TY - JOUR
T1 - Histopathology of Sanfilippo's Syndrome
AU - Del Monte, Monte A.
AU - Maumenee, Irene H.
AU - Green, William R.
AU - Kenyon, Kenneth R.
PY - 1983/8
Y1 - 1983/8
N2 - A 19-year-old woman with Sanfilippo's syndrome had poor vision, a flat electroretinographic pattern, and fundus changes similar to those in retinitis pigmentosa. Histology of her eyes by phasecontrast and electron microscopy showed extensive intracellular accumulation of fibrillogranular and membranous lamellar vacuoles in cornea, trabecular meshwork, iris, lens, ciliary body, and sclera. Retinal ganglion cells, retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), and optic nerve glia were similarly involved. Retinal pigment epithelial hyperplasia and hypopigmentation, intraretinal RPE migration, vascular attenuation, and marked photoreceptor loss were notable and closely resembled that occurring in inherited retinitis pigmentosa. We assume that the patient's blindness was due to photoreceptor cell loss, since the ganglion cells and optic nerve seemed to be intact. Although the cause of photoreceptor loss is unclear, the massive storage of acid mucopolysaccharide and lipofuscin within the RPE might disturb its essential metabolic functions and lead to photoreceptor degeneration.
AB - A 19-year-old woman with Sanfilippo's syndrome had poor vision, a flat electroretinographic pattern, and fundus changes similar to those in retinitis pigmentosa. Histology of her eyes by phasecontrast and electron microscopy showed extensive intracellular accumulation of fibrillogranular and membranous lamellar vacuoles in cornea, trabecular meshwork, iris, lens, ciliary body, and sclera. Retinal ganglion cells, retinal pigment epithelium (RPE), and optic nerve glia were similarly involved. Retinal pigment epithelial hyperplasia and hypopigmentation, intraretinal RPE migration, vascular attenuation, and marked photoreceptor loss were notable and closely resembled that occurring in inherited retinitis pigmentosa. We assume that the patient's blindness was due to photoreceptor cell loss, since the ganglion cells and optic nerve seemed to be intact. Although the cause of photoreceptor loss is unclear, the massive storage of acid mucopolysaccharide and lipofuscin within the RPE might disturb its essential metabolic functions and lead to photoreceptor degeneration.
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U2 - 10.1001/archopht.1983.01040020257020
DO - 10.1001/archopht.1983.01040020257020
M3 - Article
C2 - 6411049
AN - SCOPUS:0020592329
SN - 0003-9950
VL - 101
SP - 1255
EP - 1262
JO - Archives of ophthalmology
JF - Archives of ophthalmology
IS - 8
ER -