Enzymological diagnosis of a group of lysosomal storage diseases. Review of 5-year experience of 1600 patient-sample referrals.

1980 
: Lysosomal acid hydrolase activities have been measured in extracts of peripheral blood leucocytes of approximately 1600 patients referred from throughout Australia, each of whom was suspected of having a neurolipidosis. Assays for 12 different lysosomal enzymes were performed on each patient as a routine; ten assay systems were based on commercially available substrates, and four used radiolabelled glycosphingolipids prepared in our own laboratory. Of the 85 patients with positive results, 81 were diagnosed as being homozygous-deficient for a particular lysosomal enzyme. These patients comprised nine with GM1-gangliosidosis, 12 with GM2-gangliosidosis (11 of Tay-Sachs' disease and one of Sandhoff's disease), 18 with trihexosylceramide lipidosis (Fabry's disease), eight with beta-galactosylceramide lipidosis (Krabbe's disease), 14 with beta-glucosylceramide lipidosis (Gaucher's disease), two with sphingomyelin lipidosis (Niemann-Pick disease), 13 with metachromatic leucodystrophy and five with alpha-mannosidosis. In addition, four patients were diagnosed as being affected with mucolipidosis Type II (I-cell disease), based on elevated plasma lysosomal enzyme activities, making a total of 85 homozygous-affected patients. Clinically the patients showed wide phenotypic variability within each of the enzyme-deficient states, which did not appear to correlate with the level of "residual" enzyme activity in their leucocyte extracts.
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