Childhood Acid Maltase Deficiency
- 1 January 1984
- journal article
- case report
- Published by American Medical Association (AMA) in Archives of Neurology
- Vol. 41 (1), 47-52
- https://doi.org/10.1001/archneur.1984.04050130053022
Abstract
• Three children, including two siblings and a patient with sporadic glycogenosis type II (childhood form of acid maltase deficiency [AMD]), were studied clinically, biochemically, and morphologically. In addition to a delay in developmental milestones and mild generalized muscle weakness, nasal vocalization and an electromyographic finding of abnormal insertion voltage, followed by pseudomyotonic discharge, were assumed to be characteristic diagnostic findings for the childhood form of AMD. Since the neutral maltase activity was highest in the muscle biopsy specimen from the patient with the least severe weakness, the enzyme may play a role in reducing muscle involvement. Selective type 2A fiber atrophy and type 2B fiber deficiency in the affected muscles were the common histochemical findings in this particular form of AMD.Keywords
This publication has 6 references indexed in Scilit:
- The symptomatology, morphology and biochemistry of glycogenosis type II (Pompe) in the adultZeitschrift für Neurologie, 1976
- Disorders of Glycogen and Related Macromolecules in the Nervous SystemPublished by Springer Nature ,1972
- The Behavior of Four Fiber Types in Developing and Reinnervated MuscleArchives of Neurology, 1971
- Muscle Fiber Types: How Many and What Kind?Archives of Neurology, 1970
- ACID MALTASE DEFICIENCY IN ADULTS: STUDIES IN FOUR CASES OF A SYNDROME WHICH MAY MIMIC MUSCULAR DYSTROPHY OR OTHER MYOPATHIESBrain, 1970
- Late Infantile Acid Maltase DeficiencyArchives of Neurology, 1968