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Niemann-Pick
Overview | Symptoms | Treatment | Prevention
Sphingomyelinase deficiency (type A Niemann-Pick disease)
Treatment For Types A and B Niemann-Pick the ASM gene has been isolated and extensively studied. DNA testing and prenatal diagnosis is currently available. Research into treatments for Types A and B NPD has progressed rapidly since the early 1990's. Mount Sinai School of Medicine is conducting research on bone marrow transplantation, enzyme replacement therapy, and gene therapy. All of these therapies have had some success against Type B Niemann-Pick in a laboratory environment. Unfortunately, none of the potential therapies has been effective against Type A. For Type C Niemann-Pick, no specific treatment is available. A healthy, low-cholesterol diet is recommended. However research into low-cholesterol diets and cholesterol-lowering drugs do not indicate that these halt the progress of the disease or change cholesterol metabolism at the cellular level. Additionally, many Type C symptoms, such as cataplexy and seizures, can be controlled or tempered by drugs. The National Niemann-Pick Disease Foundation website has more in-depth reporting on the research into potential treatments. Prognosis Although Types A and B are both caused by the same enzymatic deficiency, the clinical prognosis for these two groups of patients is very different. Type A Niemann-Pick is a severe neurologic disease, which generally leads to death by 2 to 3 years of age. In contrast, patients with Type B generally have little or no neurologic involvement and may survive into late childhood or adulthood. The underlying reason for this dramatic difference in the two forms of the disease is not really understood, and, at present, it is not possible to accurately predict the severity of the disease by enzyme testing. A child showing signs of Type C before one year of age may not live to school age. Children showing symptoms after entering school may live into their mid to late teens, with few surviving into their twenties. Complications Call Your Health Care Provider If: Call for an appointment with your health care provider and genetic counselor if you have a family history of this disorder and you plan to have children. Considering calling your health care provider if you have a child that has feeding problems, does not seem to be developing properly, or seems to be not gaining weight properly.
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