| Literature DB >> 21619592 |
Alessandro P Burlina1, Katherine B Sims, Juan M Politei, Gary J Bennett, Ralf Baron, Claudia Sommer, Anette Torvin Møller, Max J Hilz.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Fabry disease is an inherited metabolic disorder characterized by progressive lysosomal accumulation of lipids in a variety of cell types, including neural cells. Small, unmyelinated nerve fibers are particularly affected and small fiber peripheral neuropathy often clinically manifests at young age. Peripheral pain can be chronic and/or occur as provoked attacks of excruciating pain. Manifestations of dysfunction of small autonomic fibers may include, among others, impaired sweating, gastrointestinal dysmotility, and abnormal pain perception. Patients with Fabry disease often remain undiagnosed until severe complications involving the kidney, heart, peripheral nerves and/or brain have arisen.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2011 PMID: 21619592 PMCID: PMC3126707 DOI: 10.1186/1471-2377-11-61
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Neurol ISSN: 1471-2377 Impact factor: 2.474
Possible early symptoms of Fabry disease
| Organ system | Sign/Symptom |
|---|---|
| General | Reduced quality of life; reduced well-being; reduced school/work performance and engagement in leisure activities, including sports |
| Psychosocial and behavioral deficits | |
| Poor weight gain | |
| Nervous system | Chronic burning pain |
| Attacks of excruciating pain | |
| Paresthesias/dysesthesias | |
| Sensory losses | |
| Hypohidrosis/anhidrosis | |
| Abdominal cramp, (post-prandial) diarrhoea, bloating, nausea | |
| Tinnitus, hearing loss | |
| Dizziness | |
| Skin | Vascular lesions (angiokeratoma, Figure 1) |
| Eyes | Corneal/lenticular opacities (seen on slit lamp examination, Figure 2) |
| Vascular tortuosity (retina, conjunctiva) | |
| Kidneys | Microalbuminuria, proteinuria |
| Impaired concentration ability | |
| Increased urinary GL-3 excretion | |
| Renal hyperfiltration (early), decrease in glomerular filtration rate | |
| Heart | ECG abnormalities (for example, short PR interval) |
| Arrhythmias, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (young adults) |
Figure 1Red-purple, non-blanching vascular skin lesions. Angiokeratoma are usually distributed on the buttocks, groin, umbilicus (left figure) and upper thighs (bathing trunk distribution), and occasionally on lips and oral mucosa (right figure).
Figure 2Cornea verticillata. A bilateral, whorl-like corneal pattern of cream colored lines in a patient with Fabry disease.
Figure 3Dorsal root ganglion cells from a Fabry patient. The ganglion cells are swollen by accumulation of glycolipids and stained with Alcian blue (photo courtesy of E. Kaye).
Figure 4Photomicrographs of frozen skin sections (50 μm) from a Fabry patient. Samples immunoreacted with PGP 9.5 and were processed for fluorescence microscopy with Cy3 labelled secondary antibodies. Note the lack of intraepidermal nerve fibers and persistence of fibers pertaining to the subepidermal nerve plexus (arrows) in the sample from the lower leg skin of a Fabry patient (upper figure). Note the dense innervation of the epidermis (arrows) in the sample from the back of the Fabry patient, taken at the dermatome Th 12 (lower figure). Bar = 50 μm.
Medical history and examinations in young patients with Fabry disease
| General status | Decreased stamina and exercise; psychologic co-morbidities; school, work and sport participation and performance; smoking |
| SF-36® Health Survey or PedsQL™ | |
| Pain | Onset; quality; intensity; distribution; abnormal responses to stimuli; exacerbating factors; pain meds (past, current), McGill Pain Questionnaire, Brief Pain Questionnaire, Pediatric Pain Questionnaire |
| Gastrointestinal | Abdominal cramps; (post-prandial) diarrhea; number of bowel movements/day; bloating; nausea |
| Family history | Renal/cardiac failure; TIA or stroke; early death |
| Complete physical examination | |
| Including height; weight; pulse irregularity; supine and standing blood pressure; vascular skin lesions (Figure 1); cornea clouding (requires slit lamp exam, Figure 2) | |
| Neurologic examination | |
| Thermal perception (cold/warm water tubes, a cold and warm tuning fork or reflex hammer, or thermal discs at dorsal foot, e.g., "Minnesota Thermal Disks" [ | |
| Pain perception (pinprick to skin of limbs and trunk) | |
| Light touch perception (cotton swab or lightly touching skin, e.g., on legs vs. feet, testing distal vs. proximal sensation) | |
| Vibration perception (vibrating tuning fork (Rydell-Seiffer®) to 1st metatarsal bone) | |
| Sensorineural hearing loss (Rinne test, three-tone audiometry) | |
| Definitive diagnosis | |
| α-Galactosidase A enzyme activity in leukocytes or whole blood in males | |
| Genetic risk assessment | Diagnosis should be followed by genetic testing of the entire family |
| Severity scoring | |
| Neuropathy Staging Scheme [ | |