Blood Smear as A Clue to The Diagnosis of GM1 Gangliosidosis

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Ann Hematol Onco. 2024; 11(2): 1449.

Blood Smear as A Clue to The Diagnosis of GM1 - Gangliosidosis

Konyukhova TV; Trukhina EV*

Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory, Dmitry Rogachev National Medical Research Center of Pediatric Hematology, Oncology and Immunology, Russian Federation

*Corresponding author: Trukhina EV Clinical and Diagnostic Laboratory, Dmitry Rogachev National Medical Research Center of Pediatric Hematology, Oncology and Immunology,1 Samory Mashela St., Moscow 117997, Russia. Tel: +79771720250 Email: Ekaterina-87@bk.ru

Received: March 28, 2024 Accepted: April 23, 2024 Published: April 30, 2024

Abstract

GM1 gangliosidosis is a rare hereditary disease from the group of lysosomal accumulation diseases, caused by deficiency of the enzyme Β-galactosidase and leading to abnormal accumulation of metabolic by-products. GM1 – gangliosidosis is accompanied by a number of cytological disorders: multiple vacuoles in lymphocytes; faintly stained, irregularly distributed granules and cytoplasmic vacuolation in eosinophils [1-3]. The article presents a clinical case of GM-1 – gangliosidosis type 1 of a 5-month-old child, which became possible to assume during the study of peripheral blood smears.

Keywords: GM1 gangliosidosis; Vacuolated lymphocytes; abnormal eosinophils

Introduction

From birth, a 5-month-old girl has a delay in a development, tetraparesis, hepatosplenomegaly, dilation (expansion) of the heart cavities, external-internal hydrocephalus, and hearing loss. Test of a peripheral blood smear revealed abnormal lymphocytes with numerous cytoplasmic vacuoles (Figure 1). Also noteworthy were eosinophils with poorly stained, irregularly distributed granules, sometimes with vacuolation (Figure 2). Neutrophils and monocytes had no abnormalities in morphology.

Citation: Konyukhova TV, Trukhina EV. Blood Smear as A Clue to The Diagnosis of GM1 – Gangliosidosis. Ann Hematol Onco. 2024; 11(2): 1449.