Neuropsychological Trends (Nov 2016)

Cognitive impairment and Fabry Disease: a case report with mutation S126G

  • Razza, Grazia,
  • Spadaro, Daniela,
  • Giordano, Antonello,
  • Scalia, Simone,
  • Colomba, Paolo,
  • Zizzo, Carmela,
  • Duro, Giovanni,
  • Iemolo, Francesco

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7358/neur-2016-020-razz
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20
pp. 173 – 185

Abstract

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Anderson-Fabry Disease is a lysosomal storage disease, multisystem, progressive, hereditary, linked to the X-chromosome. Specifically, it is characterized by a glycosphingolipid metabolism due to the reduction or absence of Alpha-galactosidase, an enzyme activity lisosomile gene mutation GLA (Xq21.3-q22), which encodes the enzyme. The decreased activity causes the accumulation of globotriaosylceramide (Gb3) within lysosomes, which in turn sets off a cascade of cellular events. The clinical picture presents a wide spectrum of manifestations of multiple systems: neurological, skin, kidney, cardiovascular disease, auditory and vestibular and cerebrovascular. Despite the recent interest in the involvement of cognitive studies in literature have not yet produced enough results to outline a possible neuropsychological profile of course. Also, not all researchers agree on the existence of a specific cognitive deficit of Fabry Disease (FD). The case discussed here is a example of a neuropsychological profile in patient with FD (mutation p.S126G).

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