Publications by authors named "J Frabasil"

Gaucher disease is reckoned for extreme phenotypic diversity that does not show consistent genotype/phenotype correlations. In Argentina, a national collaborative group, Grupo Argentino de Diagnóstico y Tratamiento de la Enfermedad de Gaucher, GADTEG, have delineated uniformly severe type 1 Gaucher disease manifestations presenting in childhood with large burden of irreversible skeletal disease. Here using Long-Read Single Molecule Real-Time (SMRT) Sequencing of GBA1 locus, we show that RecI allele is highly prevalent and associates with severe skeletal manifestations in childhood.

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Introduction: Therapy with cationic amphiphilic drugs (Amiodarone or hydroxychloroquine) may result in biochemically and ultrastructurally similar lipid inclusions in many cells also affected by Fabry disease (FD). In addition, it often results in similar clinical manifestations such as cornea verticillata. This may lead to a FD misdiagnosis, especially when a complete medical history is not available to the ophthalmologist confronted with cornea verticillata or to the pathologist examining a kidney biopsy.

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Background: Fabry disease (FD) is an X-linked lysosomal storage disorder caused by enzyme Alpha-Galactosidase A (α-Gal-A) deficiency, due mutations in GLA gene. Progressive glycolipid accumulation leads to damage in kidney and other organs. The aim of this study was to estimate the prevalence of Fabry disease in Argentinean male patients undergoing dialysis.

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Pompe disease, also known as acid maltase deficiency or glycogenosis type II, is a rare severe, autosomal, recessive, and progressive genetic disorder caused by deficiency in alpha-glucosidase. The classic infantile-onset is the most broadly known form of Pompe disease, which presents with severe heart involvement and clear hypotonia, while the non-classic presentation occurs with early motor involvement. Late-onset Pompe disease develops in adults, but it may also occur during childhood or adolescence.

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Background: Fabry disease is an X-linked lysosomal storage disorder caused by α-galactosidase enzyme deficiency. We present clinical, biochemical, and histologic findings in children with classical phenotypic presentation of Fabry disease.

Methods: A retrospective analysis was performed using charts from 14 children with confirmed diagnosis.

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