We report the first Japanese case of Salla disease. A 5-year-old male patient developed unique proteinuria with other clinical manifestations, including coarse facies, dysostosis multiplex, mild mitral valve regurgitation, umbilical and inguinal herniation, and mild developmental delay. Pathological analysis of biopsied kidney tissues showed marked vacuolation of podocytes, mesangial cells, capillary endothelial cells, and tubular cells. Biochemical studies involving thinlayer chromatography and mass spectrometry revealed increased excretion of free sialic acid (N-acetylneuraminic acid) into the patient's urine. Immuno-and lectin staining of the patient's cells demonstrated the accumulation of sialyl and asialyl glycoconjugates in lysosomes and late endosomes. A defect in sialyl glycoconjugate metabolism is thought to have occurred in the patient's cells, besides impairment of the lysosomal transport of free sialic acid residues. A renal disorder should be considered as an important manifestation, not only in infantile free sialic acid storage disease but also in Salla disease.
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