0521779407-13 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 4, 2007 21:15
Lysosomal Diseases 939
■Fabry disease [alpha-galactosidase A]
■Farber disease [ceramidase]
■Gaucher disease [glucocerebrosidase]
■GM1 gangliosidosis [beta-galactosidase]
■Tay-Sachs/Sandhoff disease/GM2 gangliosidosis [hexosaminidase]
■Krabbe [galactosylceramidase]
■Metachromatic leukodystophy [arylsulfatase]
■Neuronal ceroid lipofucinosis/Batten disease [multiple defects, not
all are known. Eight genetic loci designated CLN1-8]
■Niemann-Pick types A, B, C [sphingomyelinase in A and B, choles-
terol transport in C]
■Salla disease [sialic acid transporter]
■Sialidosis [alpha-neuraminidase]
management
What to Do First
■Supportive in most cases
General Measures
■Antiseizure medication (broad-spectrum drugs – e.g., levetirac-
etam, topiramate, lamotrigine, zonisamide, valproate; if myoclonic
seizures consider clonazepam, chlorazepate, diazepam, lorazepam)
■Antispasticity drugs (e.g., diazepam, lioresal, dantrolene)
■Adaptive equipment
■Genetic counseling for family members
specific therapy
■Bone marrow transplant in some cases, especially presymptomatic
■Future?: Stem cells, gene therapy
follow-up
n/a
complications and prognosis
■Rapidly progressive and fatal: Niemann-Pick-A, Tay-Sachs/Sandhoff
disease/GM2, Farber disease, infant Neuronal ceroid lipofuci-
nosis/Batten disease, infant and juvenile Gaucher disease, infantile
Krabbe
■Slowly progressive over years: Niemann-Pick B, Niemann-Pick C,
Fabry disease; late-onset Gaucher disease, Krabbe, metachromatic
leukodystophy, neuronal ceroid lipofucinosis/Batten disease