0000000000249602

AUTHOR

Hugo W. Moser

showing 3 related works from this author

A case of combined Farber and Sandhoff disease

1989

We describe a patient with the biochemically established combination of Farber and Sandhoff disease. A 6-month-old girl of consanguineous Turkish parents presented with hoarseness, stridor, scattered skin nodules, painful swelling of hand joints and ankles, and cherry-red macular spots. Until the age of 2 years her motor and physical condition deteriorated distinctly, however her mental state remained unchanged. A biopsied skin nodule disclosed lysosomal inclusions within storage cells that were typical of Farber disease (curved tubular structures). However, other inclusions (e.g. zebra bodies) were also found. Biochemical findings included ceramide accumulation in skin nodules and cultured…

medicine.medical_specialtyCeramidePathologyBiopsySandhoff diseaseCeramidesLipid Metabolism Inborn Errorschemistry.chemical_compoundInternal medicinemedicineHumansHexosaminidaseSkinSphingolipidsFarber diseasebusiness.industryInfantSandhoff DiseaseCeramidasemedicine.diseaseSkin NoduleEndocrinologyCeramidase activitychemistryPediatrics Perinatology and Child HealthFemalebusinessSphingomyelinEuropean Journal of Pediatrics
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Acid ceramidase deficiency: Farber lipogranulomatosis, spinal muscular atrophy associated with progressive myoclonic epilepsy and peripheral osteolys…

2020

Abstract An inherited deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme ceramidase leads to accumulation of the sphingolipid ceramide in several organs such as skin, liver, brain and other tissues, resulting in a broad spectrum of clinical manifestations. The most common form, called Farber lipogranulomatosis, is characterized by subcutaneous skin nodules and a progressive hoarseness, in many cases also the central nervous system is affected. A lethal hydrops fetalis represents the most severe form. A ceramidase deficiency was also found in a few patients in whom neurological symptoms such as spinal muscular atrophy and myoclonus epilepsy dominated the clinical picture, in other adult patients peripheral …

Pathologymedicine.medical_specialtyOsteolysisbusiness.industryCentral nervous systemSpinal muscular atrophyProgressive myoclonus epilepsyCeramidasemedicine.diseaseSphingolipidmedicine.anatomical_structureHydrops fetalismedicineASAH1business
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Acid Ceramidase Deficiency

2015

Abstract A deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme ceramidase leads to accumulation of the sphingolipid ceramide in several organs such as skin, liver, brain and other tissues, resulting in a broad spectrum of clinical manifestations. The most common form, called Farber lipogranulomatosis, is characterized by subcutaneous skin nodules and a progressive hoarseness, in many cases also the central nervous system is affected. A lethal hydrops fetalis represents the most severe form. A ceramidase deficiency was also found in a few patients in whom neurological symptoms such as spinal muscular atrophy and myoclonus epilepsy dominated the clinical picture. In the ceramidase gene, which has been mapped …

medicine.medical_specialtyFarber diseasePathologyGenetic enhancementCentral nervous systemProgressive myoclonus epilepsySpinal muscular atrophyBiologyCeramidasemedicine.diseaseSphingolipidEndocrinologymedicine.anatomical_structureHydrops fetalisInternal medicinemedicine
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