Lipoid proteinosis is a rare autosomal recessive disease characterized by cutaneous and visceral lesions, in which large amounts of amorphous material are constantly found in stroma. Morphological and biochemical studies indicate abnormal collagen production, but little attention has been paid to the lipid component of lesions. Microscopic and ultrastructural studies of skin, with special emphasis on fibroblasts, vessels, nerve endings and eccrine sweat glands, were conducted in two patients with lipoid proteinosis. Biochemical studies were undertaken in cultured fibroblasts. Evidence of lysosomal storage in epithelial cells of eccrine sweat glands and in dermal histiocytes, very similar to that found in some metabolic disorders, particularly Farber disease, was found in both cases. Our findings suggest that two alterations might coexist in lipoid proteinosis, one characterized by impaired normal collagen production and the other related to a metabolic defect which may lead to accumulation of ceramide or more complex lipids.
Fabry disease is a rare X-linked lysosomal storage disorder due to alpha galactosidase A deficiency, better known after the advent of a promising treatment, a periodical enzyme replacement. As other hereditary X-linked disorders, females have historically been considered non-affected carriers, although they are, actually, clinically and pathologically affected to a variable degree. Some women are asymptomatic, but the majority present milder forms of the disease and later onset. This wide range of disease expression is supposed to be related to the levels of enzymatic activity, probably in accordance with a skewing of X inactivation. Lysosomal deposits of ceramide trihexoside have been repeatedly documented in a wide range of tissues, including those found in angiokeratoma, the characteristic cutaneous lesion which allowed the definition of Fabry disease. The aim of this study was to investigate whether there was any difference in the amount of dermal lysosomal storage in males and females, thus accounting for the difference in clinical severity of both groups. For that purpose, with electron microscopy and quantitative methods, we studied the extent of lysosomal deposits in dermal fibroblasts of normal-appearing skin in six females and nine men, enzymatically and genetically proven as to have Fabry disease, and results were compared. Our results indicate a statistically significant difference between the two groups regarding both the percentage of dermal fibroblasts bearing stored material, and the storage surface occupied in 100 fibroblasts per case. We suggest that periodical ultrastructural examination of normal-appearing skin could be an indicator of the efficacy of enzyme replacement therapy and could help to evaluate results.
We treated a 28-year-old woman who had metachromatic leukodystrophy with bone marrow transplantation. Leukocyte arylsulfatase A levels increased to the donor's range after successful graft. Motor and sensory nerve conduction values did not change significantly in the 4 years after the transplant, and subcortical white matter lesions, as shown on MRI, remained stable during that period of time. The results, after 4 years of follow-up, indicate that the disease has not progressed and signs and symptoms are stabilized.
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