| Literature DB >> 28503705 |
Matteo Garibaldi1, Giorgio Tasca2, Jordi Diaz-Manera3,4, Pierfancesco Ottaviani5, Francesco Laschena5, Donatella Pantoli6, Simonetta Gerevini7, Chiara Fiorillo8, Lorenzo Maggi9, Elisabetta Tasca10, Adele D'Amico11, Olimpia Musumeci12, Antonio Toscano12, Claudio Bruno8, Roberto Massa13, Corrado Angelini10, Enrico Bertini11, Giovanni Antonini14, Elena Maria Pennisi15.
Abstract
Neutral lipid storage disease (NLSD) is a rare inherited disorder of lipid metabolism resulting in lipid droplets accumulation in different tissues. Skeletal muscle could be affected in both two different form of disease: NLSD with myopathy (NLSD-M) and NLSD with ichthyosis (NLSD-I). We present the muscle imaging data of 12 patients from the Italian Network for NLSD: ten patients presenting NLSD-M and two patients with NLSD-I. In NLSD-M gluteus minimus, semimembranosus, soleus and gastrocnemius medialis in the lower limbs and infraspinatus in the upper limbs were the most affected muscles. Gracilis, sartorius, subscapularis, pectoralis, triceps brachii and sternocleidomastoid were spared. Muscle involvement was not homogenous and characteristic "patchy" replacement was observed in at least one muscle in all the patients. Half of the patients showed one or more STIR positive muscles. In both NLSD-I cases muscle involvement was not observed by T1-TSE sequences, but one of them showed positive STIR images in more than one muscle in the leg. Our data provides evidence that muscle imaging can identify characteristic alterations in NLSD-M, characterized by a specific pattern of muscle involvement with "patchy" areas of fatty replacement. Larger cohorts are needed to assess if a distinct pattern of muscle involvement exists also for NLSD-I.Entities:
Keywords: ABHD5; Lipid storage disease; Muscle MRI; NLSD; PNPLA2
Mesh:
Year: 2017 PMID: 28503705 PMCID: PMC5502068 DOI: 10.1007/s00415-017-8498-8
Source DB: PubMed Journal: J Neurol ISSN: 0340-5354 Impact factor: 4.849
Clinical data of NLSD patients
| Patient | Sex | Clinical form | Age at onset (muscle involvement) (years) | Age at imaging (years) | Phenotype (muscle weakness) | Severity (at time of imaging) | References |
|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| 1 | M | NLSD-M | 40 | 62 | Proximal LL | Mild, ambulant | [ |
| 2 | M | NLSD-M | 35 | 50 | Distal UL, LL | Moderate, ambulant | [ |
| 3 | M | NLSD-M | 34 | 50 | Diffuse UL, LL, axial | Severe, ambulant with support | [ |
| 4 | M | NLSD-M | 35 | 45 | Diffuse UL, LL, axial | Severe, ambulant with support | [ |
| 5 | M | NLSD-M | 40 | 44 | Distal LL | Mild, ambulant | [ |
| 6 | F | NLSD-M | 18 | 52 | Diffuse UL, LL, axial | Severe, wheelchair-bound | [ |
| 7 | M | NLSD-M | 40 | 62 | Proximal UL, LL, axial | Moderate, ambulant | [ |
| 8 | M | NLSD-M | 5 | 15 | Asymptomatic | Very mild, ambulant | [ |
| 9 | M | NLSD-M | 1 | 25 | Proximal UL, LL | Moderate, ambulant | [ |
| 10 | F | NLSD-M | 58 | 74 | Proximal LL | Mild, ambulant | [ |
| 11 | M | NLSD-I | – | 15 | Asymptomatic | Very mild, ambulant | [ |
| 12 | F | NLSD-I | – | 26 | Asymptomatic | Very mild, ambulant | [ |
UL upper limbs, LL lower limbs, very mild not symptomatic patients, mild ambulant patients with weakness in max 2 districts (distal or proximal in upper or lower limbs), moderate ambulant patients with weakness in more than 2 districts, severe ambulant with support or wheelchair patients with diffuse muscle weakness
Fig. 1Lower limbs involvement in different stages of NLSD-M. T1-weighted images of lower limbs in NLSD-M patients of different severities: a P10, 74 years; b P1, 62 years; c P9, 25 years; d P6, 52 years; e P4, 45 years. Gluteus minimus, semimembranosus, gastrocnemius medialis and soleus are constantly affected muscles even if in different extents. Leg muscles are invariably more affected than thigh. Posterior compartment of both leg and thigh show more severe involvement than anterior compartment. Psoas, biceps femoris (short head) and rectus femoris show a mild involvement in late-disease course. Gracilis and sartorius are constantly spared
Fig. 2Heatmap of lower limbs involvement in NLSD-M
Fig. 4STIR positive images in NLSD-M and NLSD-I. STIR hyperintensities (arrows) in upper and lower limb muscles. STIR positive left infraspinatus in P1 (a), vastus medialis in P4 (b), posterior compartment of the legs in P12 (c) and anterior compartment of the legs in P6 (d)
Fig. 3Scapular girdle involvement in NLSD-M. T1-weighted images of lower limbs in NLSD-M patients of different severities: a P10, 74 years; b P1, 62 years; c P9, 25 years; d P6, 52 years; e P4, 45 years. Infraspinatus, trapezius, deltoid and thoracic paraspinous were the most affected muscles and subscapularis, pectoralis minor and major, and sternocleidomastoid were the most spared. Pectoralis major and sternocleidomastoid sometimes had a hypertrophic appearance (e). Note that least affected patients (P10, a; P1, b) showed no T1-hyperintense muscle in scapular girdle. Interestingly infraspinatus showed STIR positive signal in P1 (b) (see Fig. 4)
Fig. 5Patchy areas of fatty replacement in NLSD-M. T1-weighted images. a, b, f patient 2; c patient 5; d patient 4; e patient 7. Not homogenous muscle involvement in several muscles of different patients. Patchy areas of fatty replacement in bigger areas of not affected muscle (arrows) and muscle sparing areas in bigger fatty replaced areas (arrowheads)