Definition of Idiocy, amaurotic familial
Idiocy, amaurotic familial: An
outdated term for Tay-Sachs disease (TSD) which is
concisely defined by OMIM (Online Mendelian Inheritance in
Man) as "an autosomal recessive, progressive
neurodegenerative disorder, which in the classic infantile
form, is usually fatal by age 2 or 3 years, results from
deficiency of the enzyme hexosaminidase A. " "Autosomal"
points to the gene for TSD residing on a nonsex (autosomal)
chromosome (namely, chromosome15q23-q24). "Recessive"
indicates a person with 2 copies of the gene has TSD
whereas someone with 1 copy is a carrier in normal health.
TSD worsens, with time, as the central nervous system
progressively deteriorates.
The "classic" ("textbook") type
of TSD has its insidious onset in infancy. The child with
TSD usually develops normally for the first few months of
life. An exaggerated startle reaction may first be noted.
Head control is lost by 6-8 months of age. The infant
cannot roll over or sit up. Spasticity and rigidity
develop. Excessive drooling and convulsions become evident.
Blindness and head enlargement set in by the second year.
"Fatal by age 2 or 3 years" today would be modified to
"fatal by age 5." After age 2, total constant nursing care
is needed. Death is due usually to cachexia (wasting away)
or aspiration pneumonia initiated by food going down "the
wrong way" into the lungs.
TSD is due to deficiency of an
enzyme (a protein needed to catalyze a specific chemical
reaction within the body). Lack of the enzyme which
results in failure to process a lipid (a fat) which
accumulates and is deposited in the brain and other
tissues, to their detriment. The enzyme is called
hexosaminidase-A (hex-A) and the lipid that is deposited is
called GM2-ganglioside. TSD is a model of a fatal
metabolic disease that occurs primarily within a well-
defined subpopulation. It is one of several genetic
diseases found more often in persons of Jewish origin.
(Other Jewish genetic diseases include Gaucher disease,
Niemann-Pick disease, Bloom syndrome, and factor XI
deficiency). The frequency of TSD is much higher in Ashkenazi
Jews (of European origin) than in other groups of Jews. (In
the U.S., 95% of Jews are Ashkenazi and are at risk for
TSD). TSD occurs more rarely in non-Jews.
Knowledge of
the biochemical basis of TSD has permitted screening programs
for carrier detection and prenatal diagnosis of TSD. There
are forms of TSD with somewhat more hex-A and hence later
onset, termed juvenile TSD and adult TSH. Alternative
names for TSD itself are type 1 GM2-gangliosidosis, B
variant GM2-gangliosidosis, hexosaminidase A deficiency,
hex-A deficiency.
TSD is named for the English physician
Waren Tay (1843-1927) and the New York neurologist Bernard
(Barney) Sachs (1858-1944). Tay in 1881 studied an infant
with progressive neurological impairment and described
"symmetrical changes in the yellow spot in each eye", the
"cherry-red spots" characteristic of TSD. Sachs saw a child
in 1887 and the child's sister in 1898 with the cherry-red
spots and "arrested cerebral development" and in 1910 he
demonstrated the presence of accumulated lipid in the brain
and retina.
Last Editorial Review: 6/25/1998
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