The vestibular and oculomotor dysfunction in Fabry disease: a cohort study in China

Objective Whereas a few studies have evaluated vestibular involvement in Fabry disease (FD), the relationship between vestibular/oculomotor abnormalities and disease-specific biomarkers remain unclear. Therefore, we seek to evaluate these quantitatively and analyze their relationship with disease ph...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Authors: Yinglin Leng, Yawen Zhao, Hong Zhou, Xia Ling, Xia Wang, Guiping Zhao, Wei Zhang
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Taylor & Francis Group 2025-12-01
Series:Annals of Medicine
Subjects:
Online Access:https://www.tandfonline.com/doi/10.1080/07853890.2025.2453626
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
Description
Summary:Objective Whereas a few studies have evaluated vestibular involvement in Fabry disease (FD), the relationship between vestibular/oculomotor abnormalities and disease-specific biomarkers remain unclear. Therefore, we seek to evaluate these quantitatively and analyze their relationship with disease phenotype and biomarkers in FD.Methods This cohort study enrolled 37 Chinese FD patients registered in our center. The vestibular/oculomotor examinations were performed, including the videonystagmography, the caloric test and the video head-impulse test. Statistical analyses were made between different subgroups of patients.Results Visuo-oculomotor dysfunctions were found in 30/37 (81.1%) patients. Vestibulo-oculomotor dysfunctions were revealed in 9/22 (40.9%) patients. Statistical tests showed: (1) significantly higher Mainz Severity Score Index in patients with prolonged saccade latency [20(18,33) VS 13(9,22), p = 0.008] and vestibulo-oculomotor dysfunction [23(20,31) VS 9(5.5,12.5), p = 0.024], (2) significantly higher total small-vessel disease score in subgroups with prolonged saccade latency [2.5(1,3.5) VS 1(0,2), p = 0.038], defective smooth pursuit [3(2,4) VS 1(0,2), p = 0.003], defective optokinetic nystagmus [4(2,4) VS 1(0.2), p = 0.009] and vestibulo-oculomotor dysfunction [1(1,3) VS 0(0,1), p = 0.028], (3) significantly lower α-Gal A activity (μmol/L/h) in subgroups with defective saccades [0.44(0.25,1.93) VS 1.85(0.75,5.52), p = 0.015] and defective smooth pursuit [0.30(0.17,0.44) VS 0.96(0.39,2.40), p = 0.008], and (4) significantly elevated plasma globotriaosylsphingosine (ng/ml) in patients with defective saccades [74.16(11.05,89.18) VS 10.64(7.08,36.32), p = 0.034], than in patients without those abnormalities.Conclusion A high incidence of extensive vestibular and oculomotor dysfunction was observed in patients with FD, with the neuro-otological dysfunction being closely related to the disease burden and biomarkers like α-Gal A activity and lyso-Gb3.
ISSN:0785-3890
1365-2060