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Amyloid
The Journal of Protein Folding Disorders
Volume 16, 2009 - Issue 4
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Case Report

Withdrawn: Severe ataxia with neuropathy in hereditary gelsolin amyloidosis

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Page 246 | Published online: 20 Oct 2009
 

Abstract

Hereditary gelsolin amyloidosis (AGel amyloidosis) is a systemic disorder caused by a G654A or G654T gelsolin mutation, reported from Europe, North America, and Japan. Principal clinical signs are corneal lattice dystrophy, cutis laxa and cranial neuropathy, often deleterious at advanced age. Peripheral neuropathy, if present, is usually mild. We report a 78- year old male Finnish patient who presented with ataxia and mainly sensory peripheral polyneuropathy (PNP) signs, causing severe disability and ambulation loss. Electrophysiological studies showed severe generalized chronic mainly axonal sensorimotor PNP with facial paralysis. In magnetic resonance imaging proximal lower limb and axial muscle atrophy with fatty degeneration as well as moderate spinal cord atrophy were seen. A G654A gelsolin mutation was demonstrated but no other possible causes of his disability were found. At age 79 he became bedridden and died of pulmonary embolism. Neuropathological examination revealed marked gelsolin amyloid deposition at vascular and connective tissue sites along the entire length of the peripheral nerves extending to the spinal nerve roots, associated with severe degeneration of nerve fibers and posterior columns. Our report shows that advanced AGel amyloidosis due to degeneration of central and distal sensory nerve projections results in deleterious ataxia with fatal outcome. Severe posterior column atrophy may reflect radicular AGel deposition, although even altered gelsolin – actin interactions in neural cells possibly contribute to neurodegeneration with successive ataxia in carriers of a G654A gelsolin mutation.

Acknowledgements

This work was supported by Helsinki University Central Hospital Funding. We thank Tuija Järvinen and Tanja Eriksson for skillful technical assistance.

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