Systemic carnitine deficiency
Clinical, biochemical, and morphological cure with L‐carnitine
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Abstract
A 20-year-old woman had systemic carnitine deficiency. Biochemical studies of cultured fibroblasts, skeletal muscle mitochondria, and fluids showed no evidence of other disease that might deplete tissue carnitine stores. Carnitine supplementation produced a dramatic improvement in her clinical condition: she gained weight and strength and recovered brain function, which had deteriorated slightly after repeated episodes of encephalopathy. Lipid droplets disappeared from skeletal muscle and plasma, and muscle carnitine content rose from low to normal values. On treatment, she excreted less carnitine than controls. This form of systemic carnitine deficiency may be due to defective carnitine biosynthesis.
- © 1984 by the American Academy of Neurology
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