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Does this ill child have a metabolic disease?

Does this ill child have a metabolic disease?. General Intro Disease Presentation & Investigation Acute Neonatal Recurrent Encephalopathy Hyperammonaemia Hypoglycaemia. Inherited Metabolic Diseases. Individually rare diseases collectively ‘common’ ?1 in 800 Ubiquitous presentation

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Does this ill child have a metabolic disease?

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  1. Does this ill child have a metabolic disease? General Intro Disease Presentation & Investigation Acute Neonatal Recurrent Encephalopathy Hyperammonaemia Hypoglycaemia

  2. Inherited Metabolic Diseases • Individually rare diseases • collectively ‘common’ • ?1 in 800 • Ubiquitous presentation • Modern TB • Likely to present in • general paediatric • neonatal • speciality paediatric practice

  3. 6 PKU 4 Urea cycle 1 MSUD 1 Tyrosinaemia 4 Organic acidaemia 6 Fatty acid oxidation disorders (5 MCAD) 2 X linked & 1 neonatal adrenoleucodystrophy 3 Galactosaemia 1 L 2 hydroxyglutaric aciduria 2 Ketothiolase deficiency 1 Transient neonatal hyperammonaemia 7 Mucopolysaccharidoses 1 GSD 1 Mucolipidosis 2 Ceroid lipofuscinosis 1 Gauchers disease 1 Refsums disease 2 Steroid sulphatase def’y 1 Cystinuria 1 Orotic aciduria 5 Hypercholesterolaemia 2 Mitochondrial cytopathy 2 Segawa disease Collection of diagnoses

  4. The Metabolically ill Infant and Child If You Don’t Think You Won’t Look If You Don’t Look You Won’t Find If You Don’t Find You Can’t Treat

  5. Neonatal Apparent sepsis Neurological deterioration Hypoglycaemia Liver dysfunction E coli septicaemia Acute presentations

  6. Inborn Metabolic Errors Are easy!

  7. IEMs A B C D X Y

  8. IEMs ABC D XY E

  9. Accumulation / excess storage metabolites • Antenatal or postnatal • Toxicity of metabolites • Energy insufficiency • Specific deficiency • Combination

  10. Genetics • All types of inheritance • Recessive • X linked • Dominant • Mitochondrial DNA • Mutation/s + genetics define level of enzyme activity • Enzyme activity informs severity and timing of presentation • e.g. OCT deficiency, PKU

  11. Four Basic Clinical Groups • Acute neonatal symptoms • Present at birth • Symptom free interval • Later onset acute/intermittent • Chronic progressive general • Specific symptoms of a disorder

  12. HistoryClues • Age onset • Disease progression • Precipitating factors • Milk feeds • Weaning • Infection • Fasting • Sibling death • Maternal HELLP and AFLP syndromes

  13. Acute neonatal symptoms • Present at birth • Toxic type • Energy deficient • Hypoglycaemia

  14. Acute neonatal symptoms • From birth • Facial dysmorphism • Profound hypotonia • Seizures • Liver disorder • ? Peroxisomal disorder • ? Respiratory chain • ? Carbohydrate Deficient Glycoprotein disorder (CDG) • Zellwegers syndrome

  15. Zellweger • Zellweger disease - antenatal onset • Neurological - disorder neuronal migration • Hepatic - jaundice, bleeding, ^ ALT, mild cirrhosis on biopsy • Cardiac anomaly - 32% VSD : 22% aortic • Renal cysts • Calcific stippling of patella • Eyes - ERG always abnormal • Death in 1-2 yrs • Diagnosis • ^VLCFA • ^pristanic, phytanic acids & some bile acids • hypoprothrombinaemia

  16. IEMs E ABC D XY

  17. Acute Neonatal Symptoms Toxic Type • Symptom free interval • Unexpected/”mysterious” deterioration • Poor sucking / feeding • Encephalopathy • Hiccups, apnoea • Bradycardia, hypothermia • Relative hypertonia, Opisthotonus • Pedalling/boxing • Tremors / jerks • True seizures rare • Odour eg MSUD/IVA • Coma

  18. Acute neonatal symptoms • Energy deficient • non specific symptoms • +/- symptom free interval • severe generalised hypotonia • then rapidly progressive neurological deterioration • cardiomyopathy • lactic acidosis common • Hypoglycaemia • hepatomegaly • liver dysfunction

  19. Acute neonatal symptoms Watch out for • initial respiratory alkalosis • neutropaenia • thrombocytopaenia • pancytopaenia • clotting disturbance • vomiting • abdominal distention • IMD may mimic infection

  20. Acute Neonatal Symptoms Initial Investigations • Blood • FBC, clotting • U&E, (anion gap) • Glucose • Gases • Uric acid • LFT • Ammonia • Lactate • Calcium

  21. Anion Gap • = ( Na+K ) - (Cl+HCO3) • 8 to 16 mmol/L when not including [K+] • 10 to 20 mmol/L when including [K+].

  22. Blood FBC, clotting U&E, (anion gap) Glucose Gases Uric acid LFT Ammonia Lactate Calcium Urine Odour Ketones Ketonuria is an indicator for a metabolic disease in the newborn. Reducing substances Ph Acute Neonatal Symptoms Initial Investigations

  23. Interpretation • Ketones+++ NH3 +/- • MSUD • Acidosis++ NH3 +/++ lactate+/- cytopaenia • Organicacidurias • Increased Uric acid is indicative for organic aciduria • Thrombocytopenia and Neutropenia are criteria for severity in organic aciduria • NH3++/+++ acidosis - lactate +/- • Urea cycle • Fatty acid oxidation

  24. Interpretation • Lactate +++ acidosis ++ ketones ++ • Respiratory chain • “Cong lactic acidosis” • Liver+++ acidosis++ lactate ++ hypoglycemia++ • GSD i, iii • LFT abn Liver +, NH3 +/- • Galactosaemia tyrosinaemia HFI

  25. Blood Amino acids Carnitine T & Free Acyl carnitines Specific tests Eg Gal-1-PUT Urine Amino acids Organic acids CSF+/- Lactate glycine Acute Neonatal Symptoms Further Investigations

  26. Recurrent Encephalopathy • May be well for years • Cause not immediately obvious • Child seems sicker than expected for apparent illness • Rarely of sudden onset • Encephalopathy preceeds hypoglycaemia • Consider in any type of coma or encephalopathy ( including DKA)

  27. Recurrent Encephalopathy • Well between episodes BUT • May suffer neurological damage during episodes (MCAD, OCT) • Many are treatable • Early diagnosis is important • Most metabolic encephalopathies do not have focal neuro signs BUT • Strokes, ataxia, • It does not quite fit • D&V more ill than expected • Unexpected “psychiatric illness”

  28. “Metabolic” investigations glucose ketones ammonia lactate blood gases FBC carnitines acyl carnitines Urine Odour Ketones Amino acids Organic acids CSF+/- Glucose Lactate Glycine Recurrent encephalopathy

  29. Recurrent Encephalopathy Metabolic causes • Fatty acid oxidation disorders • MCAD • Carnitine disorders • Urea cycle disorders • Organic acidaemias • Respiratory chain defects

  30. Recurrent Encephalopathy Consider also • Stroke like episodes • MELAS • Homocystinuria • Total homocysteine • organic acidaemias • ornithine carbamyl transferase deficiency • Carbohydrate Deficient Glycoprotein syndromes (CDG) • (sialotransferrin) • Macrocephaly • Glutaric aciduria I • Frontal atrophy • CDG syndromes

  31. INHERITED DISORDERS Urea cycle disorders Organic acidaemias Fatty acid oxidation disorders Other inborn errors (OAT,PC, HHH syndrome, etc) ACQUIRED DISORDERS Liver disease Poisoning ‘Reye’s syndrome’ – acquired – aspirin + viral infection Sodium valproate toxicity Asparaginase toxicity Urinary tract infection with stasis HYPERAMMONAEMIA Differential diagnosis

  32. Hyperammonaemia Mainly neurological presentation • Inhibits neurotransmitters • NH3 + glutamate = glutamine • Osmotic load = cerebral oedema • Careful sampling is important • Values of 100 mmol/l may be significant, but usually >200 mmol/l • Ammonia level not a good predictor of severity but >350 expect neuro sequelae

  33. Brain stem stimulant tachypnoea Cyclical vomiting Check in all children in acute episode anorexia Lethargy Failure to thrive Delayed development Faddy eating Acute encephalopathy irritability headache confusion ataxia / slurring of speech bizarre behaviour focal neurological signs fluctuating level of consciousness coma Hyperammonaemia

  34. Hyperammonaemia • Treatment • Emergency regimen • Avoid catabolism • High CHO feeds only • 10% dextrose IV+/- insulin IV • Drugs • Arginine • Benzoate • Phenylbutyrate • Haemofiltration • Haemodialysis • Treat cerebral oedema

  35. Healthy Children: Response to fasting

  36. May be the end result of a metabolic disease - sick May be the primary symptom What is the timing of hypo Fasting Postprandial Intercurrent illness Hepatomegaly? Permanent Transient Ketosis? Lactate++? Liver dysfunction? Short stature? Hypoglycaemia

  37. When hypo lactate Ketones FFA urate CK lipids GH insulin cortisol Others carnitine acyl carnitine LFT Aminoacids Urine (first available) aminoacids organic acids reducing substances ketones Hypoglycaemia investigations

  38. Hypoglycaemia - Permanent hepatomegaly • “All metabolic” • Fasting hypo/ ketosis / lactate + • Glycogen storage disease • Trigly > cholesterol I • Chol > trigly III • Urate ++ I • Creat kinase ++ III • Lactate ++ I • Liver failure / short fast • Galactosaemia • Tyrosinaemia • Postprandial • Hereditary fructose intolerance

  39. Hypoglycaemia - No Permanent Hepatomegaly • Ketosis • Organicaciduria • MSUD • Ketotic hypoglycaemia • Adrenal insufficieny • Without ketosis • Fatty acid oxidation disorder • Hyperinsulinism • Growth hormone deficiency

  40. Diagnostic algorithm METABOLIC ACIDOSIS yes no Ketonuria Ketonuria yes no yes no Major hyperlactatemia Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD) Hyperlactatemia Maple Syrup Urine Disease (MSUD) HYPERAMMONEMIA yes no yes no yes no Mitochondrial defect Organic aciduria Hypoglycemia Organic aciduria Pyroglutamic aciduria Hypoglycemia Non-ketonic hyperglycinemia Sulfite oxydase deficiency - XO yes no yes no Fatty acid oxydation Glycogen storage disease Glyconeogenesis defects Respiratory chain Fatty acid oxydation Variant hyperinsulinism (glutamate dehydrogenase) Urea Cycle Disorders

  41. Best Practice Guidelines • Contents • Guidelines for the Biochemical Investigation of Patients with Foetal and Neonatal Hydrops • Guidelines for Investigation of Fits and Seizures (Instruction Sheet for CSF sample collection ) • Guidelines for the Investigation of Hypoglycaemia in Infants and Children • Guidelines for the Investigation of Hyperammonaemia for Inherited Metabolic Disorders • Appendix - Notes on the measurement of ammonia in blood/plasma • Skin Biopsy - Information Sheet for parents/carers • Skin Biopsy - Consent form • Neonatal Jaundice in Inherited Metabolic Disorders

  42. Inherited Metabolic DiseasesPractice points • More common than expected • Can present in unexpected ways • If you do not think about the possibility you will not make the diagnosis • Lower threshold to investigate • Be aware significance of NH3 level • Hypoglycaemia is a late event

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