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Query: UMLS:C1762617 (
weakness
)
37,932
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Pompe disease is an autosomal-recessive disorder caused by
acid alpha-glucosidase
deficiency due to mutations in the GAA gene. There are two forms of the disease: infantile-onset Pompe disease and late-onset Pompe disease. The worldwide incidence of both forms of the disease is commonly reported to be 1 in 40,000. Adult patients are affected by limb-girdle muscular
weakness
and respiratory insufficiency. Enzyme replacement therapy with alglucosidase-alpha is available since 2006. There is little knowledge about pregnant woman with Pompe disease. These women should be considered as high-risk pregnant women. Here, we aim to present Cesarean delivery and postpartum management of a case with an interrupted enzyme replacement therapy during pregnancy.
...
PMID:Delivery and postpartum management of a patient with Pompe disease: Case report and review of the literature. 2905 84
We examined patients with limb-girdle muscle
weakness
and/or hyper-CKaemia and undiagnosed muscle biopsy for late onset Pompe disease (LOPD). Patients with an inconclusive limb-girdle muscle
weakness
who presented at our neuromuscular centre between 2005 and 2015 with undiagnosed muscle biopsies were examined by dry blood spot testing (DBS) including determination of the enzyme activity of
acid alpha-glucosidase
(GAA). In the case of depressed enzyme activity, additional gene testing of the GAA gene was carried out. Of the 340 evaluated muscle biopsies, 69 patients fulfilled the inclusion criteria and were examined with DBS. Among those patients, 76% showed a limb-girdle muscle
weakness
and 14% showed a hyper-CKaemia. A diagnosis of LOPD could be established in the case of two patients (2.9%) with reduced GAA enzyme activity and proof of mutations in the GAA gene. One of the two patients presents in the muscle biopsy suggestive features of Pompe disease including vacuoles with positive acid phosphatase reaction. In summary, our results show that a muscle biopsy can be helpful in identifying LOPD patients, but vacuolation with glycogen storage can also be absent. An inconspicuous muscle biopsy does not rule out Pompe disease. Consequently, all patients with limb-girdle muscle
weakness
should be examined by DBS before conducting a muscle biopsy.
...
PMID:Prevalence of adult Pompe disease in patients with proximal myopathic syndrome and undiagnosed muscle biopsy. 2932 2
Pompe disease is an inherited disease caused by
acid alpha-glucosidase
(GAA) deficiency. A single center observational study aimed at assessing the prevalence of late-onset Pompe disease in a high-risk Brazilian population, using the dried blood spot test to detect GAA deficiency as a main screening tool. Dried blood spots were collected for GAA activity assay from 24 patients with "unexplained" limb-girdle muscular
weakness
without vacuolar myopathy in their muscle biopsy. Samples with reduced enzyme activity were also investigated for GAA gene mutations. Of the 24 patients with dried blood spots, one patient (4.2%) showed low GAA enzyme activity (NaG/AaGIA: 40.42; %INH: 87.22%). In this patient, genetic analysis confirmed two heterozygous mutations in the GAA gene (c.-32-13T>G/p.Arg854Ter). Our data confirm that clinicians should look for late-onset Pompe disease in patients whose clinical manifestation is an "unexplained" limb-girdle
weakness
even without vacuolar myopathy in muscle biopsy.
...
PMID:Late-onset Pompe disease: what is the prevalence of limb-girdle muscular weakness presentation? 2974 45
Pompe disease is an autosomal recessive glycogen storage disorder caused by deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme
acid alpha-glucosidase
(GAA). GAA deficiency results in systemic lysosomal glycogen accumulation and cellular disruption in muscle and the central nervous system (CNS). Adeno-associated virus (AAV) gene therapy is ideal for Pompe disease, since a single systemic injection may correct both muscle and CNS pathologies. Using the Pompe mouse (B6;129-Gaa
Tm1Rabn
/J), this study sought to explore if AAVB1, a newly engineered vector with a high affinity for muscle and CNS, reduces systemic
weakness
and improves survival in adult mice. Three-month-old Gaa
-/-
animals were injected with either AAVB1 or AAV9 vectors expressing GAA and tissues were harvested 6 months later. Both AAV vectors prolonged survival. AAVB1-treated animals had a robust weight gain compared to the AAV9-treated group. Vector genome levels, GAA enzyme activity, and histological analysis indicated that both vectors transduced the heart efficiently, leading to glycogen clearance, and transduced the diaphragm and CNS at comparable levels. AAVB1-treated mice had higher GAA activity and greater glycogen clearance in the tongue. Finally, AAVB1-treated animals showed improved respiratory function comparable to wild-type animals. In conclusion, AAVB1-GAA offers a promising therapeutic option for the treatment of muscle and CNS in Pompe disease.
...
PMID:Systemic Delivery of AAVB1-GAA Clears Glycogen and Prolongs Survival in a Mouse Model of Pompe Disease. 2990 18
Glycogen storage disease type II, or Pompe disease, is an autosomal recessive disorder caused by deficiency of lysosomal
acid alpha-glucosidase
(GAA). We performed genetic analysis to confirm the diagnosis of Pompe disease in a 61-year-old patient with progressive
weakness
in extremities, severe Sleep Apnea-Hypopnea Syndrome, a significant reduction of alpha-glucosidase in liquid sample of peripheral blood and muscular biopsy diagnosis. GAA gene sequencing showed the patient is homozygous for the splice-site mutation c.1194+5G>A, considered as nonpathogenic in Pompe Center mutation database. Further molecular RNA characterization of GAA transcripts allowed us to identify abnormal processing of pre-mRNA, leading to aberrant transcripts and a significant reduction of GAA mRNA levels. Our results indicate that c.1194+5G>A is a pathogenic splice-site mutation and should be considered as such for diagnostic purposes. This study emphasizes the potential role of functional studies to determine the consequences of mutations with no evident pathogenicity.
...
PMID:Reevaluating the pathogenicity of the mutation c.1194 +5 G>A in GAA gene by functional analysis of RNA in a 61-year-old woman diagnosed with Pompe disease by muscle biopsy. 3077 Mar 9
Pompe disease is a rare autosomal-recessive disorder characterised by limb-girdle myopathy and respiratory
weakness
in the late-onset form (LOPD). Various mutations in the
acid alpha-glucosidase
gene lead to toxic lysosomal and extra-lysosomal glycogen accumulation in all organs due to ineffective glycogen clearance by the encoded enzyme. Only one randomized trial demonstrated beneficial effects of respiratory function and meters walked in the 6-min walking test with enzyme replacement therapy (ERT). These results were confirmed in several retrospective and prospective observations and in meta-analyses. Due to a potential lifelong therapy, moderate efficacy and high treatment costs time of ERT initiation and cessation is an ongoing matter of debate. So far, several national and international recommendations have been published with different criteria concerning diagnosis, initiation and cessation of ERT in LOPD. We therefore formally analysed recent published recommendations and consensus statements of LOPD using diagnostic nodes (DODES) as a special software tool. With DODES, an objective analysis becomes possible if the content of the recommendations is represented as algorithms using cross-compatible elements. This analysis formally disclosed both, areas of great heterogeneity and concordance for the diagnosis and management of LOPD and paved the way for a Pompe disease burden scale focussing on ERT initiation. According to this investigation further clinical research should concentrate on ERT in pre-symptomatic and severely affected LOPD patients and on cessation criteria for ERT as these issues are areas of international uncertainty and discordance.
...
PMID:Comparison of recent pivotal recommendations for the diagnosis and treatment of late-onset Pompe disease using diagnostic nodes-the Pompe disease burden scale. 3110 35
Brain atrophy, white matter abnormalities, and ventricular enlargement have been described in different neuromuscular diseases (NMDs). We aimed to provide a comprehensive overview of the substantial advancement of brain imaging in neuromuscular diseases by consulting the main libraries (
Pubmed, Scopus
and
Google Scholar
) including the more common forms of muscular dystrophies such as dystrophinopathies, dystroglycanopathies, myotonic dystrophies, facioscapulohumeral dystrophy, limb-girdle muscular dystrophy, congenital myotonia, and congenital myopathies. A consistent, widespread cortical and subcortical involvement of grey and white matter was found. Abnormalities in the functional connectivity in brain networks and metabolic alterations were observed with positron emission tomography (PET) and single photon emission computed tomography (SPECT). Pathological brain changes with cognitive dysfunction seemed to be frequently associated in NMDs. In particular, in congenital muscular dystrophies (CMDs), skeletal muscular
weakness
, severe hypotonia, WM abnormalities, ventricular dilatation and abnormalities in cerebral gyration were observed. In dystroglycanopathy 2I subtype (LGMD2I), adult patients showed subcortical atrophy and a WM periventricular involvement, moderate ventriculomegaly, and enlargement of subarachnoid spaces. Correlations with clinical features have been observed with brain imaging characteristics and alterations were prominent in congenital or childhood onset cases. In myotonic dystrophy type 2 (DM2) symptoms seem to be less severe than in type 1 (DM1). In Duchenne and Becker muscular dystrophies (DMD, BMD) cortical atrophy is associated with minimal ventricular dilatation and WM abnormalities. Late-onset glycogenosis type II (
GSD II
) or Pompe infantile forms are characterized by delayed myelination. Only in a few cases of oculopharyngeal muscular dystrophy (OPMD) central nervous system involvement has been described and associated with executive functions impairment.
...
PMID:Advances in imaging of brain abnormalities in neuromuscular disease. 3110 70
Infantile-onset Pompe disease (IOPD) is characterized by virtually complete absence of
acid alpha-glucosidase
(GAA)-activity, resulting in rapidly progressive hypertrophic cardiomyopathy (HCM), profound skeletal muscle
weakness
, and death usually within the first 12 months of life. Enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) with recombinant GAA in humans started in 1999, and pivotal studies demonstrated that the treatment ameliorated HCM, improved motor function in some patients, and prolonged overall and ventilator-free survival. These outcomes led to the approval of ERT in 2006. Implementation of ERT has uncovered multisystemic character of IOPD, not known in the pre-ERT era. Although ERT has substantially improved the prognosis of IOPD, mortality is still considerable, and decline of motor function with time is frequent in long-term survivors. This review details the new complex IOPD phenotype, outlines problems related to ERT, and highlights unmet needs.
...
PMID:Long-term outcome and unmet needs in infantile-onset Pompe disease. 3139 95
Pompe disease is a rare metabolic disorder due to deficiency of the lysosomal
acid alpha-glucosidase
(GAA) that causes glycogen accumulation in all tissues with a predominant involvement of skeletal muscle. The late onset form of Pompe disease (LOPD) is characterized by a progressive
weakness
of proximal and axial muscles, often mimicking limb-girdle muscular dystrophies or inflammatory myopathies, with respiratory distress mainly due to a diaphragmatic
weakness
. Diagnostic delay is still common, and clinicians need a high index of suspicion to recognize this condition because the disorder is quite rare, the clinical spectrum is wide, and signs and symptoms are not distinguishable from those in other neuromuscular disorders that present in a similar fashion. Diagnostic laboratory tests are quite fast and reliable to detect the enzymatic deficiency. Enzyme replacement therapy has been available for several years, and other new therapeutic strategies such as gene therapy are underway. Here, we discuss the main diagnostic tools currently used for the evaluation of patients with suspected LOPD.
...
PMID:Diagnostic tools in late onset Pompe disease (LOPD). 3139 98
Pompe disease is a neuromuscular disease caused by a deficiency of the lysosomal enzyme
acid alpha-glucosidase
leading to lysosomal and cytoplasmic glycogen accumulation in neurons and striated muscle. In the decade since availability of first-generation enzyme replacement therapy (ERT) a better understanding of the clinical spectrum of disease has emerged. The most severe form of early onset disease is typically identified with symptoms in the first year of life, known as infantile-onset Pompe disease (IOPD). Infants are described at floppy babies with cardiac hypertrophy in the first few months of life. A milder form with late onset (LOPD) of symptoms is mostly free of cardiac involvement with slower rate of progression. Glycogen accumulation in the CNS and skeletal muscle is observed in both IOPD and LOPD. In both circumstances, multi-system disease (principally motoneuron and myopathy) leads to progressive
weakness
with associated respiratory and feeding difficulty. In IOPD the untreated natural history leads to cardiorespiratory failure and death in the first year of life. In the current era of ERT clinical outcomes are improved, yet, many patients have an incomplete response and a substantial unmet need remains. Since the neurological manifestations of the disease are not amenable to peripheral enzyme replacement, we set out to better understand the pathophysiology and potential for treatment of disease manifestations using adeno-associated virus (AAV)-mediated gene transfer, with the first clinical gene therapy studies initiated by our group in 2006. This review focuses on the preclinical studies and clinical study findings which are pertinent to the development of a comprehensive gene therapy strategy for both IOPD and LOPD. Given the advent of newborn screening, a significant focus of our recent work has been to establish the basis for repeat administration of AAV vectors to enhance neuromuscular therapeutic efficacy over the life span.
...
PMID:Pompe disease gene therapy: neural manifestations require consideration of CNS directed therapy. 3139 2
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