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DOI: 10.1055/s-2008-1071426
© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York
Juvenile Onset Diabetes Mellitus, Central Diabetes Insipidus and Optic Atrophy (Wolfram Syndrome) - Neurological Findings and Prognostic Implications
Publication History
Publication Date:
19 March 2008 (online)

Abstract
The authors report on one case of Wolfram syndrome, a rare condition, which is characterized by juvenile onset diabetes mellitus, diabetes insipidus, optic atrophy and sensorineural deafness. The findings of this 13-year follow-up show that this patient developed typical neurological complications of long-standing diabetes mellitus as in the common type 1 variant. Moreover, some peculiar signs occurred such as anosmia, ophthalmoplegia interna, and central nystagmus. Since Wolfram syndrome is probably part of a more generalized neurodegenerative disorder, long-term prognosis will depend both upon the severity of chronic diabetic complications and upon the rapidity, by which degeneration of cerebellar, pontine and brain stem structures appear. Prognosis of the cardinal clinical signs is such that optic atrophy, though usually quite rapid in the beginning, generally does not lead to complete blindness. Sensorineural hearing loss progresses very slowly so that deafness might be expected exceptionally only. The hearing deficit in classical diabetics, however, is of retrocochlear origin. Therefore, in Wolfram syndrome, a combined inner-ear and retrocochlear hearing loss may occur.
Key words
Wolfram syndrome - Neurological complications - Neurodegenerative process - Long-term prognosis