Cases reported "Refsum Disease"

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1/4. autopsy findings in two siblings with infantile refsum disease.

    Recognition of adrenal atrophy during a review of autopsy findings in two sisters who died at 8 months and 3 1/2 years prompted estimation of very long chain fatty acids, phytanic acid and pristanic acid on wet liver fixed in formalin for 12 years. These were shown to be markedly increased and defects in multiple peroxisomal functions and decrease in particulate catalase were shown in cultured fibroblasts, confirming an abnormality of peroxisomal biogenesis. The patients had presented with failure to thrive, recurrent diarrhoea and vomiting, poor mental development, retinal pigmentation, blindness and in the older patient deafness, with only mild dysmorphic features. autopsy in the older patient showed adrenal atrophy, cirrhosis, and foamy histiocytes in multiple organs. The brain showed no demyelination, little cytoarchitectural abnormality, occasional perivascular histiocytes in the grey matter and meninges and prominent purkinje cells in the molecular layer of the cerebellum. In the younger patient the changes were very subtle in spite of the marked clinical similarity. Despite the young age at death the clinicopathological features are most suggestive of infantile refsum disease. In many situations anatomical pathology can be very useful in the recognition and study of peroxisomal disorders.
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2/4. Infantile Refsum's disease: a generalized peroxisomal disorder. Case report with postmortem examination.

    Infantile Refsum's disease (IRD) is a peroxisomal deficiency disease which is closely related to neonatal adrenoleukodystrophy (NALD) and the zellweger syndrome (ZS). Recent observations suggest that NALD and ZS are separate genetic disorders but the delimitation towards IRD remains uncertain. We present here the first autopsy report of a patient who was clinically and biochemically diagnosed as having IRD, and we compare the findings with those from NALD and ZS. The main gross and microscopic findings comprised micronodular liver cirrhosis, small hypoplastic adrenals without degenerative changes, and large groups of lipid macrophages in liver, lymph nodes and certain areas of the cerebral white matter. The brain showed no malformations except for a severe hypoplasia of the cerebellar granule layer and ectopic location of the purkinje cells in the molecular layer. A mild and diffuse reduction of axons and myelin was found in the corpus callosum and periventricular white matter, the corticospinal tracts, and the optic nerves. Large numbers of perivascular macrophages were present in the same areas but there was no active demyelination. The retina and cochlea showed severe degenerative changes. peripheral nerves, skeletal system and kidneys were normal. Electron microscopy showed characteristic cytoplasmic inclusions with bilamellar profiles in macrophages in the liver, lymph nodes and brain but not in the adrenals. Similar inclusions were found in liver cells and astrocytes. The findings differ from ZS which shows cortical renal cysts, skeletal changes, liver changes, cerebral micropolygyria, neuronal heterotopias, and demyelination of the white matter. Cases with NALD show mild cerebral malformations, active demyelination, degenerative changes of the adrenals, liver changes, and bilamellar electromicroscopic inclusions in macrophages. Our cases thus resembled NALD but lacked active demyelination, cerebral cortical malformations and adrenal degenerative changes. Further autopsy studies will be necessary to determine whether these changes are consistent findings in IRD.
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3/4. X-linked spastic paraplegia: evidence for homogeneity with a variable phenotype.

    Hereditary spastic paraplegia (HSP) is rarely inherited in an X-linked recessive mode in pure and complicated forms. Recently, molecular linkage studies have suggested that these variant X-linked HSP conditions result from locus heterogeneity. In this paper we report on the clinical and linkage analysis of a kindred with complicated X-linked HSP. The finding in this family of a map location of the putative HSP gene in the same region as the documented for the pure HSP gene provides evidence that allelic mutations might also be responsible for the variable phenotype encountered in these X-linked disorders.
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4/4. Supplemental therapy in isolated vitamin e deficiency improves the peripheral neuropathy and prevents the progression of ataxia.

    A 24-year-old male, who suffered since childhood from a progressive form of ataxia associated with peripheral neuropathy, was found severely deficient in serum vitamin E. He walked with bilateral aid and presented severe dysmetria of the limbs and dysarthric speech; muscular strength and trophism were slightly diminished in the distal muscles of four limbs and there was hypotonia of the arms; he presented absent deep tendon reflexes, bilateral Babinski's sign, reduced proprioception at four limbs, pes cavus and fasciculations of the tongue. Intestinal fat malabsorption and other gastrointestinal or haematological conditions associated with deficiency of this vitamin were ruled out. In this patient, after 2 years of a daily supplement of high doses of vitamin E, a further progression of the disease was not observed and, moreover, the neurophysiological characteristics of his neuropathy appeared clearly improved. A longitudinal evaluation of serum vitamin E levels showed values in the normal range after 13 months of therapy. The patient had molecular genetic analysis of chromosome 8 and was found homozygous for the unusual mutation 513insTT in the alpha-tocopherol transfer protein gene.
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keywords = molecular
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