| Literature DB >> 24135395 |
Eugen Mengel1, Hans-Hermann Klünemann, Charles M Lourenço, Christian J Hendriksz, Frédéric Sedel, Mark Walterfang, Stefan A Kolb.
Abstract
Niemann-Pick disease type C (NP-C) is a rare, progressive, irreversible disease leading to disabling neurological manifestations and premature death. The estimated disease incidence is 1:120,000 live births, but this likely represents an underestimate, as the disease may be under-diagnosed due to its highly heterogeneous presentation. NP-C is characterised by visceral, neurological and psychiatric manifestations that are not specific to the disease and that can be found in other conditions. The aim of this review is to provide non-specialists with an expert-based, detailed description of NP-C signs and symptoms, including how they present in patients and how they can be assessed. Early disease detection should rely on seeking a combination of signs and symptoms, rather than isolated findings. Examples of combinations which are strongly suggestive of NP-C include: splenomegaly and vertical supranuclear gaze palsy (VSGP); splenomegaly and clumsiness; splenomegaly and schizophrenia-like psychosis; psychotic symptoms and cognitive decline; and ataxia with dystonia, dysarthria/dysphagia and cognitive decline. VSGP is a hallmark of NP-C and becomes highly specific of the disease when it occurs in combination with other manifestations (e.g. splenomegaly, ataxia). In young infants (<2 years), abnormal saccades may first manifest as slowing and shortening of upward saccades, long before gaze palsy onset. While visceral manifestations tend to predominate during the perinatal and infantile period (2 months-6 years of age), neurological and psychiatric involvement is more prominent during the juvenile/adult period (>6 years of age). Psychosis in NP-C is atypical and variably responsive to treatment. Progressive cognitive decline, which always occurs in patients with NP-C, manifests as memory and executive impairment in juvenile/adult patients. Disease prognosis mainly correlates with the age at onset of the neurological signs, with early-onset forms progressing faster. Therefore, a detailed and descriptive picture of NP-C signs and symptoms may help improve disease detection and early diagnosis, so that therapy with miglustat (Zavesca(®)), the only available treatment approved to date, can be started as soon as neurological symptoms appear, in order to slow disease progression.Entities:
Mesh:
Year: 2013 PMID: 24135395 PMCID: PMC3853996 DOI: 10.1186/1750-1172-8-166
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Orphanet J Rare Dis ISSN: 1750-1172 Impact factor: 4.123
Classification of signs and symptoms in NP-C
| | |
| | Isolated unexplained splenomegaly |
| | Hepatomegaly/Splenomegaly |
| | Prolonged neonatal cholestatic jaundice |
| | Hydrops foetalis or foetal ascites |
| | Pneumopathologies (aspiration pneumonia, alveolar lipidosis, interstitial lung involvement) |
| | Mild thrombocytopenia |
| | |
| | Vertical supranuclear gaze palsy |
| | Gelastic cataplexy |
| | Ataxia |
| | Dystonia |
| | Dysarthria |
| | Dysphagia |
| | Hypotonia |
| | Clumsiness |
| | Delayed developmental milestones |
| | Seizures |
| | Hearing loss |
| | |
| | Developmental delay and pre-senile cognitive decline |
| | Organic psychosis |
| | Disruptive/aggressive behaviour |
| Progressive development of treatment-resistant psychiatric symptoms |
Abbreviation: NP-C, Niemann-Pick disease type C.
Sign and symptom combinations strongly suggestive of NP-C
| Splenomegaly | + | Vertical supranuclear gaze palsy |
| Hypotonia | ||
| Schizophrenia-like psychosis | ||
| Gelastic cataplexia | ||
| Delayed developmental milestones | ||
| Ataxia | + | Dystonia |
| Dysarthria/dysphagia | ||
| Cognitive decline | ||
| Psychotic symptoms | + | Cognitive decline |
The combination of one of the symptoms on the left with at least one of those on the right is strongly suggestive of NP-C.
Abbreviation: NP-C, Niemann-Pick disease type C.
Figure 1Clinical assessment of vertical supranuclear gaze palsy. During the neurological evaluation of eye movements, assessing eye pursuit movements alone (left) is insufficient: voluntary saccades must be tested (right). The examiner should require the subject to visually fixate on two separate objects, e.g. the examiner’s finger and a hatpin, which are displaced first horizontally and then vertically (up and down), but always within the subject’s visual field. The subject is then asked to look at each object alternately.