A Family With a Complex Phenotype Caused by Two Different Rare Metabolic Disorders: GLUT1 and Very-Long-Chain Fatty Acid Dehydrogenase (VLCAD) Deficiencies

We report a 40-year-old man with mild mental retardation and sporadic choreo-athetoid movements, who complained of recurrent episodes of rhabdomyolysis triggered by exercise or fasting since his twenties. His 15-year-old son had a psychomotor developmental delay with episodes of drowsiness mainly at fasting and exercise-induced choreo-athetoid movements but no history of pigmenturia. Clinical and laboratory findings in the son suggested a diagnosis of GLUT1-DS confirmed by SCL2A1 genetic analysis that revealed a heterozygous mutation c.997C>T (p.R333W) that was also found in the proband. However, the presence in the latter of recurrent exercise-induced rhabdomyolysis, never reported in GLUT1-DS, implied a second metabolic disorder. Increased plasma C14:1-carnitine levels and the identification of two known heterozygous mutations c. 553G>A (p.G185S) and c.1153C>T (p.R385W) in ACADVL confirmed the additional diagnosis of VLCAD deficiency in the proband. Nowadays, there is an increasing evidence of “double trouble” cases of genetic origin. Consequently, when atypical features accompany a known phenotype, associated comorbidities should be considered.
Source: Frontiers in Neurology - Category: Neurology Source Type: research