The response to l-carnitine and glycine therapy in isovaleric acidaemia
- 1 February 1986
- journal article
- case report
- Published by Springer Nature in European Journal of Pediatrics
- Vol. 144 (5) , 451-456
- https://doi.org/10.1007/bf00441737
Abstract
The profound metabolic disturbances which occur in isovaleric acidaemia are due to the intramitochondrial accumulation of isovaleryl coenzyme A (CoA) with a consequent reduction in the availability of free CoA. Secondary carnitine insufficiency is also a feature of this and other disorders of organic acid metabolism. A patient who presented at 2.5 years of age was diagnosed using capillary GC-MS as having isovaleric acidaemia. She showed the full spectrum of abnormal organic acids previously associated with the ‘neonatal’ form of the disease despite her late presentation, indicating that it is inappropriate to refer to acute early and late onset forms of isovaleric acidaemia. Instead, a spectrum of disease exists, determined by environmental factors, residual enzyme activities and modifying effects of different phenotypes in different individuals. She also showed evidence of carnitine insufficiency. An oral challenge with l-carnitine resulted in the excretion of large amounts of urinary acylcarnitines which were shown by use of fast atom bombardment mass spectrometry to be primarily isovalerylcarnitine. Regular glycine supplementation caused no significant increase in urinary isovaleryglycine and had to be stopped because of side-effects after 5 days. An oral l-carnitine challenge during glycine supplementation resulted in a marked increase in isovalerylglycine excretion, again associated with the excretion of large amounts of isovalerylcarnitine. Carnitine acts by removing (detoxifying) intramitochondrial isovaleryl groups and, in the presence of glycine, it promotes the formation of isovalerylglycine. We believe l-carnitine supplementation is of value in the treatment of isovaleric acidaemia and that, in the present case, l-carnitine together with a moderate dietary restriction has proved to be the optimum form of therapy.Keywords
This publication has 20 references indexed in Scilit:
- Urinary Excretion of l-Carnitine and Acylcarnitines by Patients with Disorders of Organic Acid Metabolism: Evidence for Secondary Insufficiency of l-CarnitinePediatric Research, 1984
- Metabolic response to carnitine in methylmalonic aciduria. An effective strategy for elimination of propionyl groups.Archives of Disease in Childhood, 1983
- Changing Plasma and Urinary Organic Acid Levels in a Patient with Isovaleric Acidemia during an AttackPediatric Research, 1982
- Isovaleric Acidemia: Use of Glycine Therapy in NeonatesNew England Journal of Medicine, 1978
- Glycine therapy in isovaleric acidemiaThe Journal of Pediatrics, 1978
- Therapeutic Effects of Glycine in Isovaleric AcidemiaPediatric Research, 1976
- The specificity of glycine-N-acylase and acylglycine excretion in the organicacidaemiasBiochemical Medicine, 1974
- A method for the determination of carnitine in the picomole rangeClinica Chimica Acta; International Journal of Clinical Chemistry, 1972
- Identification of β-hydroxyisovaleric acid in the urine of a patient with isovaleric acidemiaBiochimica et Biophysica Acta (BBA) - Lipids and Lipid Metabolism, 1968
- NEONATAL DEATH ASSOCIATED WITH ISOVALERICACIDÆMIAThe Lancet, 1967