“…Patients usually present between two and four years of age with symptoms referable to the joints. [4][5][6] The typical clinical symptoms include short stature, cardiac valve involvement, normal intelligence or mild mental retardation, normal corneal appearance or steaminess of the cornea, and scoliosis and skeletal and orthopedic complications including hand and shoulder stiffness, claw-hand deformities, short iliac wings, erosion of the femoral heads, dysostosis multiplex of the vertebral bodies, long bones, skull, phalanges and clavicles with no to mild organomegaly. [3][4][5][6][7] Cardiopulmonary complications are the usual reasons of mortality in patients with ML III.…”