4.3 Article

Neurology of Fabry disease

Journal

INTERNAL MEDICINE JOURNAL
Volume 37, Issue 7, Pages 436-447

Publisher

BLACKWELL PUBLISHING
DOI: 10.1111/j.1445-5994.2007.01366.x

Keywords

Fabry disease; peripheral neuropathy; neurologic manifestations; neurocognitive testing; hearing loss

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Background: Fabry disease has diverse neurological manifestations, many of which influence morbidity and quality of life. Aims: The aim of the study was to document the clinical and subclinical neurological manifestations in a cohort of Australian patients with Fabry disease, using multiple clinical tools and a multidisciplinary approach. Methods: Participants completed focused questionnaires and underwent clinical neurological examination, Neurocognitive testing using Mini Mental State Examination and Neuropsychiatry Unit Cognitive Screen, Quantitative Sensory Testing (QST), autonomic assessment using RR interval variation, intracranial magnetic resonance imaging (MRI) and audiology. In subsets of patients who had previously undergone QST and/or prospective serial quality-of-life assessments over the previous 5 years, results before and after enzyme replacement therapy were compared. Results: Twenty hemizygotes and two heterozygotes were recruited. The age (mean +/- standard deviation (SD)) of male participants was 40.4 +/- 11.9 years (range 20-62 years); the women were aged between 20 and 56 years. Increasing age was strongly associated with increasing neurological disability. Clinical peripheral neuropathy predominantly affected thermal sensation in all patients, with variable involvement of pinprick and light touch. QST confirmed these findings. Clinical cerebellar tests were commonly abnormal: this has not been previously reported in the absence of symptomatic cerebrovascular disease. There was hearing loss was in 90% of patients and no patient older than 44 years had normal hearing. MRI lesion prevalence increased with age. Despite neurological complications being common, formal cognitive testing was basically normal. QST thresholds for pain showed a significant change after enzyme replacement therapy. Conclusions: Neurological complications in Fabry disease are common, complex and may be devastating. All patients studied had neurological involvement, with protean and diverse manifestations.

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