Histopathological features of X-linked Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease in 8 patients from 6 families with different connexin32 mutations

There is still confusion as to whether X-linked Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMTX) is primarily an axonal disorder or is primarily demyelinating. Eight symptomatic patients, 7 males and 1 female, from 6 families with identified connexin32 mutations underwent a superficial peroneal nerve biopsy. Quan...

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Veröffentlicht in:Journal of the peripheral nervous system 2001-06, Vol.6 (2), p.79-84
Hauptverfasser: Vital, A, Ferrer, X, Lagueny, A, Vandenberghe, A, Latour, P, Goizet, C, Canron, M H, Louiset, P, Petry, K G, Vital, C
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Sprache:eng
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Zusammenfassung:There is still confusion as to whether X-linked Charcot-Marie-Tooth disease (CMTX) is primarily an axonal disorder or is primarily demyelinating. Eight symptomatic patients, 7 males and 1 female, from 6 families with identified connexin32 mutations underwent a superficial peroneal nerve biopsy. Quantitative and ultrastructural studies were performed, and histopathological lesions in these 8 patients proved to be quite homogeneous. The myelinated fiber count was within normal values or only moderately decreased. In 7 cases, the distribution of myelinated fibers was unimodal due to a loss of large fibers, coexisting with numerous clusters of small regenerating fibers. At ultrastructural level, these clusters were often surrounded by flattened Schwann cell processes giving an aspect of "pseudo-onion bulb" formation. There was no "naked axon" (ie, demyelinated axon), and real "onion bulb" formations composed of flattened Schwann cell processes surrounding an isolated myelinated fiber were discrete and not numerous. Macrophages laden with myelin debris were scarce or absent in the endoneurium. Several fibers appeared discretely hypomyelinated and the calculated g-ratio was scarcely higher than the mean control value. Lesions of unmyelinated fibers were absent in 7 cases and mild in one. Given that the primary defect concerns connexin32, we think that the histopathological features observed in our patients correspond to primary hypomyelination rather than to ongoing demyelination. The associated axonal degeneration might be secondary to defective axon-Schwann cell interactions.
ISSN:1085-9489
1529-8027
DOI:10.1046/j.1529-8027.2001.01011.x