While equally effective compared with sternotomy, the cosmetic and financial appeal of the percutaneous and minimally invasive approaches must be weighed against their greater exposure to technical pitfalls. Adequate training is needed if a strategy of surgical or percutaneous minimally invasive closure of ASD in children is planned in place of conventional surgery.
Available data provided the basis for a shared approach to management of cryptogenic ischemic cerebral events and PFO among different Italian scientific societies. Wider international initiatives on the topic are awaited.
Danon disease, an X-linked cardioskeletal myopathy caused by primary deficiency of lysosome-associated membrane protein-2 (LAMP-2), is clinically characterized by cardiomyopathy, myopathy, and variable mental retardation. The pathological hallmark of the disease is the absence of LAMP-2 immunohistochemical staining in muscle. The LAMP-2 gene mutations reported thus far are generally private mutations. We describe two cases of Danon disease with different clinical presentation, in whom we identified the same exon skipping mutation c.928G>A in the LAMP-2 gene. The first patient was affected by an early onset myopathy and hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM) that partially improved with drug treatment. A first muscle biopsy at age 4 months showed markedly increased glycogen, and acid maltase deficiency was ruled out biochemically. A second muscle biopsy, performed at age 3(1/2) years, showed very mild abnormalities. The second child at age 15 years had mild, diffuse muscle weakness and wasting, moderate mental deficiency, and HCM. Two serial biopsies performed at age 8 and 15 years showed similar findings of multiple esterase-positive vacuoles in type I myofibers. In both patients the immunohistochemical study demonstrated the absence of LAMP-2 in skeletal muscle.
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