Literature DB >> 26615382

Diagnosing Mitochondrial Disorder without Sophisticated Means.

Josef Finsterer1, Marlies Frank2.   

Abstract

Mitochondrial disorders (MIDs) require biochemical or genetic investigations for being diagnosed. In some cases, however, the diagnosis can be suspected upon the syndromic phenotype or upon clinical presentation and family history, as in the following case. The patient was a 74-year-old male admitted for worsening of pre-existing left-sided ptosis and ophthalmoparesis after a birthday party. The history was positive for arterial hypertension, hypertrophic cardiomyopathy with systolic dysfunction, diabetes-type 2, mild renal insufficiency, thyroiditis, and polyneuropathy. Instrumental investigations additionally revealed hepatopathy, hyperlipidemia, hyperuricemia, bifascicular block, white matter lesions, and subacute stroke. Systolic dysfunction resolved upon adequate cardiac treatment. On hospital day 11 the patient suddenly developed asystole. He was successfully resuscitated but died a few hours later from acute myocardial infarction. Surprisingly, a more extensive family history was positive for myopathy (patient, brother, daughter), neuropathy (patient), hypoacusis (patient), Parkinson syndrome (mother), spasticity (son), diabetes (patient, son), renal failure (patient), and generalized atherosclerosis (patient). The individual and family history was strongly suggestive of an MID. In conclusion, individual and family history may strongly suggest MID. Phenotypic variability may be high between family members affected by an MID. MID may be associated with an increasing atherosclerotic risk lastly resulting in coronary heart disease and death.

Entities:  

Keywords:  Cardiac involvement; Cognitive decline; Diabetes; Hypoacusis; Mitochondrial disorder; Myopathy; Neuropathy

Mesh:

Year:  2015        PMID: 26615382

Source DB:  PubMed          Journal:  Acta Med Iran        ISSN: 0044-6025


  3 in total

1.  Chiropractic-Responsive Vestibular Involvement in Mitochondrial Disorders.

Authors:  Josef Finsterer; Subhankar Chatterjee
Journal:  J Chiropr Med       Date:  2021-01-22

Review 2.  Mitochondrial vasculopathy.

Authors:  Josef Finsterer; Sinda Zarrouk-Mahjoub
Journal:  World J Cardiol       Date:  2016-05-26

3.  Aseptic meningitis as a manifestation of a mitochondrial disorder.

Authors:  Josef Finsterer; Klaus W Preidler
Journal:  Arch Med Sci       Date:  2016-12-29       Impact factor: 3.318

  3 in total

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