Consanguineous 3‐methylcrotonyl‐CoA carboxylase deficiency: Early‐onset necrotizing encephalopathy with lethal outcome

Male 0301 basic medicine Glycine Infant, Newborn Infant 3. Good health Diagnosis, Differential Leukoencephalitis, Acute Hemorrhagic Consanguinity 03 medical and health sciences Fatal Outcome Carbon-Carbon Ligases Mutation Valerates Humans RNA Splice Sites Metabolism, Inborn Errors
DOI: 10.1007/s10545-005-4559-8 Publication Date: 2005-05-04T09:14:17Z
ABSTRACT
SummaryA patient with a severe neonatal variant of 3‐methylcrotonyl‐CoA carboxylase (MCC) deficiency is reported. The first child of healthy consanguineous Turkish parents presented on the second day of life with dehydration, cyanosis, no sucking, generalized muscular hypotonia, encephalopathy, respiratory depression requiring mechanic ventilation, macrocephaly, severe acidosis and hypoglycaemia. Elevated C5‐OH‐carnitine in dried blood spot by tandem MS and elevated urinary excretion of 3‐hydroxyisovaleric acid and 3‐methylcrotonylglycine suggested MCC deficiency, confirmed by enzyme analysis in cultured fibroblasts. Cerebral ultrasonography and cranial CT findings revealed progressive changes such as disseminated encephalomalacia, cystic changes, ventricular dilatation and cerebral atrophy. Treatment with high‐dose biotin and protein‐restricted diet was ineffective and the patient died at the age of 33 days with progressive neurological deterioration. Mutation analysis revealed a homozygous mutation in the splice acceptor site of intron 15 in the MCC β‐subunit. Early‐onset severe necrotizing encephalopathy should be included in the differential diagnosis of isolated MCC deficiency.
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