Cases reported "Adrenoleukodystrophy"

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11/205. coma as an acute presentation of adrenoleukodystrophy.

    X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy is a metabolic disorder with broad clinical variations. A 4-year-old male admitted to the hospital with fever, hypotension, and coma as the presenting signs of adrenoleukodystrophy is reported. The initial presentation followed by rapidly developing disseminated intravascular coagulopathy and multiorgan failure suggested an initial diagnosis of septic shock. However, bronze skin pigmentation and a cranial computed tomography scan demonstrating posterior demyelination consistent with adrenoleukodystrophy led to the final diagnosis. The diagnosis was confirmed by the findings of elevated very-long-chain fatty acid levels and an elevated C24/C16 ratio in plasma and fibroblast cultures. Atypical presentations of the disease require a high index of suspicion to initiate treatment before the appearance of irreversible sequelae. ( info)

12/205. Bipolar affective disorder heralding cerebral demyelination in adreno-myelo-leukodystrophy.

    A young male with adrenomyeloleukodystrophy (AMLD), diagnosed at the age of 25 years, presented with signs of bipolar affective disorder (BPD) concomitant with radiological findings of central demyelination. There was a marked deterioration of the earlier relatively benign neurological dysfunction, leading to fatal bulbar syndrome. The association of BPD with central demyelination in AMLD is in agreement with previously reported cases of this and other types of multifocal central demyelination diseases. ( info)

13/205. bone marrow transplantation for the treatment of X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy.

    The effects of bone marrow transplantation (BMT) in X-linked childhood adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) are described in four Japanese patients. Two older patients, 10-year-old boys with IQ 60 and difficulty in school, had favourable results. IQ levels and MRI findings were generally maintained after BMT. One patient showed improvement of gait disturbance. They have both attended ordinary schools after BMT, although a learning disorder persists. On the other hand, two other younger patients with a rapid course and indeterminate IQ at BMT showed deterioration of neurological functions. Indication for BMT seems to be a maintained IQ level, preferably higher than 80, since it seems to be difficult to normalize IQ level after BMT. Younger patients have higher risk of developing a rapidly progressive form of the disease. Identification of presymptomatic boys, and serial and careful follow-up by neuropsychological and neuroradiological studies, are essential prerequisites to successful BMT in X-ALD. ( info)

14/205. Two novel mutations in the adrenoleukodystrophy gene in two unrelated Japanese families and the long-term effect of bone marrow transplantation.

    We identified two novel missense mutations in exon 1 of adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) gene in two unrelated Japanese families. The first, G(874)C transition results in Arg(163)Pro substitution in the cytoplasmic domain of the ALD protein in adrenomyeloneuropathy family. The second, C(679)G results in Ser(98)Trp substitution in the first transmembrane loop in childhood onset cerebral ALD family. Both mutations cause the substitution of polar amino acid (arginine and serine) with non-polar amino acid (proline and tryptophan). bone marrow transplantation (BMT) from his non-affected his younger sister was performed on a boy with childhood onset cerebral ALD who showed neurological deficit and brain MRI abnormalities. We evaluated the effect of BMT over a 6-year period in terms of neurological deficit, the level of very-long-chain fatty acids (VLCFA) in plasma and fibroblasts, and brain MRI. After BMT, patient's peripheral white blood cells were replaced by donor's XX ones carrying a normal ALD gene confirmed by in situ hybridization using satellite dna of the centromere of X and Y chromosomes as probes and the level of VLCFA in lymphocytes was within normal limit. However, his neurological state progressively deteriorated. BMT was not beneficial to him. ( info)

15/205. An autopsy case of atypical adrenoleukomyeloneuropathy in childhood.

    Adrenoleukomyeloneuropathy (ALMN) usually occurs in adulthood, it being extremely rare in childhood. We reported a quite atypical clinical case of ALMN as a variant of adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD). The onset was at 5 years 7 months and ataxia was the major symptom. His condition progressed rapidly to a vegetative state within 1 year. At the age of 11 years and 11 months he died of pneumonia and an autopsy was performed. We herein reported the neuropathological findings in this rare case. The autopsy revealed marked atrophy with diffuse demyelination and astrogliosis throughout the cerebrum, cerebellum and brainstem. Massive degeneration of the pyramidal tracts and loss of neurons were also seen in the spinal cord. The adrenal cortex showed marked atrophy with a striated cytoplasm in ballooned cells. These findings include pathological characteristics of both ALD and adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN), suggesting ALMN. However, diffuse demyelination with gliosis in the cerebrum and cerebellum is quite atypical for ALMN. They might explain his atypical clinical course, especially the early onset of the disease with ataxia and rapid deterioration. ( info)

16/205. Therapeutic plasma exchange in treatment of adrenoleukodystrophy.

    adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) is an X-linked disorder of metabolism of very long-chain fatty acids (VLCFA) with a frequency of up to 1:20,000 in males. VLCFA C 24:0 and C 26:0 accumulate in the cholesterol ester and ganglioside fraction in plasma and red cells. Symptoms of ALD are ataxia, loss of visual and auditory functions, and cerebral convulsions. Presently, no sure therapeutic approaches are established. Efforts were reported by dietary regimens with VLCFA-restriction and glycerol trioleate and glycerol trierucate intake. In the present trial, we report on a 58-year-old white male suffering from progressive ALD with spastic paraparesis. He has a positive family history back to the 18th century. In this patient, although maximum dietary therapy was applied over a period of 60 months, no normalization of VLCFA C24:0 and C26:0 was reached, and neurological disorders were progressive. As a result, therapeutic plasma exchange (TPE) was applied from 1990 to 1994. Then, for more selective adsorption of VLCFA, dextran-sulfate adsorption (Liposorber, Kaneka, Osaka, japan) until 1996, and after that, immunoadsorption (Therasorb, Baxter, Munchen, germany) were used. During these periods (total, 101 months), VLCFA C 24:0 and C 26:0 levels were reduced by 55% and 50% (p < 0.001). The patient experienced a significant improvement in performance and general well-being. No further progression of neuronal disorders was documented. This anecdotal data suggest a very beneficial effect of TPE in treatment of progressive ALD. ( info)

17/205. hospice care for a terminally-ill child in the school setting.

    In our society, the words "dying" and "school" are not a natural fit. Recently they have occurred together all too frequently. When this happens, horror, fear, and confusion often prevail. The death of a child is always a tragedy, but handled well, it can bring positive growth and maturity to the school community. The death of a class member, teacher, or student affects the class in a way that no other event does. Accidental deaths, shootings, and other violent deaths cause multiple and complex problems within the school community. These dramatic and tragic events are present in the media and leave people with a violent concept of death. However, death sometimes comes in slow and lingering ways. In this article, the case study of a student named "Tyler" illustrates the painful but positive experiences of his class. This type of death--of a school-age child--brings a prolonged grief and struggle for students, teachers, and the school community. ( info)

18/205. Voiding dysfunction in a patient with adolescent adrenoleukodystrophy.

    The details are reported of bladder dysfunction in a Japanese boy with adrenoleukodystrophy. He developed gait disturbance at the age of 15 years. Spastic paraparesis progressed from the legs to the hands and brain magnetic resonance imaging showed characteristic degenerative change. Detrusor hyperreflexia was found by a urodynamic study and detrusor-sphincter dyssynergia was also suspected. ( info)

19/205. Intrathecal baclofen in X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy.

    X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy is a progressive neurodegenerative disorder involving the destruction of white matter in the brain and adrenocortical hormone deficiency. Clinical symptoms first appear between 4 and 8 years of age and include spasticity, visual loss, dysphagia, and seizures. In this report, continuous infusion of intrathecal baclofen was used to treat the severe spasticity of an 8-year-old patient with X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy. The improvement in this patient's quality of life, including the elimination of pain and the increased ease of care, suggests that intrathecal baclofen should be considered as part of the treatment strategy for spasticity associated with X-linked adrenoleukodystrophy and other neurodegenerative disorders in children and adults. ( info)

20/205. The dorsal root ganglia in adrenomyeloneuropathy: neuronal atrophy and abnormal mitochondria.

    Adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN), a disease of spinal cord, brain, adrenal, and testis, mostly affects men with spastic paraparesis or ataxia beginning in their second or third decade. The spinal cord displays bilateral, usually symmetrical, long tract degeneration particularly of the gracile tract in a "dying-back" pattern. The available data strongly indicate that the fundamental lesion in AMN is an axonopathy or neuronopathy. We compared lumbar dorsal root ganglia (DRG) from 3 AMN patients to 6 age-matched controls histologically, morphometrically, immunohistochemically, and ultrastructurally. There was no apparent neuronal loss, necrosis or apoptosis, nor obvious atrophy; nodules of Nageotte were sparse in both groups. The morphometric studies, however, did reveal neuronal atrophy with a decrease in the number of large neurons and a corresponding increase in neurons less than 2,000 microm2, especially in the 1,500-1,999 microm2 range. No consistent immunohistochemical differences were observed, and no specific cell type appeared to be lost. Many mitochondria in the AMN neurons demonstrated lipidic inclusions; this raises the possibility that, in addition to the well-known peroxisomal defect, impaired mitochondrial function may lead to a failure of ATP-dependent axoplasmic transport in AMN spinal tracts with consequent "dying-back" axonal degeneration. The observation that the DRG parent neurons of the degenerate gracile tracts in AMN undergo atrophy and do not display appreciable evidence of cell death, even at autopsy, provides a wide window of opportunity for the development of therapeutic strategies to combat or prevent this myeloneuropathy. ( info)
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