Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: EC:3.2.1.23 (
beta-galactosidase
)
14,648
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
BACKGROUND Cholesteryl ester storage disease (CESD), also known as lysosomal acid lipase deficiency (LAL-D), is a rare autosomal-recessive inheritable lysosomal storage disease. Since 2015, a causal treatment with sebelipase alfa, which replaces the missing LAL enzyme, has been approved. We report a fatal course of LAL-D in a female patient. CASE REPORT In 1979, CESD was first diagnosed in a 13-year-old female with marked hepatomegaly. At that time, no specific treatment for CESD was available and the spontaneous course of the disease had to be awaited. In 2013, a laparoscopic cholecystectomy for symptomatic gallstones was performed. The patient's CESD had caused a Child-Pugh A/B and Lab-MELD 14 cirrhosis with
esophageal varices
(grade III), a solitary fundal varix, as well as hepatosplenomegaly with thrombocytopenia. In 2016, the patient was admitted with compensated cirrhosis and splenomegaly for a ligature of
esophageal varices
which was complicated by vomiting of blood followed by severe coagulopathy and hemorrhagic shock. The dried blood test showed reduced acid lipase (0.03 nmol/spot*3 hours; reference range 0.2-2) and
beta-galactosidase
(0.08 nmol/spot*21 hours; reference range 0.5-3.2). Then 15 days after the
esophageal varices
bleed, the patient died due to multiorgan failure as a sequelae of advanced liver disease. CONCLUSIONS LAL-D should be included in the differential diagnosis of lipid metabolism disorder, hepatomegaly, and non-alcoholic fatty liver disease with fibrosis or cirrhosis. Causal treatment with sebelipase alfa should be introduced even in patients who have LAL-D and many years of clinically mild symptoms of this disease to prevent the serious sequelae of cirrhosis or cardiovascular complications.
...
PMID:Cholesteryl Ester Storage Disease: Fatal Outcome without Causal Therapy in a Female Patient with the Preventable Sequelae of Progressive Liver Disease after Many Years of Mild Symptoms. 2977 83