Rapidly Progressive Type III Gaucher Disease: Deterioration Following Partial Splenectomy

Abstract
Total splenectomy has been found to accelerate diseaes progression in Type III Gaucher disease, therefore partial splenic resection was performed in a 28 month old girl with rapidly progressive (non-Norrbottnian) Type III disease to alleviate the effects of hypersplenism. Surgery failed to arrest the disease process and splenomegaly recurred within three months. The erythrocyte glucosylceramide lvel increased post-operatively. Post-mortem studies revealed dense accumulation of Gaucher cells in spleen, liver, lungs, bone marrow and within the central nervous system. The glucosylceramide content of brain and liver was elevated to the range previously noted in splenectomised Norrbottnian patients. Thus, in rapidly progressive Type III Gaucher disease, neither total nor partial splenectomy alone provides a favourable outcome.