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Leukodystrophy is characterized by specific symptoms, including decreased motor function, muscle rigidity, and eventual degeneration of sight and hearing. While the disease is fatal, the age of onset is a key factor, as infants have a typical life expectancy of 2–8 years, while adults typically live more than a decade after onset.
These symptoms first start out with dysfunctions of the autonomic nervous system which result in symptoms such as abnormal functioning of both the bladder and bowel, recurrent blood pressure drops whenever patients stand up, and male erectile dysfunction. [8] [9] [10] Rarely, anhidrosis might also occur alongside these symptoms. [9] [8] [11] [10]
Symptoms include cerebellar ataxia, spasticity, optic atrophy, epilepsy, [1] loss of motor functions, irritability, vomiting, coma, [2] and even fever has been tied to VWM. [3] The neurological disorders and symptoms which occur with VWM are not specific to countries; they are the same all over the world. [ 4 ]
Related disorders in the same disease spectrum as HDLS include Nasu-Hakola disease (polycystic lipomembranous osteodysplasia with sclerosing leukoencephalopathy), and a type of leukodystrophy with pigment-filled macrophages called pigmentary orthochromatic leukodystrophy (POLD). [3] In addition to white matter disease, Nasu-Hakola causes bone ...
Leukoencephalopathy with neuroaxonal spheroids (LENAS), also known as adult-onset leukoencephalopathy with axonal spheroids and pigmented glia (ALSP), hereditary diffuse leukoencephalopathy with spheroids (HDLS) and pigmentary orthochromatic leukodystrophy (POLD) [1] is an extremely rare kind of leukoencephalopathy and is classified as a neurodegenerative disease.
(Reuters) -A person with prior health complications who had contracted bird flu died in Mexico in April and the source of exposure to the virus was unknown, the World Health Organization said on ...
Shooting the same amount of heroin the addict was used to before treatment can more easily lead to a fatal overdose. Three counties in Northern Kentucky — Campbell, Kenton and Boone — are among the hardest hit by the state’s heroin crisis. In 2013, those counties had 93 fatal heroin-related overdoses, according to coroner records.
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