## Correct Answer: D. Glucocerebrosidase The "crumpled tissue paper" appearance (also called "wrinkled silk" or "onion skin" appearance) is the pathognomonic histological finding of **Gaucher cells**, which are lipid-laden macrophages characteristic of **Gaucher disease**. This lysosomal storage disorder results from deficiency of the enzyme **glucocerebrosidase** (also called β-glucosidase or acid β-glucosidase), which normally cleaves glucose from glucocerebroside (glucosylceramide). Without this enzyme, glucocerebroside accumulates within macrophages of the reticuloendothelial system, creating the distinctive crumpled tissue paper morphology on bone marrow aspirate. The clinical presentation—anemia, thrombocytopenia, hepatosplenomegaly, and bone pain—is classic for **Type 1 Gaucher disease** (non-neuronopathic), the most common lysosomal storage disorder in India and globally. Bone marrow infiltration by Gaucher cells causes cytopenias; splenic and hepatic infiltration causes organomegaly. Bone involvement (osteonecrosis, pathological fractures) manifests as bony pain. This is an autosomal recessive condition with variable penetrance. Enzyme replacement therapy (imiglucerase) and substrate reduction therapy (miglustat, eliglustat) are now available in India, making early diagnosis critical for preventing irreversible complications. ## Why the other options are wrong **A. Sphingomyelinase** — Sphingomyelinase deficiency causes **Niemann-Pick disease**, where foam cells (not Gaucher cells) accumulate sphingomyelin. While both present with hepatosplenomegaly and cytopenias, the bone marrow morphology is distinctly different—Niemann-Pick cells lack the crumpled tissue paper appearance. This is a common NBE trap pairing two lysosomal storage diseases with overlapping clinical features. **B. Glucose-6-phosphatase** — Glucose-6-phosphatase deficiency causes **Glycogen Storage Disease Type 1 (Von Gierke disease)**, a carbohydrate metabolism disorder, not a lysosomal storage disease. It presents with hepatomegaly, hypoglycemia, and lactic acidosis—not the bone marrow findings described. This option misdirects students who confuse carbohydrate metabolism disorders with lysosomal storage diseases. **C. Hexosaminidase** — Hexosaminidase deficiency causes **Tay-Sachs disease** and **Sandhoff disease**, which are primarily neurodegenerative lysosomal storage disorders presenting with developmental regression, seizures, and blindness in infants—not bone marrow pathology or the described clinical picture. While both are lysosomal disorders, the clinical and histological presentations are entirely different from Gaucher disease. ## High-Yield Facts - **Gaucher disease** is caused by **glucocerebrosidase deficiency** and is the most common lysosomal storage disorder worldwide. - **Gaucher cells** (crumpled tissue paper appearance) are lipid-laden macrophages filled with glucocerebroside, pathognomonic on bone marrow aspirate. - **Type 1 Gaucher disease** (non-neuronopathic) is the most common form in India; presents with hepatosplenomegaly, cytopenias, and bone disease. - **Enzyme replacement therapy (imiglucerase)** and **substrate reduction therapy (miglustat)** are disease-modifying treatments now available in India. - **Bone involvement** in Gaucher disease includes osteonecrosis (femoral head), pathological fractures, and erlenmeyer flask deformity of femur. - **Inheritance pattern**: Autosomal recessive; **carrier frequency** in Ashkenazi Jewish population is ~1:30, but significant in Indian populations with consanguinity. ## Mnemonics **GAUCHER = Glucocerebroside Accumulation Causes Hepatosplenomegaly, Enzyme defect is glucocerebrosidase** G = Glucocerebroside (substrate), A = Accumulates, U = in macrophages (Gaucher cells), C = Crumpled tissue paper, H = Hepatosplenomegaly, E = Enzyme defect (glucocerebrosidase), R = Reticuloendothelial infiltration. **LSDs with Bone Marrow Findings** **Gaucher** (crumpled tissue paper) → glucocerebrosidase; **Niemann-Pick** (foam cells) → sphingomyelinase. Remember: Gaucher = wrinkled, Niemann-Pick = foamy. ## NBE Trap NBE pairs Gaucher disease with Niemann-Pick disease to trap students who confuse overlapping clinical features (hepatosplenomegaly, cytopenias) but forget the discriminating bone marrow morphology—crumpled tissue paper is pathognomonic for Gaucher cells only. ## Clinical Pearl In Indian clinical practice, Gaucher disease is increasingly recognized in children presenting with unexplained hepatosplenomegaly and cytopenias. Early diagnosis via enzyme assay and genetic testing enables timely initiation of ERT/SRT, preventing irreversible bone and neurological complications. Bone marrow aspirate showing Gaucher cells is the first diagnostic clue—don't miss it by confusing it with other lipid storage disorders. _Reference: Robbins Pathology Ch. 5 (Genetic Disorders); Harrison Ch. 356 (Lysosomal Storage Diseases); KD Tripathi Pharmacology Ch. 58 (Enzyme Replacement Therapy)_
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