4.5 Article

Niemann-Pick type C as a cause of progressive intellectual and neurological deterioration in childhood

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DEVELOPMENTAL MEDICINE AND CHILD NEUROLOGY
卷 59, 期 9, 页码 965-972

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WILEY
DOI: 10.1111/dmcn.13476

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  1. Policy Research Programme of the English Department of Health [121/6443]
  2. Great Ormond Street Hospital Childrens Charity [W1083] Funding Source: researchfish

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AimTo describe the cases of Niemann-Pick type C (NP-C) disease in a United Kingdom epidemiological study of progressive intellectual and neurological deterioration in childhood. MethodPaediatricians notified cases via the British Paediatric Surveillance Unit between 1997 and 2015. ResultsFifty-three NP-C patients were identified: 29 females, 24 males. Fifteen cases had a systemic presentation (neonatal jaundice and/or hepatosplenomegaly). Thirty-eight had a neurological onset, the commonest presenting symptom being gait disturbance/ataxia (29 cases, 76%). Forty-nine cases eventually had neurological problems, the commonest were school/cognitive difficulties (40, 82%), seizures (33, 67%), dysphagia (20, 41%), dysarthria (18, 37%), cataplexy (17, 35%), and visual deterioration (8, 16%); their commonest abnormal physical signs were vertical supranuclear gaze palsy (35, 71%), hypotonia (19, 39%) and hepatosplenomegaly (19, 39%). The median diagnostic delay in the 38 neurological onset cases was 3 years (range 0.3-12.8). Confirmatory investigations included filipin staining of skin fibroblasts (42 cases), bone marrow examination in 30 (the last in 2011), and increasingly DNA studies, mutations in NP-C1 being found in 20 cases. InterpretationNP-C should be considered in children with progressive neurological deterioration. Subtle neurological problems combined with a history of prolonged neonatal jaundice and/or hepatosplenomegaly may provide early evidence of the disease.

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