Physical examination, laboratory tests, and MRI showed that he had adult-onset AMN manifestations, including spasticity and hyperactive tendon reflexes with Hoffman and Babinski signs in the limbs, difficulty in performing the heel-to-shin test, hyperpigmentation, increased levels of adrenocorticotropic hormone and very long-chain fatty acids, decreased levels of corticosteroid and serum gesterol, and salient atrophy of the cervical and thoracic spinal cord.
Although on examination by light microscopy the sural nerve proved to be normal, the clinical diagnosis of adrenomyeloneuropathy (AMN) in its juvenile form may be assumed, in view of the clinical symptoms and the evidence of adrenocortical insufficiency revealed by the ACTH test.
However, basal morning plasma adrenocorticotropic hormone (ACTH) levels were markedly elevated in the two males with ALD and AMN, despite the fact that they had no clinical signs of adrenal insufficiency and that morning plasma cortisol levels and their response to maximal exogenous ACTH stimulation appeared to be normal.