We describe a child with lethal multiple malformations and generalised accumulation of desmosterol. The infant had macrocephaly, a hypoplastic nasal bridge, thick alveolar ridges, gingival nodules, cleft palate, total anomalous pulmonary venous drainage, ambiguous genitalia, short limbs, and general
Clinical phenotype of lathosterolosis
โ Scribed by Massimiliano Rossi; Maria D'Armiento; Ida Parisi; Paola Ferrari; Christine M. Hall; Mariarosaria Cervasio; Francesco Rivasi; Fiorella Balli; Raffaella Vecchione; Gaetano Corso; Generoso Andria; Giancarlo Parenti
- Book ID
- 101453193
- Publisher
- John Wiley and Sons
- Year
- 2007
- Tongue
- English
- Weight
- 459 KB
- Volume
- 143A
- Category
- Article
- ISSN
- 1552-4825
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
โฆ Synopsis
Abstract
Lathosterolosis (LS) is a defect of cholesterol biosynthesis due to the deficiency of the enzyme sterolโC5โdesaturase. Only two patients have been described to date, both presenting with multiple malformations, mental retardation, and liver involvement. In addition in one of them pathological examination revealed mucolipidosisโlike inclusions on optic microscopy analysis, and peculiar lysosomal lamellar bodies on electron microscopy analysis. This study is focused on a better characterization of the clinical phenotype of LS. We describe a further case in a fetus, sibling of the first patient reported, presenting with neural tube defect, craniofacial and limb anomalies, and prenatal liver involvement. The fetal phenotype suggests the possible occurrence of significant intrafamilial variability in LS, and expands the phenotypic spectrum of the disease. Histological examination of autopsy samples from the fetus and skin fibroblasts from the living sibling suggested that the mucolipidosisโlike picture previously reported is not a constant feature of LS, being possibly associated with the most severe biochemical defects, but confirmed the ultrastructural finding of lamellar inclusions. The LS phenotype appears to be characterized by the distinctive association of a recognizable pattern of congenital anomalies, involving axial and appendicular skeleton, liver, central nervous and urogenital systems, and lysosomal storage. This condition partially overlaps with other defects of sterol metabolism, suggesting intriguing pathogenic links among these conditions. ยฉ 2007 WileyโLiss, Inc.
๐ SIMILAR VOLUMES
## Abstract Wilms tumor can occur in association with a number of recognizable patterns of malformation, as first described by Miller et al. in 1964 [1]. This paper represents a synthesis of the current state of knowledge regarding recognizable phenotypes associated with Wilms tumor. Specific disor