AI Article Synopsis

  • - Reversible infantile respiratory chain deficiency is a serious condition in newborns caused by a specific mtDNA mutation (m.14674T>C) and certain nuclear gene variants; it typically resolves on its own.
  • - Two cases are presented: a boy and a girl, both showing symptoms like weak muscle tone, feeding issues, high lactic acid levels, and distinctive muscle biopsy findings (ragged red fibers).
  • - Early recognition of this condition is crucial for providing essential care during the first six months, and understanding how it resolves might lead to new treatments for other mitochondrial diseases.

Article Abstract

Reversible infantile respiratory chain deficiency is a severe neonatal mitochondrial myopathy that resolves spontaneously. It is caused by the homoplasmic m.14674T>C mtDNA mutation and additional nuclear variants in genes interacting with mt-tRNAGlu have been detected in some patients. We present detailed clinical, imaging, and muscle biopsy findings in a boy and a girl with neonatal hypotonia, feeding difficulties, lactic acidosis, and ragged red fibers. Both patients show fat replacement on muscle imaging, which was mild in the boy, but severe in the girl, affecting mostly the posterior leg muscles. In addition to the homoplasmic m.14674T>C, both patients carried heterozygous variants in QRSL1 (c. 686T>G; p.Val299Gly) and EARS2 (c.358C>T; p.Arg120Trp), respectively. It is very important to recognize the clinical and morphological signs of reversible infantile respiratory chain deficiency as patients should receive intensive supportive care in the first 6 months of life. Understanding the mechanism of the spontaneous recovery may lead to novel therapeutic perspectives in other mitochondrial diseases.

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Source
http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.nmd.2021.02.017DOI Listing

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