Chronic neuronopathic type of Gaucher’s disease with progressive myoclonic epilepsy in the absence of visceromegaly and bone involvement

Introduction Gaucher’s disease is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by the deficiency of glucocerebrosidase. Gaucher’s disease has three clinical types: non-neuronopathic (Type 1), Acute Neuropathic (Type 2) and chronic neuronopathic (Type 3). The chronic neuronopathic (Type 3) is characterised by...

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Veröffentlicht in:Scottish medical journal 2014-05, Vol.59 (2), p.e1-e6
Hauptverfasser: Botross, Nevein Philip, Riad, Amgad Abadir, Viswanathan, Shanthi, Nordin, Rusli Bin, Lock, HN
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:Introduction Gaucher’s disease is a lysosomal storage disorder caused by the deficiency of glucocerebrosidase. Gaucher’s disease has three clinical types: non-neuronopathic (Type 1), Acute Neuropathic (Type 2) and chronic neuronopathic (Type 3). The chronic neuronopathic (Type 3) is characterised by a variety of disease variants with onset in childhood with hepatomegaly, skeletal lesions and later slow horizontal saccades, treatment-resistant generalised tonic–clonic and myoclonic seizures, dementia, progressive spasticity, cognitive deterioration, ataxia and death in the second or third decade of life. Case presentation We describe a case of a 17-year-old girl who was born normally but subsequently developed treatment-refractory seizures at the age of nine with myoclonus, oculomotor apraxia, ataxia and cognitive decline. Enzyme activity of beta-glucocerebrosidase was found to be low without visceromegaly or bone involvement. Conclusion Screening for lysosomal enzyme activity should be done in patients exhibiting features suggestive of progressive myoclonic epilepsy.
ISSN:0036-9330
2045-6441
DOI:10.1177/0036933014529868