NAS, NAFLD activity score; ROC, receiver-operating characteristic; AUC, area under the ROC curve; γGT, γ-glutamyltransferase; HCC, hepatocellular carcinoma.2 Abstract Background/Aims: Citrin deficiency caused by SLC25A13 gene mutations develops into adult-onset type II citrullinemia (CTLN2) and may be accompanied with hepatic steatosis and steatohepatitis. As its clinical features remain unclear, we aimed to explore the characteristics of fatty liver disease associated with citrin deficiency. Methods: The prevalence of hepatic steatosis in 19 CTLN2 patients was examined, and clinical features were compared with those of nonalcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) patients without known SLC25A13 gene mutations. Results: Seventeen (89%) CTLN2 patients had steatosis, and 4 (21%) had been diagnosed as having NAFLD before appearance of neuropsychological symptoms. One patient had steatohepatitis. Citrin deficiency-associated fatty livers showed a considerably lower prevalence of accompanying obesity and metabolic syndrome, higher prevalence of history of pancreatitis, and higher serum levels of pancreatic secretory trypsin inhibitor (PSTI) than fatty livers without the mutations. Receiver operating characteristic curve analyses revealed that a body mass index < 20 kg/m 2 and serum PSTI > 29 ng/mL were associated with citrin deficiency. Conclusion: Patients presenting with nonalcoholic fatty liver unrelated to obesity and metabolic syndrome might have citrin deficiency, and serum PSTI may be a useful indicator for distinguishing this from conventional NAFLD.
To elucidate whether progressive wild-type transthyretin (TTR) deposition can actually occur after liver transplantation (LT), amyloid fibrils were investigated in two familial amyloid polyneuropathy patients with TTR Val30Leu variant, who died 1 year after LT. Amyloid fibrils were extracted from cardiac muscles, sciatic nerves and kidney, which were investigated by the immunoprecipitation-mass spectrometry method and liquid chromatographyion trap mass spectrometry analysis. The ratio of wild-type to variant TTR in cardiac muscle was approximately 5:5 before LT, but greatly increased to about 9:1 after transplantation. The ratios in sciatic nerves and kidney obtained at autopsy were approximately 5:5. Wild-type TTR was undetectable in kidney amyloid obtained before LT. Our results indicate that paradoxical wild-type TTR deposition after LT can preferentially occur in myocardium, leading to fatal cardiac dysfunction, but it is quite likely that this phenomenon can also occur in other visceral organs.
Objective-Adult onset type II citrullinemia is an inherited disorder of amino acid metabolism caused by a deficiency of liver specific argininosuccinate synthetase activity. Most of the patients with this disease were reported in Japan and therefore, this disease has not been well recognised outside this country. The detailed clinical pictures of the patients with type II citrullinaemia are reported and their outcomes after liver transplantation referred to. Methods-Ten patients with this disease were evaluated. Seven of them underwent liver transplants using a graft obtained from a healthy family member. Results-There were six men and four women; the age of onset of encephalopathy ranged from 17 to 51 years. The initial symptom in nine patients was sudden onset disturbance of consciousness, and one patient had long been regarded as having a chronic progressive psychotic illness. High concentrations of plasma citrulline and ammonia were commonly seen on admission. Although brain CT or MRI lacked any consistent findings, the EEG was abnormal in all patients, showing diVuse slow waves. Additionally, in five patients chronic pancreatitis preceded the onset of encephalopathy. After liver transplantation the metabolic abnormalities, including abnormal plasma concentrations of citrulline and ammonia, were immediately corrected and all neuropsychic symptoms soon disappeared, except for impaired cognitive function in one patient. Six out of these seven patients returned to their previous social lives, including work. Conclusions-The clinical concept of adult onset type II citrullinaemia coincides well with the range of hepatic encephalopathy, and liver transplantation is a very promising therapeutic approach.
To elucidate whether the amount of tissue-deposited amyloid in familial amyloid polyneuropathy (FAP) patients decreases or increases over the long-term course after liver transplantation (LT), we examined changes in histopathological and biochemical characteristics of abdominal fat amyloid in the transplanted patients with a postoperative history of more than 10 years. Using a series of aspirated abdominal fat tissues from 6 FAP patients with transthyretin (TTR) Val30Met variant, the severity of amyloid deposits was examined and the composition ratio of wild type-to-variant TTR in fat amyloid was assayed by liquid chromatography-ion trap mass spectrometry (LC-MS/MS). Histopathological examination of abdominal fat tissues demonstrated a significant decrease or disappearance of amyloid deposits in all 6 patients. On LC-MS/MS analysis, the contribution of wild-type TTR to the composition ratio in amyloid fibrils was markedly increased in all patients after LT. This is the first report showing pathological evidence that deposited amyloid in FAP patients with long posttransplantation courses can gradually regress or disappear.
Objective We report a risk of worsening of encephalopathy by glycerol infusion when this osmotic agent is used for the treatment of brain edema in patients with adult-onset type II citrullinemia (CTLN2) caused by citrin deficiency.Patients and Methods We performed a retrospective investigation of 3 patients with CTLN2 treated for brain edema at our institute: a 31-year-old male patient and a 40-year-old female patient received treatment for encephalopathy-related brain edema with 10% glycerol infusion and 20% D-mannitol, and a 40-year-old male patient received only 20% D-mannitol infusion. In addition, we also performed a retrospective study in 11 CTLN2 patients reported previously (8 patients treated with 10% glycerol, 2 treated with 10% glycerol and 20% mannitol, and 1 treated with 20% mannitol).Results The 12 patients treated with 10% glycerol, including 2 of our patients, died due to rapidly deteriorating encephalopathy and brain edema. On the other hand, the 2 patients who received only 20% D-mannitol, including one of our patients, recovered with the disappearance of brain edema.Conclusion In CTLN2 patients, glycerol infusion seems to be associated with exacerbation of encephalopathy itself and only mannitol should be used for the treatment of brain edema in patients with this disorder. (Internal Medicine 44: 188-195, 2005)
Preoperative clinical severity and duration of illness are associated with outcomes after liver transplantation for FAP.
More than 20 patients with adult-onset type II citrullinemia have undergone liver transplantation, showing dramatic therapeutic effects. In Japan, living donor liver transplantation is the standard technique of liver transplantation because of the rare availability of cadaveric donors. The feasibility of auxiliary partial orthotopic liver transplantation (APOLT) for adult-onset type II citrullinemia to overcome the problem of a small-for-size graft in living donor liver transplantation has not been defined. We recently performed APOLT for patients with type II citrullinemia. Here, we present 2 patients: patient 1 was a 32-year-old man and patient 2 was a 43-year-old woman. Both patients suffered from hepatic encephalopathy, and laboratory data showed highly elevated plasma levels of ammonia and citrulline. In patient 1, the liver graft was obtained from a patient with familial amyloid polyneuropathy as a domino liver transplant. In patient 2, APOLT was performed after graft donation from her husband. The postoperative clinical courses of both patients were uneventful, and the neurological symptoms were completely resolved. The plasma concentrations of ammonia and citrulline normalized rapidly in both patients. APOLT can provide an adequate hepatocyte mass to correct the underlying enzyme deficiency in adult patients with type II citrullinemia. In addition, APOLT can be carried out safely to overcome the limitation of graft volume in living donor liver transplantation.
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