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Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism 2012-Jun

An infant with pseudohyperkalemia, hemolysis, and seizures: cation-leaky GLUT1-deficiency syndrome due to a SLC2A1 mutation.

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Waleed M Bawazir
Evelien F Gevers
Joanna F Flatt
Ai Leen Ang
Benjamin Jacobs
Caroline Oren
Stephanie Grunewald
Mehul Dattani
Lesley J Bruce
Gordon W Stewart

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Abstrak

BACKGROUND

GLUT1 (glucose transporter 1) deficiency syndrome is a well-known presentation in pediatric practice. Very rare mutations not only disable carbohydrate transport but also cause the red cell membrane to be constitutively permeant to monovalent cations, namely sodium and potassium.

OBJECTIVE

The aim of this study was to describe the pediatric presentation of a patient with GLUT1 deficiency with such a cation-leaky state.

METHODS

The infant presented with erratic hyperkalemia, neonatal hyperbilirubinemia, anemia, hepatic dysfunction, and microcephaly. Later, seizures occurred and developmental milestones were delayed. Magnetic resonance imaging and computerized tomography scans of the brain showed multiple abnormalities including periventricular calcification. Visual impairment was present due to the presence of both cataracts and retinal dysfunction.

RESULTS

Measurements of red cell cation content showed extremely leaky red cells (causing the hemolysis) and temperature-dependent loss of potassium from red cells (explaining the hyperkalemia as pseudohyperkalemia). A trinucleotide deletion in SLC2A1, coding for the deletion of isoleucine 435 or 436 in GLUT1, was identified in the proband.

CONCLUSIONS

This is the fourth pedigree to be described with this most unusual syndrome. The multisystem pathology probably reflects a combination of glucose transport deficiency at the blood-brain barrier (as in typical GLUT1 deficiency) and the deleterious osmotic effects of a cation-leaky membrane protein in the cells where GLUT1 is expressed, notably the red cell. We hope that this detailed description will facilitate rapid diagnosis of this disease entity.

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