Etheridge Tyler, Kellom Elizabeth R, Sullivan Rachel, Ver Hoeve James N, Schmitt Melanie A
University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health, Department of Ophthalmology & Visual Sciences, Madison, WI, United States.
Am J Ophthalmol Case Rep. 2020 Aug 12;20:100873. doi: 10.1016/j.ajoc.2020.100873. eCollection 2020 Dec.
We present 3 cases of Alström syndrome (ALMS) that highlight the importance of the ophthalmic exam, as well as the diagnostic challenges and management considerations of this ultra-rare disease.
The first case is of a 2-year-old boy with history of spasmus nutans who presented with head bobbing and nystagmus. The second patient is a 5-year-old boy with history of infantile dilated cardiomyopathy status post heart transplant, Burkitt lymphoma status post chemotherapy, obesity, global developmental delay, and high hyperopia previously thought to have cortical visual impairment secondary to heart surgery/possible ischemic event. This patient presented with nystagmus, photophobia, and reduced vision. The third case involves a 8-year-old boy with history of obesity, bilateral optic nerve atrophy, hyperopic astigmatism, exotropia, and nystagmus. Upon presentation to the consulting pediatric ophthalmologist, none of the patients had yet been diagnosed with ALMS. All 3 cases were subsequently found to have an electroretinogram (ERG) that exhibited severe global depression and to carry pathogenic variants.
ALMS is an autosomal recessive disease caused by variations, characterized by cone-rod dystrophy, obesity, progressive sensorineural hearing loss, cardiomyopathy, insulin resistance, and multiorgan dysfunction. Retinal dystrophy diagnosis is critical given clinical criteria and detection rates of genetic testing. Early diagnosis is extremely important because progression to flat ERG leads to the inability to differentiate between rod-cone or cone-rod involvement, either of which have their own differential diagnoses. In our series, the ophthalmic exam and abnormal ERG prompted further genetic testing and the subsequent diagnosis of ALMS. Multidisciplinary care ensures the best possible outcome with the ophthalmologist playing a key role.
我们报告3例阿尔斯特伦综合征(ALMS)病例,以强调眼科检查的重要性,以及这种超罕见疾病的诊断挑战和管理考量。
第一例是一名2岁男孩,有眼球震颤病史,表现为点头和眼球震颤。第二例患者是一名5岁男孩,有婴儿期扩张型心肌病病史,已接受心脏移植,有伯基特淋巴瘤病史,已接受化疗,肥胖,全面发育迟缓,以及此前被认为继发于心脏手术/可能的缺血事件的高度远视性皮质视力损害。该患者表现为眼球震颤、畏光和视力下降。第三例涉及一名8岁男孩,有肥胖、双侧视神经萎缩、远视散光、外斜视和眼球震颤病史。在向小儿眼科会诊医生就诊时,所有患者均未被诊断为ALMS。随后发现所有3例患者的视网膜电图(ERG)均表现为严重的整体抑制,并携带致病变异。
ALMS是一种由变异引起的常染色体隐性疾病,其特征为锥杆营养不良、肥胖、进行性感音神经性听力丧失、心肌病、胰岛素抵抗和多器官功能障碍。鉴于临床标准和基因检测的检出率,视网膜营养不良的诊断至关重要。早期诊断极其重要,因为进展为平坦的ERG会导致无法区分杆体-锥体或锥体-杆体受累情况,而这两种情况都有各自的鉴别诊断。在我们的系列病例中,眼科检查和异常的ERG促使进一步进行基因检测,并随后诊断为ALMS。多学科护理可确保获得最佳结果,眼科医生发挥关键作用。