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Electron microscopical study in neurodegenerative diseases in infancy

Neurodegenerative diseases are a group of disorders in which there is storage of abnormal material in cells throughout the body due to an enzyme defect. The authors present the experience in the diagnosis of the neurodegenerative diseases in infancy by electron microscopical study of skin, conjunctival and rectum material of 89 patients and 2 necropsy cases. The age of the patients ranged from 49 days to 13 years with a peak age of incidence in first year of life (n=28). Fifty patients were female and 39 were male. The most frequent sites of biopsy were the skin and conjunctival. Of the total 89 patients, 15 had a definitive diagnosis (16.8%) including 4 cases of gangliosidosis, 3 cases of mucopolysaccharidosis, a case of Gaucher's disease, a case of Niemann-Pick disease, 3 cases of neuronal ceroid lipofuscinosis and 3 cases of storage disease which could not be specified. The authors studied all these patients within clinic and ultrastructural aspects and concluded that electron microscopy is an important method in diagnosis of storage diseases but with a low sensivity as a single "screening" test for patients with progressive encephalopathy.

neurodegenerative diseases; electron microscopy; diagnosis; infancy


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