Nephrosialidosis: ultrastructural and lectin histochemical study

K Toyooka, H Fujimura, H Yoshikawa, M Taniike… - Acta …, 1993 - Springer
K Toyooka, H Fujimura, H Yoshikawa, M Taniike, K Inui, S Yorifuji, S Tarui, S Okada…
Acta neuropathologica, 1993Springer
The neuropathological findings in a Japanese male with nephrosialidosis are reported.
Clinically, coarse face, psychomotor retardation, macular cherryred spot and proteinuria
were noted at 1 year and 7 months. He was diagnosed to have nephrosialidosis on the
basis of a deficiency of α-neuraminidase activity in both lymphocytes and cultured skin
fibroblasts, and of severe glomerular and tubular involvement on renal biopsy. He died of
multiple organ failure at 8 years and 6 months. There were numerous vacuoles and storage …
Summary
The neuropathological findings in a Japanese male with nephrosialidosis are reported. Clinically, coarse face, psychomotor retardation, macular cherryred spot and proteinuria were noted at 1 year and 7 months. He was diagnosed to have nephrosialidosis on the basis of a deficiency of α-neuraminidase activity in both lymphocytes and cultured skin fibroblasts, and of severe glomerular and tubular involvement on renal biopsy. He died of multiple organ failure at 8 years and 6 months. There were numerous vacuoles and storage materials in visceral organs, particularly in the glomerular and tubular epithelial cells of the kidney and Kupffer cells as well as hepatocytes in the liver. Neuropathological examination revealed severe neuronal storage in the selected part of the central nervous system; lower motor neurons of the brain stem and spinal anterior horn cells, as well as neurons in the basal nucleus of Meynert. In the peripheral nervous system, sympathetic ganglia were severely affected. There was little or no neuronal storage in the basal ganglia, cerebral cortex or cerebellum, and demyelination was not found. Electron microscopic examination showed fine wavy multilamellar structures in the spinal anterior horn cells or Zebra body-like structures in the neurons of the Meynert's basal nucleus. Lectin histochemistry was positive for wheat germ agglutinin, Ricinus communis agglutinin-1 and peanut agglutinin within distended neurons. We conclude that the neuropathological feature in nephrosialidosis is not specific except for the selectiveness of the anatomical sites of involvement. It shares some aspects found in other types of sialidosis or galactosialidosis.
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