Severe neuromuscular forms of glycogen storage disease type IV: Histological, clinical, biochemical, and molecular findings in a large French case series
Charles R. Lefèvre,
Sophie Collardeau‐Frachon,
Nathalie Streichenberger
et al.
Abstract:Glycogen storage disease type IV (GSD IV), also called Andersen disease, or amylopectinosis, is a highly heterogeneous autosomal recessive disorder caused by a glycogen branching enzyme (GBE, 1,4‐alpha‐glucan branching enzyme) deficiency secondary to pathogenic variants on GBE1 gene. The incidence is evaluated to 1:600 000 to 1:800 000 of live births. GBE deficiency leads to an excessive deposition of structurally abnormal, amylopectin‐like glycogen in affected tissues (liver, skeletal muscle, heart, nervous s… Show more
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