| Literature DB >> 2599500 |
W Trabert1, T Stober, U Mielke, F S Heck, K Schimrigk.
Abstract
Since the detection of vitamin E in 1922, nearly 50 years passed until the recognition that there is a pathogenic vitamin E deficiency in humans. Such a deficiency can be found mostly in a disturbed resorption or transport of the vitamin (mucoviscidosis, chronic cholestasis, abetalipoproteinaemia) and leads typically to a progredient spinocerebellar ataxia in combination with a polyneuropathy. Substitution of the vitamin may hinder a further progression or even lead to an amelioration of the symptoms. Prophylactic treatment in abetalipoproteinaemia prevents the otherwise unavoidable neurological deficits. Isolated vitamin E deficiency is a rare syndrome and the causes are still obscure. We observed a 26 year old male patient with such a isolated vitamin E deficiency who was hitherto thought to suffer from Friedreich's ataxia. The clinical feature showed in addition to the "classical" symptoms of vitamin E deficiency cranial nerve involvement, perioral dystonia and pyramidal signs. Histologically (M. gastrocnemius) we saw the described typical but not specific changes (neurogenic atrophy, phosphatase-positive vacuoles with myelin bodies, cores). An oral vitamin E resorption test yielded a very shortened serum half life. These results support the hypothesis that in the pathophysiology of isolated vitamin E deficiency malelimination plays an important role in addition the known malresorptions models.Entities:
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Year: 1989 PMID: 2599500 DOI: 10.1055/s-2007-1001146
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Fortschr Neurol Psychiatr ISSN: 0720-4299 Impact factor: 0.752