1. Mitochondrial Depletion Causes Neonatal-Onset Leigh Syndrome, Myopathy, and Renal Tubulopathy
- Author
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Pen-Hua Su, Inn-Chi Lee, Jang-Jih Lu, and Ni-Chung Lee
- Subjects
medicine.medical_specialty ,Encephalopathy ,Neonatal onset ,Biology ,Mitochondrial depletion ,Muscular Diseases ,Ptosis ,Tubulopathy ,Internal medicine ,medicine ,Humans ,Muscle, Skeletal ,Myopathy ,Muscle biopsy ,medicine.diagnostic_test ,Infant, Newborn ,Brain ,Infant ,Skeletal muscle ,medicine.disease ,Mitochondria ,Kidney Tubules ,Endocrinology ,medicine.anatomical_structure ,Pediatrics, Perinatology and Child Health ,Female ,Kidney Diseases ,Neurology (clinical) ,Leigh Disease ,medicine.symptom - Abstract
The authors describe a newborn with postnatal myopathy who subsequently developed feeding difficulties, ophthalmoplegia, ptosis, encephalopathy, and seizures. She became ventilator dependent after sudden apnea. The myopathy was without ragged red fibers in the muscle biopsy. An electron transport chain study showed a markedly generalized low level of enzyme activity, particularly in complexes I, I + III, and IV. An initial electroencephalogram finding was normal; subsequent electroencephalograms showed suppression bursts. The mitochondrial copy number in skeletal muscle was 2% of normal.
- Published
- 2013
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