Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease associated with hypobetalipoproteinemia: report of three cases and a novel mutation in APOB gene


Autoria(s): Rodrigues, Joana; Azevedo, Ana; Tavares, Susana; Rocha, Cristina; Silva, Ermelinda Santos
Data(s)

28/06/2016

28/06/2016

01/06/2016

Resumo

Background: Non-alcoholic fatty liver disease, the leading cause of chronic liver disease in children, is defined by hepatic fat infiltration >5% of hepatocytes, in the absence of excessive alcohol intake, evidence of viral, autoimmune or drug-induced liver disease. Conditions like rare genetic disorders must be considered in the differential diagnosis. Case Report: Two male brothers, and a non-related girl, all overweight, had liver steatosis. One of the brothers and the girl had elevated transaminases; all three presented with low total cholesterol, low density lipoproteins and very low density lipoproteins cholesterol levels, hypotriglyceridemia and low apolipoprotein B. A liver biopsy performed in the brother with citolysis confirmed steatohepatitis and the molecular study of apolipoprotein B gene showed a novel homozygous mutation (c.9353dup p.Asn3118Lysfs17). Patients with cytolysis lost weight, however liver steatosis persists. Conclusion: Fatty liver disease might be a consequence of hypobetalipoproteinemia. Evidence is scarce due to low number of reported cases.

Identificador

Nascer e Crescer 2016; 25(2): 104-7

0872-0754

http://hdl.handle.net/10400.16/1949

Idioma(s)

eng

Publicador

Centro Hospitalar do Porto

Relação

2;

Direitos

openAccess

Palavras-Chave #Gene APOB #Criança #Hipobetalipoproteinemia familiar #Fígado gordo não alcoólico #Esteatohepatite não alcoólica
Tipo

article