Cases reported "Niemann-Pick Diseases"

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1/10. MRI in an unusually protracted neuronopathic variant of acid sphingomyelinase deficiency.

    MRI was performed in two siblings with the neuropathic sphingomyelinase deficiency caused by identical mixed heterozygosity in the structural acid sphingomyelinase gene. The clinical phenotype of the cases is unique in showing a rather protracted course, both having reached the fourth decade. Pronounced cerebellar and mild supratentorial atrophy was seen on MRI in both siblings, in contrast to their strikingly different clinical status. One has no overt neurological deficit, while the second had neocerebellar symptoms and signs, nystagmus and cranial nerve palsies for some years. The MRI findings, together with the cherry-red spot in the ocular fundus, ultrastructurally proved storage in cutaneous nerve schwann cells and the histopathologically proven brain neuronal storage in a third sibling who died after a relatively rapid course dominated by fatal visceral storage, is evidence that a remarkably restricted neuropathology can be caused by this enzymopathy.
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2/10. Niemann-Pick disease type C (a cellular cholesterol lipidosis) treated by bone marrow transplantation.

    bone marrow transplantation (BMT) has been used for a wide variety of lysosomal storage diseases with encouraging results. We report a 3-year 5-month-old girl with Niemann-Pick type C disease (NPC) who received an allogeneic BMT. The patient presented with repeated lower respiratory tract infections, hepatosplenomegaly, failure to thrive, and developmental delay. Chest computed tomography (CT) revealed diffuse interstitial lung infiltration. Bone marrow and liver biopsies revealed abundant lipid-filled foamy macrophages. skin fibroblast sphingomyelinase assay revealed partial deficiency. The ability of her skin fibroblasts to esterify cholesterol was very low, and the cells stained brightly for free cholesterol. She received BMT from a healthy HLA-identical male sibling donor at the age of 2 year 6 months. Full engraftment was evidenced by repeated bone marrow sex chromosome studies. Regression of the hepatosplenomegaly, markedly reduced foamy macrophage infiltration in bone marrow, and decreased interstitial lung infiltration was noted 6 months after BMT. Her neurological status, however, deteriorated. Follow-up magnetic resonance image (MRI) revealed progressive, diffuse brain atrophy. We conclude that resolution occurred in the liver, spleen, bone marrow and lung following successful engraftment. Such a response is remarkable since the underlying problem involves a membrane receptor for cholesterol. This positive response might be due to replacement of the monocyte-phagocytic system or it may imply the existence of cross-correction in the NPC membrane receptor defect by BMT approach. Since BMT did not halt the neurological deterioration, it is unlikely to be an adequate treatment for NPC.
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3/10. Atypical amyotrophic lateral sclerosis with dementia mimicking frontal Pick's disease: a report of an autopsy case with a clinical course of 15 years.

    This report concerns an autopsy case of atypical amyotrophic lateral sclerosis (ALS) with dementia mimicking frontal Pick's disease. The patient was a Japanese woman without hereditary burden who was 45 years old at the time of death. She developed abnormal behavior and amnesia at age 30, followed by disinhibition, aspontaneity, urinary incontinence, abulia, and rectal incontinence. Neurological signs compatible with ALS developed about 14 years after the disease onset. No respirator was used throughout the clinical course. Macroscopically, neuropathological examination showed atrophy of the frontotemporal lobes with accentuation in the convexities of the frontal lobes. Histologically, there was neuronal loss in the cerebral cortex, parahippocampal gyrus, amygdala, caudate nucleus, substantia nigra, brain stem motor nuclei, and anterior horns of the spinal cord, in addition to marked degeneration of the pyramidal tracts. ubiquitin-immunoreactive neuronal inclusions were present in the frontotemporal cortical layer II neurons and motor neurons in the brain stem and spinal cord. In the hippocampal dentate granular cells, many ubiquitin-immunoreactive neurites were present without ubiquitin-immunoreactive intraneuronal inclusions. Based on these clinicopathological findings and a review of the literature, we concluded that our case was atypical ALS with dementia of long disease duration. We also note the possibility that motor neuron disease-inclusion dementia with a long clinical course may develop into ALS in the final stage of the illness.
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4/10. Niemann-pick disease type C in neonatal cholestasis at a North American Center.

    OBJECTIVE: To determine the frequency of Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) among children being evaluated for neonatal cholestasis during a 2-year period. methods: medical records were reviewed from all infants with cholestasis and all patients with NPC evaluated at our center from January 1997 through December 1998. RESULTS: Forty neonates with cholestasis were evaluated, including three patients diagnosed with NPC (age at diagnosis, 5-21 months) who were originally labeled as having idiopathic neonatal cholestasis (INH). Two adolescents (ages 14 and 16 years) were also diagnosed with NPC during this period, one who originally had neonatal hepatitis and cirrhosis, and the other who had hepatosplenomegaly throughout childhood. Three of the patients with NPC were Hispanic. At time of NPC diagnosis, infants had mildly delayed motor development and persistent splenomegaly with or without hepatomegaly, and the adolescents had ataxia, dysarthria, hepatosplenomegaly, and paresis of vertical gaze. The diagnosis of NPC was established by demonstrating defective cellular cholesterol esterification in cultured skin fibroblasts in three patients and a specific genetic mutation in three patients. Niemann-Pick disease type C was found in 27% of infants initially diagnosed with INH and 8% of all infants evaluated for cholestasis. CONCLUSION: Niemann-Pick disease type C should be considered in all infants with cholestasis, particularly those with splenomegaly or who are of Hispanic descent. Electron microscopy and lipid analysis of liver biopsy specimens obtained during the evaluation of neonatal cholestasis may suggest this diagnosis.
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ranking = 3127.8744732075
keywords = pick disease, pick
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5/10. frontal lobe atrophy due to a mutation in the cholesterol binding protein HE1/NPC2.

    This is the first description of slowly progressive Niemann-Pick disease type C (NPC) without the typical lysosomal storage in bone marrow and viscera in two descendants of a group of 17th century French-Canadians. The index patient was a married 43-year-old woman with onset of dementia in her thirties, later followed by the development of ataxia and athetoid movements. Her autopsy disclosed frontal lobe atrophy, neurolysosomal storage with oligolamellar inclusion and tau-positive neurofibrillary tangles. Of the 119 family members screened, only a married 42-year-old sister displayed symptoms of a dementia. Both women displayed vertical supranuclear ophthalmoplegia; expressive aphasia; concrete, stimulus-bound, perseverative behavior; and impaired conceptualization and planning. Cultured fibroblasts showed decreased cholesterol esterification and positive filipin staining, but no mutation was detected in coding or promoter regions of the NPC1 gene using conformation sensitive gel electrophoresis and sequencing. Sequencing showed a homozygous gene mutation that is predicted to result in an amino acid substitution, V39M, in the cholesterol binding protein HE1 (NPC2). adult-onset NPC2 with lysosomal storage virtually restricted to neurons represents a novel phenotypic and genotypic variant with diffuse cognitive impairment and focal frontal involvement described for the first time.
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keywords = atrophy
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6/10. Niemann-pick disease type C and Crohn's disease.

    A five-year-old girl with Neimann-Pick disease type C subsequently developed Crohn's Disease. This association has only been presented once previously in the literature. This report discusses the options for managing one chronic disease in the presence of another life limiting condition.
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ranking = 3127.8744732075
keywords = pick disease, pick
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7/10. Niemann-pick variant disorders: comparison of errors of cellular cholesterol homeostasis in group D and group C fibroblasts.

    fluorescence microscopic examination of filipin-stained cultured skin fibroblasts derived from two brothers with group D Niemann-Pick disease revealed abnormal storage of low density lipoprotein (LDL)-derived cholesterol. LDL stimulation of intracellular cholesteryl ester synthesis was severely compromised in the Niemann-Pick D fibroblasts, as it also was in fibroblasts obtained from Niemann-Pick C patients. Cholesteryl ester synthesis was intermediately deficient in cells derived from an obligate group-D heterozygous carrier. Activity of acyl-CoA:cholesterol acyltransferase was within the normal range in cell-free extracts of both LDL-depleted and LDL-supplemented cultures of Niemann-Pick C and D fibroblasts. Incubation of Niemann-Pick D fibroblasts with LDL did not lead to as high a level of intracellular cholesterol accumulation as the excessive storage observed with Niemann-Pick C fibroblasts. These findings suggest that the Niemann-Pick variant disorders may represent a family of specific and possibly individual mutations that disrupt cellular cholesterol homeostasis.
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ranking = 338.08646732756
keywords = pick
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8/10. Niemann-Pick disease type C. Study on the nature of the cerebral storage process.

    A complex neuropathological study of two cases of Niemann-Pick disease (NPD) type C (NPDC) revealed some novel features in the chemical pathology of the neuronal storage. Lipid histochemistry showed the presence of a lipid which met the criteria of a neuronal glycosphingolipid. Sphingomyelin (SM) was not detected in the neurones in any of the regions examined. Lipid chemical analysis of total extracts and of partially purified lysosomal fraction of the brain cortex showed markedly increased levels of neutral ceramide hexosides especially of glucosylceramide and ceramide dihexoside (mostly of its slower band). phospholipids were not significantly increased. Monosialogangliosides GM2 and GM3 were increased only slightly. The storage process displayed the well known fine structure and was accompanied by a marked secondary increase in some lysosomal enzyme activities. There was neuroaxonal dystrophy (nad) of considerable intensity and extent. Many spheroids contained masses of degenerated organelles and neurofilaments in various proportions and displayed variable activities of acid phosphatase, nonspecific esterase and dehydrogenases. There was marked brain atrophy accompanied in one case by severe demyelination. Enzyme studies revealed partial decrease of sphingomyelinase (SMase) and beta-glucosidase activities in cultured fibroblasts, as well as lack of cathodic SMase activity on isoelectric focusing. No defects of these enzymes were found in the brain samples. The findings are regarded as significant since they indicate a biochemical defect in which SM is not primarily involved and which may thus be fundamentally different from that in type A of NPD.
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9/10. Hypoplasia of the corpus callosum in Niemann-Pick type C disease.

    In two unrelated patients with Niemann-Pick type C disease MRI showed symmetrical cerebral and cerebellar atrophy and hypoplasia of the corpus callosum. T2-weighted images in one showed high signal areas in the posterior white matter.
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10/10. adult-onset Niemann-Pick type C disease. Clinical, biochemical, and genetic study.

    BACKGROUND: Niemann-Pick type C disease is an autosomal recessive neurometabolic disorder of unknown origin mapped to chromosome 18q11-12 in most of the studied families. In contrast to the sphingomyelin lipidoses, in Niemann-Pick type C disease, fibroblasts are impaired in intracellular homeostatic responses to exogenous low-density lipoprotein (LDL) cholesterol. Biochemical heterogeneity of the disorder in relation to abnormal LDL processing is associated with various clinical presentations, but adult-onset Niemann-Pick type C disease is rare and has not been comprehensively characterized. OBJECTIVE: To describe clinical, biochemical, and genetic features of adult-onset Niemann-Pick type C disease in 3 siblings. DESIGN AND SETTING: Case series in a tertiary care center. patients: The 3 siblings manifested a variable combination of vertical supranuclear ophthalmoplegia, ataxia, and splenomegaly. Brain magnetic resonance imaging showed cerebellar atrophy; brainstem auditory evoked responses were unobtainable, and bone marrow examination disclosed typical foam cells. The patients were 20, 26, and 28 years old and belonged to a sibship of 13 born of consanguineous healthy parents. methods: esterification of exogenous LDL cholesterol in cultured skin fibroblasts and filipin staining for free intracellular cholesterol. polymerase chain reaction-based dna linkage study using AC microsatellite markers D18S40, D18S44, D18S480, and D18S66. RESULTS: fibroblasts of the 3 patients showed a 23% to 58% block in the induced cholesterol esterification after 4 1/2 hours and a mild to moderate accumulation of free cholesterol. dna study demonstrated linkage to the major 18q11-12 Niemann-Pick type C locus and identified unaffected carriers. CONCLUSIONS: These results confirm the diagnosis of the least biochemically affected Niemann-Pick type C phenotype in this family with adult-onset disease and support a correlation between the mild laboratory and clinical findings in this age group.
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