In 1914 the German pediatrician Albert Niemann described a Jewish child with damage to the brain and nervous system. Subsequently, in 1927, Ludwig Pick analyzed the tissues from deceased children and provided evidence of a new storage disease, not previously described. Currently, the term "Niemann-Pick disease" (NPD) refers to a group of genetic diseases of the metabolism, characterized by lipid storage and autosomal recessive inheritance. Alan Crocker, in 1958, was the first to propose a classification of this series of metabolic disorders, based on biochemical and clinical features (1). Types A and B of Niemann-Pick disease (NPD-A and NPD-B) are due to a lack of acid sphingomyelinase (A-SMase) activity, a lysosomal enzyme encoded by th...