A total of 300 patients (15%) with sphingolipidoses were diagnosed; there were deficiencies of arylsulfatase A [metachromatic leukodystrophy (MLD)] in 93 (31%), hexosaminidase [Sandhoff disease (SHD)] in 62 (20.7%), hexosaminidase A [Tay-Sachs disease (TSD)] in 15 (5%), beta-galactosidase (GM1 gangliosidosis) in 35 (11.7%), alpha-galactosidase (Fabry disease) in one (0.3%) cerebroside beta-galactosidase (Krabbe disease) in 65 (21.7%) and glucosylceramidase (Gaucher disease) in 29 (9.6%).
Globoid cell leukodystrophy (GLD) is an autosomal recessive disorder of infants, caused by deficient activity of cerebroside-beta-galactosidase resulting in loss of myelin accompanied by loss of oligodendrocytes.
Chorionic villi obtained during the first trimester from a pregnancy at risk for Krabbe's disease were shown to have reduced cerebroside-beta-galactosidase (E.C.3.2.1.46) activity using the artificial substrate trinitrophenylaminolauryl galactocerebroside (TNPAL-galactocerebroside).
The biological variation was investigated further by measuring the cerebroside-beta-galactosidase activity in cultured skin fibroblasts from infants with Krabbe disease and from their parents.