Treatment of pyruvate carboxylase deficiency with high doses
of citrate and aspartate.
Ahmad A, Kahler SG, Kishnani PS, Artigas-Lopez M, Pappu AS, Steiner R,
Millington DS, Van Hove JL.
Department of Pediatrics, Duke University Medical Center, Durham, North
Carolina, USA.
A patient with severe pyruvatecarboxylase
deficiency presented at age 11 weeks with metabolic decompensationafter routine immunization. She
was comatose, had severe lactic acidemia (22 mM) and ketosis, low aspartate and
glutamate, elevated citrulline and proline, and mild hyperammonemia. Head
magnetic resonance imaging showed subdural hematomas and mild generalized brain
atrophy. Biotin-unresponsive pyruvate carboxylase deficiency was diagnosed. To
provide oxaloacetate, she was treated with high-dose citrate (7.5
mol/kg(-1)/day(-1)), aspartate (10 mmol/kg(-1)/day(-1)), and continuous drip
feeding. Lactate and ketones diminished dramatically, and plasma amino acids
normalized, except for arginine, which required supplementation. In the
cerebrospinal fluid (CSF), glutamine remained low and lysine elevated, showing
the treatment had not normalized brain chemistry. Metabolic decompensations,
triggered by infections or fasting, diminished after the first year. They were
characterized by severe lactic and ketoacidosis, hypernatremia, and a tendency
to hypoglycemia. At age 3(1/2) years she has profound mental retardation,
spasticity, and grand mal and myoclonic seizures only partially controlled by
anticonvulsants. The new treatment regimen has helped maintain metabolic
control, but the neurological outcome is still poor. Copyright 1999 Wiley-Liss,
Inc.
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