The primary symptoms are generally behavioral changes such as atypical detachment or aggressiveness, hyperactivity, worsening of handwriting, crossed eyes, poor memory, and bad school performance. Other symptoms include optic loss, learning disabilities, seizures, poorly articulated words, trouble swallowing, hearing loss, disruptions of gait and coordination, fatigue, intermittent vomiting, increased skin pigmentation, and progressive dementia.

Adrenoleukodystrophy (ALD) is also known as Addison-Schilder Disease or Siemerling-Creutzfeldt Disease. This life-threatening condition of the disease was first identified by E. Siemerling and Hans Gerhard Creutzfeldt. The clinical presentation is mostly dependent on the age of onslaught of the devastating disease. The authoritative, dangerous type is the puerility intellectual form which, as an X-linked [...]