is the first published case of Farber disease in Dutch nonconsanguineous parents.
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keywords = leukocytes
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5/14. New mutations in two Dutch patients with early infantile galactosialidosis.

    Galactosialidosis is an autosomal recessive lysosomal storage disease caused by a combined deficiency of lysosomal beta-galactosidase and neuraminidase as a result of a primary defect in the protective protein/cathepsin a (PPCA). We report the first 2 Dutch cases of early infantile galactosialidosis, both presenting with neonatal ascites. The defect was identified in urine, leukocytes, and fibroblasts. Residual activity was determined with a modified assay for cathepsin a and was <5% in leukocytes and <1% in fibroblasts. Histological examination of the placenta in case 1 showed extensive vacuolization in all cell types. Northern blot analysis of rna isolated from the patients' cultured fibroblasts showed substantially decreased levels of the PPCA transcript, which nevertheless had the correct size of 2 kb. mutation analysis of both mRNA and genomic dna from the patients identified two novel mutations in the PPCA locus. Case 1 was a compound heterozygote, with a single missense mutation in one allele, which resulted in Gly57Ser amino acid substitution, and a single C insertion at nucleotide position 899 in the second allele, which gave rise to a frame shift and premature termination codon. Case 2 was homozygous for the same C899 insertion found in case 1.
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keywords = leukocytes
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6/14. Niemann Pick c or storage by excessive blood cell destruction: a case presenting a diagnosis problem.

    A case of storage disease followed up during 12 a was studied by morphological, histochemical, immunological, and biochemical techniques. Data were analysed in an attempt to differentiate an acquired storage by excessive cell degradation from a storage of genetic origin. If, as it is our belief, a conclusion of acquired storage can be made, this observation in which the same cholesterol metabolism abnormalities as in Niemann Pick type C were seen, leads to a rediscussion of their diagnostic significance.
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ranking = 0.72038179176093
keywords = blood cell
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7/14. Different molecular mechanisms leading to white matter hypomyelination in infantile onset lysosomal disorders.

    Hypomyelinating leukoencephalopathies may be related to a primary disturbance in the formation of myelin or may be caused by neuronal, oligodendrocytic or astrocytic dysfunction, leading to a failure of myelination. Abnormal myelination related to a direct metabolic damage on oligodendrocytes has been shown to occur in some animal models of lysosomal storage diseases. To demonstrate that cerebral white matter hypomyelination may occur also in humans affected by early-onset lysosomal storage diseases, we report three cases with infantile-onset lysosomal storage disorders (type 1 GM1 gangliosidosis, globoid cell leukodystrophy or Krabbe's disease, and type A Niemann-Pick disease) showing white matter hypomyelination. Hypomyelinating leukoencephalopathy may therefore represent a feature of lysosomal storage disorders with onset in the first months of life, when the process of myelination is particularly active, indicating that neuronal storage disorders may be primarily responsible for central nervous system hypomyelination.
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ranking = 0.21575836168605
keywords = white
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8/14. Difficulty in recognizing multiple sulfatase deficiency in an infant.

    We describe the difficulty in recognizing multiple sulfatase deficiency (MSD; Online Mendelian Inheritance in Man [OMIM] database No. 272200) in an infant. MSD is a rare autosomal recessive disorder that affects the posttranslational activation of various sulfatase enzymes. It is both biochemically and clinically variable. Currently, there are 12 known sulfatases in humans, and the clinical presentation of MSD is a unique composite of those individual enzyme defects. Here we report a black girl who presented with bilateral broad thumbs and great toes, both with angulation deformities at birth. rubinstein-taybi syndrome (OMIM No. 180849) was considered initially. The detection of inclusion bodies in her white blood cells at 37 months of age led to the appropriate diagnostic workups for lysosomal storage diseases. Elevation of urine mucopolysaccharides provided additional clues, and the fibroblast enzyme assays finally established the diagnosis. Broad thumbs and great toes are rare features of MSD, and to the best of our knowledge such a bilateral congenital anomaly with angulation deformities has never been reported before to be associated with MSD.
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ranking = 0.21605517488791
keywords = blood cell, white
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9/14. Infantile sialic acid storage disease (ISSD). Report on first case in czech republic with biopsy and autopsy findings.

    The first case of infantile sialic acid storage disease in czech republic is presented in a four-and-half year-old girl. The clinical phenotype consisted of moderate hepatosplenomegaly and skin hypopigmentation, early psychomotoric and developmental arrest, associated with truncal ataxia and lower extremities spasticity, extinguished acoustic and visual perception (optic atrophy without macular alteration) and remarkable automutilation phenomena. The appearance was normosomatic and there were minimal dysostotic changes. skin and liver biopsy displayed moderate amount of lucent storage lysosomes in epithelial, mesenchymal, and neural elements. Alder-Reily granules were found in the bone marrow and peripheral blood cells. The urinary excretion of mucopolysaccharides and oligosaccharides was not increased. The autopsy showed heterogenous neuronal and glial brain storage (lucent lysosomes, lipopigment, membranous cytoplasmic bodies), severe hypomyelination and severe storage in the splenic sinus endothelium. diagnosis was made by proving thirteen fold increase of free sialic acid in the fibroblast culture. It is pointed out that in the case of a mucopolysaccharidosis-like storage disease unexplainable by a hydrolytic enzyme deficiency, it is the enzyme product storage which must be suspected. At present, the only candidate is the sialic acid storage disease.
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ranking = 0.18009544794023
keywords = blood cell
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10/14. Long-term effects of bone marrow transplantation for inborn errors of metabolism: a study of four patients with lysosomal storage diseases.

    Long-term effects of bone marrow transplantation (BMT) were evaluated in patients with I-cell disease, metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD), Maroteaux-Lamy syndrome or Hunter syndrome (mild form). Donors were human leukocyte antigen (HLA)-matched siblings, and the follow-up periods were 24-71 months after BMT. The enzyme activities were increased in leukocytes, plasma or liver tissues compared with pre-BMT levels. A patient with I-cell disease acquired development of 4-8 month old infants and showed no further progression in cardiac dysfunctions. A patient with MLD showed a decelerated disease progression and an improved peripheral neuropathy, but progressive brain atrophy was not prevented. patients with Maroteaux-Lamy syndrome or Hunter syndrome showed improvements in hepatomegaly, joint contractures, short stature and tight skin, and this greatly increased their quality of life. These results indicated that the long-term therapeutic effects achieved by BMT were subject to multiple factors including biochemical improvements, a reversibility of affected tissues, or advanced states of disease and central nervous system impairments in inborn errors of metabolism.
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ranking = 0.89212081915697
keywords = leukocytes
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