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Kearns-Sayre syndrome with features of Pearson's marrow-pancreas syndrome and a novel 2905-base pair mitochondrial DNA deletion.
Authors:M W Becher  M L Wills  W W Noll  O Hurko  D L Price
Affiliation:Department of Pathology, Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine, Baltimore, MD, USA.
Abstract:
Kearns-Sayre syndrome (KSS) and Pearson's marrow-pancreas syndrome (PMPS) are rare disorders caused by the same molecular defect, one of several deletion mutations in mitochondrial DNA (mtDNA). KSS is an encephalomyopathy with ophthalmoplegia, retinal degeneration, ataxia, and endocrine abnormalities. PMPS is a disorder of childhood characterized by refractory anemia, vacuolization of bone marrow cells, and exocrine pancreas dysfunction. Children with PMPS that have a mild phenotype, or are supported through bone marrow failure, often develop the encephalomyopathic features of KSS. The subject of numerous reports in the neuromuscular, genetic, and pediatric literature in recent years, very few cases of either disorder have ever been studied at autopsy. We report the results of our studies of a patient with clinically documented KSS who presented with renal dysfunction and was found to have a novel mtDNA deletion and degenerative changes in the central nervous system, retina, skeletal muscle, and pancreas.
Keywords:
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