Metabolic Brain Disease | 2019

Laboratory diagnosis of the Niemann-Pick type C disease: an inherited neurodegenerative disorder of cholesterol metabolism

 
 

Abstract


Niemann-Pick type C disease (NPC) is a genetically determined neurodegenerative metabolic disease resulting from the mutations in the NPC1 or NPC2 genes. It belongs to the lysosomal storage diseases and its main cause is impaired cholesterol transport in late endosomes or lysosomes. NPC is inherited in an autosomal recessive trait. Due to the wide range in age of onset, often unspecific clinical picture and varying dynamics of disease progression, the diagnosis is very difficult and long-lasting. The most characteristic visceral symptoms are hepato- or hepatosplenomegaly, which may appear independently of neurological or psychiatric symptoms at various stages of the disease. Available biochemical biomarkers should be tested as early as possible in patients presenting with hepato- or hepatosplenomegaly, long-lasting cholestatic jaundice in neonates or infantile patients, as well as in individuals at any age with: vertical supranuclear gaze palsy (VSGP), ataxia, dystonia, frontotemporal dementia and untreatable schizophrenia or psychosis. Research on biomarkers which can detect NPC patients (Cholestan-3β, 5α, 6β-triol, 7-ketocholesterol, lysosphingomyelin isoforms and bile acid metabolites) is still ongoing, although they are not specific for the NPC disease only. This mini review describes currently used diagnostic methods.

Volume 34
Pages 1253 - 1260
DOI 10.1007/s11011-019-00445-w
Language English
Journal Metabolic Brain Disease

Full Text