Tuberculous sacroiliitis in a patient with Gaucher disease


Cite item

Full Text

Abstract

Gaucher disease (GD) is an inherited enzymatic defect resulting from a deficiency of acid Β-glucosidase, a lysosomal enzyme involved in the degradation of cell metabolic products. The major clinical manifestations of GD are hepatosplenomegaly, cytopenia, and bony involvement varying from asymptomatic osteopenia to severest osteoporosis and ischemic necrosis to develop irreversible orthopedic defects. Timely enzyme replacement therapy with recombinant glucosidase makes it possible to arrest disease progression and to prevent damage to the vital organs. However, GD in adult patients is frequently diagnosed in the presence of occurring osteoarticular lesions (arthrosis deformans, abnormal fractures). In these instances, besides enzyme replacement therapy, high-quality orthopedic care is required. The description of the case history of a patient undergoing splenectomy in childhood is given as a clinical example of severe osteoarticular lesion in GD and complex differential diagnosis with the intercurrent disease extrapulmonary tuberculosis.

About the authors

E A Lukina

Гематологический научный центр Минздрава России, Москва

V E Mamonov

Гематологический научный центр Минздрава России, Москва

K A Lukina

Гематологический научный центр Минздрава России, Москва

V A Khomenko

Гематологический научный центр Минздрава России, Москва

M M Pisetskiĭ

Гематологический научный центр Минздрава России, Москва

G A Iatsyk

Гематологический научный центр Минздрава России, Москва

References

  1. Руководство по гематологии. Под ред. А.И. Воробьева. М: Ньюдиамед 2003: 202-205.
  2. Futerman A.H., Zimran A. (eds.) Gaucher disease. Boca Raton: Taylor & Francis Group, LLC 2007.
  3. Лукина Е.А. Болезнь Гоше. М: Литтерра 2011.

Copyright (c) 2013 Consilium Medicum

Creative Commons License
This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International License.
 
 


This website uses cookies

You consent to our cookies if you continue to use our website.

About Cookies