| Literature DB >> 28270654 |
Rodrigo C Surjan1, Elizabeth S Dos Santos2, Tiago Basseres1, Fabio F Makdissi3, Marcel A Machado1.
Abstract
BACKGROUND Hyperammonemic encephalopathy is a potentially fatal condition that may progress to irreversible neuronal damage and is usually associated with liver failure or portosystemic shunting. However, other less common conditions can lead to hyperammonemia in adults, such as fibrolamellar hepatocellular carcinoma. Clinical awareness of hyperammonemic encephalopathy in patients with normal liver function is paramount to timely diagnosis, but understanding the underlying physiopathology is decisive to initiate adequate treatment for complete recovery. CASE REPORT A 31-year-old male with fibrolamellar carcinoma and peritoneal carcinomatosis presented with rapid onset hyperammonemic encephalopathy. Despite usual treatment for hepatic encephalopathy, his hyperammonemia was aggravated. A physiopathological pathway to encephalopathy resulting from hepatocellular dysfunction or portosystemic shunting was suspected and proper treatment was initiated, which resulted in complete remission of encephalopathy. Thus, we propose there is a physiopathology path to hyperammonemic encephalopathy in non-cirrhotic patients with fibrolamellar carcinoma independent of ornithine transcarbamylase (OTC) mutation. An ornithine metabolism imbalance resulting from overexpression of Aurora Kinase A as a result of a single, recurrent heterozygous deletion on chromosome 19, common to all fibrolamellar carcinomas, can lead to a c-Myc and ornithine decarboxylase overexpression that results in ornithine transcarboxylase dysfunction with urea cycle disorder and subsequent hyperammonemia. CONCLUSIONS The identification of a physiopathological pathway allowed adequate medical treatment and full patient recovery from severe hyperammonemic encephalopathy.Entities:
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Year: 2017 PMID: 28270654 PMCID: PMC5358858 DOI: 10.12659/ajcr.901682
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Am J Case Rep ISSN: 1941-5923
Figure 1.Computed tomography (yellow arrows: peritoneal seedings). (A) Axial plane, 18 cm hepatic mass on the right lobe with tumor thrombosis of the right portal and right hepatic veins and compensatory hypertrophy of the left hepatic lobe. (B) Axial plane, peritoneal carcinomatosis on the pelvis. (C) Coronal plane, hepatic tumor and peritoneal carcinomatosis. (D) Sagittal plane, hepatic tumor occupying the entire right lobe and peritoneal carcinomatosis.
Figure 2.Laparoscopy. (A) Hepatic tumor and diffuse peritoneal neoplastic implants, normal aspect of the non-tumoral liver and hypertrophy of the left hepatic lobe. (B) Peritoneal carcinomatosis on the pelvis. (C) Biopsy of a peritoneal seeding. (D) Biopsy of the hepatic tumor.
Immunohistochemistry profile of the hepatic tumor.
| Ki 67 | 30–9 | Positive in 70% |
| Polyclonal CEA | Polyclonal positive membranous | Positive, membranous staining |
| CAM 5.2 | CAM 5.2 | Moderately positive, diffuse cytoplasmatic |
| Glypican 3 | GC33 | Positive, multifocal |
| CK19 | RCK108 | Negative |
| CK7 | SP52 | Positive, intense |
| Hepatocyte | OCH1E5 | Intense positive, granular staining |
Figure 3.List of genes related to inborn errors of metabolism tested. OTC was tested and no mutation was found.
Figure 4.Ornithine metabolism.