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Number 08-15 Danon Disease – a rare cause of LV hypertrophy
Case from: Dorota Piotrowska-Kownacka, Lukasz Kownacki, Leszek
Krolicki. Medical University of Warsaw
History: 20 years old male, history of RF ablation for WPW
syndrome, without prior history of heart failure.
Echo: severe hypertrophy of LV with preserved global
and regional function. Patient referred for CMR
CMR cine: Severe, symmetric LV hypertrophy without LVOT obstruction,
increased LV mass (400 g), long axis impairment and reduced thickening.
CMR rest perfusion: (“first pass method”; Gd-DTPA
0.1mmol/kg b.w.; 4 ml/s): Significant perfusion defects noted, not all sub-endocardial
– atypical for coronary artery disease.
CMR Delayed enhancement (DE): Extensive delayed enhancement,
not all subendocardial, some matching the perfusion defects. Total volume of
delayed enhancement: >25 % of LV muscle volume.
CMR interpretation: CMR results suggested a cardiomyopathy
with hypertrophy, possibly non-sarcomeric. Cardiac and skeletal muscle biopsies
demonstrated Danon’s disease.* Danon's Disease is an X linked glycogen
storage disease leading to severe LV hypertrophy and death in young males. The
only available form of treatment is cardiac transplantation.
*Stained using monoclonal antisera against N-terminal of dystrophin
and antisera against LAMP-2. In immunohistochemical analysis the vacuolar membrane
seen in skeletal muscle was decorated with antibody against dystrophin and such
vacuoles were negative for LAMP-2.
References:
Yang et al. Danon Disease as an Underrecognized Cause of Hypertrophic
Cardiomyopathy in Children. Circulation.
2005;112:1612-1617. (full text)
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