Article ID Journal Published Year Pages File Type
1998256 Molecular Genetics and Metabolism 2015 7 Pages PDF
Abstract

•Non-invasive PFTs are tested for patients with Morquio syndrome.•Non-invasive PFTs cover younger and/or physically handicapped patients.•Results of conventional spirometry and non-invasive PFTs were correlated.•Morquio patients do not always present restrictive and/or obstructive lung disease.•Proposed PFTs can be applied to other types of MPS

In clinical practice, respiratory function tests are difficult to perform in Morquio syndrome patients due to their characteristic skeletal dysplasia, small body size and lack of cooperation of young patients, where in some cases, conventional spirometry for pulmonary function is too challenging. To establish feasible clinical pulmonary endpoints and determine whether age impacts lung function in Morquio patients non-invasive pulmonary tests and conventional spirometry were evaluated.The non-invasive pulmonary tests: impulse oscillometry system, pneumotachography, and respiratory inductance plethysmography in conjunction with conventional spirometry were evaluated in twenty-two Morquio patients (18 Morquio A and 4 Morquio B) (7 males), ranging from 3 to 40 years of age.Twenty-two patients were compliant with non-invasive tests (100%) with the exception of IOS (81.8%–18 patients). Seventeen patients (77.3%) were compliant with spirometry testing. All subjects had normal vital signs at rest including > 95% oxygen saturation, end tidal CO2 (38–44 mm Hg), and age-appropriate heart rate (mean = 98.3, standard deviation = 19) (two patients were deviated). All patients preserved normal values in the impulse oscillometry system, pneumotachography, and respiratory inductance plethysmography, although predicted forced expiratory total (72.8 ± 6.9 SE%) decreased with age and was below normal; phase angle (35.5 ± 16.5°), %rib cage (41.6 ± 12.7%), resonant frequency, and forced expiratory volume in 1 s/forced expiratory volume total (110.0 ± 3.2 SE%) were normal and not significantly impacted by age.The proposed non-invasive pulmonary function tests are able to cover a greater number of patients (young patients and/or wheel-chair bound), thus providing a new diagnostic approach for the assessment of lung function in Morquio syndrome which in many cases may be difficult to evaluate. Morquio patients studied herein demonstrated no clinical or functional signs of restrictive and/or obstructive lung disease.

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