| Literature DB >> 30646848 |
Ravi Patel1, Lucia Lee Coulter1, Joanna Rimmer2, Miles Parkes2, Patrick Francis Chinnery3,4, Oscar Swift5.
Abstract
BACKGROUND: Mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalopathy (MNGIE), due to mutations in TYMP, often presents with gastrointestinal symptoms. Two sisters, initially managed for Crohn's disease based upon clinical, imaging and pathological findings, were later found to have MNGIE. The cases provide novel clinicopathological insight, for two further reasons: both sisters remain ambulant and in employment in their late 20s and 30s; diagnosis in one sister was made after a suspected azathioprine-precipitated acute illness. CASEEntities:
Keywords: Azathioprine; Crohn’s disease; Inflammatory bowel disease; Inherited mitochondrial disorders; Leukoencephalopathy; Mitochondrial neurogastrointestinal encephalopathy; Thymidine phosphorylase
Mesh:
Substances:
Year: 2019 PMID: 30646848 PMCID: PMC6334462 DOI: 10.1186/s12876-018-0925-5
Source DB: PubMed Journal: BMC Gastroenterol ISSN: 1471-230X Impact factor: 3.067
Fig. 1Colonic histology, MR enterography, and MRI brain for Patient 1 (-). (a) Colonic biopsy showing active inflammation in keeping with panproctocolitis, H&E stain, magnification × 40. (b) Colonic biopsy showing focal atrophic changes within the smooth muscle cells of the muscularis mucosa, including intracytoplasmic vacuoles, pyknotic nuclei and eosinophilic degeneration of the cytoplasm, H&E stain, magnification × 200. (b-e) Coronal contrast MRI of the small bowel demonstrating a 2 cm segment of terminal ileum with mild mural thickening (c), mural oedema on T2 sequence (d), intermediate enhancement with gadolinium (e), and separation of bowel loops in the distal ileal mesentery suggesting fat proliferation. (f) Axial brain flair MRI taken during the acute admission, showing extensive confluent, symmetrical white matter hyperintensity in both cerebral hemispheres, which does not show restricted diffusion. This extends from the periventricular to the subcortical regions but sparing the U-fibres. (g) Follow-up axial brain flair MRI with contrast, at six weeks post-discharge, showing no change in the extent of diffuse periventricular and subcortical white matter hyperintensity
Fig. 2Colonoscopic image, colonic histology, and MRI brain for Patient 2 (A-F). (a) Colonoscopy showing aphthous ulceration in the descending colon. (b) Colonic biopsy showing patchy increase in chronic inflammatory cells within the lamina propria and focal cryptitis, H&E stain, magnification × 40. (c) Colonic biopsy showing multiple, round and refractile eosinophilic cytoplasmic inclusions of megalomitochondria within the submucosal ganglionic cells, H&E stain, magnification × 400. (d) Axial brain TSE MRI for Patient 2 with white matter changes, as described for Patient 1 Fig. 1f and g
Fig. 3Schematic of hypothesised MNGIE-azathioprine interaction for Patient 1. Schematic summarising the hypothesised interaction of azathioprine with the underlying genetic defect of MNGIE, thus potentially explaining Patient 1’s acute deterioration