AI Article Synopsis

  • Gaucher disease type 2 is a rare lysosomal storage disorder that usually appears between 3 to 6 months old, causing neurodegeneration and typically leading to death within the first 2 years.
  • The case presented discusses a newborn with cholestasis and liver biopsy findings of giant-cell transformation, initially misdiagnosed as giant-cell hepatitis, highlighting the challenges in diagnosing neonatal onset Gaucher disease.
  • This example suggests that neonatal cholestasis could signify a broader range of symptoms in Gaucher disease, potentially linking classic type 2 and perinatal lethal forms of the disease, with giant cells indicating a systemic inflammatory response.

Article Abstract

Gaucher disease type 2 [OMIM #230800] is a rare lysosomal storage disorder with usual onset between 3 and 6 months of age leading to progressive neurodegeneration and death within the first 2 years of life. Rarely it may lack the characteristic symptom-free period and initially manifest prenatally or in the neonatal period. The early course of neonatal onset classic type 2 variants is not well known, and reports of early histological changes in the liver of type 2 Gaucher disease patients are scarce. We describe a patient who presented in the immediate postnatal period with cholestasis without hepatomegaly associated with hepatocellular giant-cell transformation on liver biopsy, thrombocytopenia, and failure to thrive. This was initially thought to represent neonatal giant-cell hepatitis and the correct diagnosis was not made until the age of 6 months. Hepatocellular giant transformation has not been described in the classic acute neuronopathic form of GD. However, it has been reported in congenital GD with nonimmune hydrops and neonatal hepatitis, an example of perinatal lethal Gaucher disease (PLGD), which sometimes is regarded as an entity separate from GD type 2. Our case illustrates that neonatal cholestasis may be part of a spectrum of manifestations which spans a continuum between the PLGD and classic type 2 GD. Giant cells are a nonspecific finding but may reflect the presence of a systemic inflammatory process that recently has been implicated in the brain stem degeneration associated with acute neuronopathic GD.

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Source
http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3509909PMC
http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/8904_2011_104DOI Listing

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