A female patient started to develop deafness
and vertigo at the age of 29. In the following years she
became atactic and retinitis pigmentosa was discovered.
The diagnosis of Refsum's disease was reached on the
grounds of the high concentration of phytanic acid
in plasma. The patient died 23 years after onset of
the first symptons. Liver, spleen and kidney showed
lipofuscinosis and pigment-laden macrophages. The
retina was atrophic and its pigment discontinuous. The
meninges contained lipid-laden macrophages. The nerve
cells in brain and spinal cord as well as the astrocytes
and perivascular macrophages stored substances weakly
PAS-positive and sudanophilic. The nerve cells
accumulated lysosomes and residual bodies. In the
astrocytes, the residual bodies were extremely
polymorphous and contained inclusions with bilamellar
ribbon-like structures. In the oligodendroglia the
residual bodies displayed high electron density and
finger print-like pattern. Peroxisomes were found in glial
cells and microperoximes in neurons. The ultrastructural
findings in the present case demonstrate that in terminal
stages phytanic acid can reach the brain parenchyma
passing through the BBB. Further autopsy studies will be
necessary to determine whether these changes are
consistent findings in Refsum's disease