Lysosomal acid lipase deficiency (LAL-D) is an ultra-rare lysosomal storage disease that may present from infancy to late adulthood depending on residual enzyme activity. While the severe form manifests as a rapidly progressive disease with near universal mortality within the first 6 months of life, milder forms frequently go undiagnosed for prolonged periods and typically present with progressive fatty liver disease, enlarged spleen, atherogenic dyslipidemia and premature atherosclerosis. The adult variant of LAL-D is typically diagnosed late or even overlooked due to the unspecific nature of the presenting symptoms, which are similar to common changes observed in the context of the metabolic syndrome. This review is aimed at delineating clinically useful scenarios in which pediatric or adult medicine clinicians should be aware of LAL-D as a differential diagnosis for selected patients. This is particularly relevant as a potentially life-saving enzyme replacement therapy has become available and the diagnosis can easily be ruled out or confirmed using a dried blood spot test.
Background and Aims: Although non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) is linked to obesity, a proportion of lean subjects also have NAFLD with potentially distinct clinical features. We studied the outcome of lean NAFLD subjects. Methods: 299 consecutive patients (215 male, 84 female, 49.5 ± 13.5years) with biopsy-proven NAFLD and a follow-up of 8.4 years (±4.1; range: 0.9-18.0) were stratified by body mass index (BMI) at the time of liver biopsy: lean (BMI ≤25.0 kg/m, n=38), overweight (BMI 25.0-29.9 kg/m2, n=165), obese (BMI ≥30.0 kg/m2, n=93). A control group of 1,013 subjects (547 male, 52.4 ± 5.8) was used for comparison. The time to the event was recorded. Multivariable Cox regression analyses were performed to assess associations with 10-year-mortality. Hazard ratios (HR) and adjusted hazard ratios (aHR) with 95% confidence intervals (CI) were calculated. Results: Age and gender were similar, while components of the metabolic syndrome were less frequent in lean subjects. The proportion of subjects with significant fibrosis and the number of subjects with cirrhosis was increased in lean subjects while the proportion of non-alcoholic steatohepatitis was not different. Mortality in the NAFLD groups was significantly higher than in the control group. Multivariable analysis adjusting for age, gender, and glucose confirmed lower mortality in overweight (aHR 0.21; 95% CI 0.07-0.62, p=0.005) and in obese (aHR 0.22; 95% CI 0.06-0.76, p=0.02) compared to lean subjects. Further adjustment for fibrosis weakened the difference between lean and obese (p=0.12) while the difference to overweight subjects remained intact (p=0.01). Conclusion: Lean subjects with NAFLD have a high risk of liver-related death. Our data support that lean NAFLD subjects deserve particular attention with regard to clinical follow-up.
ObjectivesWe compared the accuracy of NOGA endocardial mapping for delineating transmural and non-transmural infarction to the results of cardiac magnetic resonance imaging (cMRI) with late gadolinium enhancement (LE) for guiding intramyocardial reparative substance delivery using data from experimental myocardial infarction studies.MethodsSixty domestic pigs underwent diagnostic NOGA endocardial mapping and cMRI-LE 60 days after induction of closed-chest reperfused myocardial infarction. The infarct size was determined by LE of cMRI and by delineation of the infarct core on the unipolar voltage polar map. The sizes of the transmural and non-transmural infarctions were calculated from the cMRI transmurality map using signal intensity (SI) cut-offs of>75% and>25% and from NOGA bipolar maps using bipolar voltage cut-off values of <0.8 mV and <1.9 mV. Linear regression analysis and Bland-Altman plots were used to determine correlations and systematic differences between the two images. The overlapping ratios of the transmural and non-transmural infarcted areas were calculated.ResultsInfarct size as determined by 2D NOGA unipolar voltage polar mapping correlated with the 3D cMRI-LE findings (r = 0.504, p<0.001) with a mean difference of 2.82% in the left ventricular (LV) surface between the two images. Polar maps of transmural cMRI and bipolar maps of NOGA showed significant association for determining of the extent of transmural infarction (r = 0.727, p<0.001, overlap ratio of 81.6±11.1%) and non-transmural infarction (r = 0.555, p<0.001, overlap ratio of 70.6±18.5%). NOGA overestimated the transmural scar size (6.81% of the LV surface) but slightly underestimated the size of the non-transmural infarction (−3.04% of the LV surface).ConclusionsBy combining unipolar and bipolar voltage maps, NOGA endocardial mapping is useful for accurate delineation of the targeted zone for intramyocardial therapy and is comparable to cMRI-LE. This may be useful in patients with contraindications for cMRI who require targeted intramyocardial regenerative therapy.
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Background and Aims Anti‐mitochondrial antibodies (AMA) are closely linked to primary biliary cholangitis (PBC). The prevalence of AMA in the general population is low, and AMA positivity may precede PBC. We aimed to determine the natural history of subjects with positive AMA. Methods In total, 302 patients were tested AMA‐positive over a ten‐year period. Of these, immunoblotting confirmed specific AMA in 184 (29 male, 155 female, age 59.6 ± 14.1 years). These subjects were invited to our liver outpatient clinic for clinical and biochemical re‐evaluation. Detailed clinical history data were additionally collected from the hospital computer system and by telephone. The subsequent course with regard to mortality, liver‐related morbidity, extrahepatic co‐morbidities and effectiveness of PBC treatment was determined in 150 subjects (81.5%). Results After 5.8 ± 5.6 years of follow‐up (FU), of 184 AMA‐positive subjects, 28 subjects (15.2%; liver‐related mortality n = 5) were deceased, and 122 subjects (66.3%) completed FU while 34 subjects (18.5%) were not available for FU. The 122 patients who completed FU were 63 patients with established PBC, six de novo cases of PBC (10.2% of 59 initially at risk), 42 (34.4%) subjects were still AMA‐positive without PBC, and 11 (9.0%) subjects were AMA‐negative at FU. Conclusions Anti‐mitochondrial antibodies‐positive patients without PBC at baseline infrequently developed PBC over six years of FU. AMA positivity represented a transient serological autoimmune phenomenon in a significant proportion of subjects.
Colorectal cancer (CRC) is a major public health burden and one of the leading causes of cancer-related deaths worldwide. Screening programs facilitate early diagnosis and can help to reduce poor outcomes. Serum metabolomics can extract vital molecular information that may increase the sensitivity and specificity of colonoscopy in combination with histopathological examination. The present study identifies serum metabolite patterns of treatment-naïve patients, diagnosed with either advanced adenoma (AA) or CRC in colonoscopy screenings, in the framework of the SAKKOPI (Salzburg Colon Cancer Prevention Initiative) program. We used a targeted flow injection analysis and liquid chromatography-tandem mass spectrometry metabolomics approach (FIA- and LC-MS/MS) to characterise the serum metabolomes of an initial screening cohort and two validation cohorts (in total 66 CRC, 76 AA and 93 controls). The lipidome was significantly perturbed, with a proportion of lipid species being downregulated in CRC patients, as compared to AA and controls. The predominant alterations observed were in the levels of lyso-lipids, glycerophosphocholines and acylcarnitines, but additionally, variations in the quantity of hydroxylated sphingolipids could be detected. Changed amino acid metabolism was restricted mainly to metabolites of the arginine/dimethylarginine/NO synthase pathway. The identified metabolic divergences observed in CRC set the foundation for mechanistic studies to characterise biochemical pathways that become deregulated during progression through the adenoma to carcinoma sequence and highlight the key importance of lipid metabolites. Biomarkers related to these pathways could improve the sensitivity and specificity of diagnosis, as well as the monitoring of therapies.
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