Journal of Pediatric and Neonatal Individualized Medicine (Feb 2013)

Peri and intraglomerular haematoxylinophilic deposits in a newborn: answer

  • Sonia Nemolato,
  • Alice Sanna,
  • Clara Gerosa,
  • Daniela Fanni,
  • Giuliana Palmas,
  • Melania Puddu,
  • Cristina Loddo,
  • Claudia Fanni,
  • Peter Van Eyken,
  • Gavino Faa

DOI
https://doi.org/10.7363/020110
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 2, no. 1
pp. 98 – 100

Abstract

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Idiopathic infantile arterial calcification (IIAC) is a rare disease characterized by abnormal calcification of the arterial vessels, resulting in calcium deposits in the wall of medium-sized and large arteries. IIAC is caused by mutations in the ENPP1 gene, localized on chromosome 6q22, resulting in deficiency of the enzyme PC-1 nucleoside triphosphate pyrophosphohydrolase (NPP). Clinical presentation may occur during the intrauterine life, with fetal hydrop, aorto-pulmonary calcification, or as fatal hypertensive cardiomyopathy. In other patients, the clinical presentation is in the postnatal period with hypertrophic cardiomyopathy, with a fatal outcome within 6 months due to intractable heart failure. Here we report the clinico-pathological findings of a preterm affected with IIAC, with particular emphasis on renal glomerular pathological lesion not previously described in this disease.

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