Volume 24, Issue 1 pp. 65-71
Article

Peripheral and autonomic nervous system involvement in chronic GM2-gangliosidosis

M. S. Salman

Corresponding Author

M. S. Salman

Division of Neurology, University of Toronto and Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto

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J. T. R. Clarke

J. T. R. Clarke

Department of Pediatrics, University of Toronto and Division of Clinical Genetics, Hospital for Sick Children, Toronto

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G. Midroni

G. Midroni

Department of Medicine, University of Toronto and Division of Neurology, St Michael's Hospital, Toronto

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M. B. Waxman

M. B. Waxman

Department of Medicine, University of Toronto and Division of Cardiology, Toronto General Hospital, Toronto, Canada

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First published: 01 February 2001
Citations: 23

Abstract

GM2-gangliosidosis (McKusick 268800 and 272800) is a rare hereditary, progressive disorder of ganglioside metabolism caused by deficiency of lysosomal β-hexosaminidase (EC 3.2.1.52) activity. It is characterized by severe central nervous system involvement. Involvement of the peripheral and autonomic nervous system has been suspected but rarely documented in published case reports in the chronic form of the disease. Four patients, aged 24–29 years, with chronic GM2-gangliosidosis were examined prospectively for evidence of peripheral and autonomic nervous system dysfunction. All had nerve conduction studies, sympathetic skin responses and cardiac monitoring during the head tilt-table test. Three patients had objective evidence of autonomic dysfunction with abnormal sympathetic nervous skin responses and axonal sensorimotor polyneuropathy. None of the patients had evidence of significant cardiovascular autonomic dysfunction on the head tilt-table test. The peripheral and autonomic nervous system may be involved in patients with chronic GM2-gangliosidosis. In some cases, this may be clinically significant. On the other hand, cardiovascular autonomic instability is apparently not a significant problem in young adult patients with the disease.

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