How do you distinguish between these two? The question I got stuck was...
Two 4mo old baby has progressive weakness, diminished deep tendon reflex, and a frog-leg position since infancy. The parents say that both boys experienced seizure accompanied by hypoketotic hypoglycemia. One twin dies at 5 months of age. At 3 years of age, the surviving twin is diagnosed with cardiomegaly and lab tests show elevated carnitine esters in both muscle tissue and serum. What is the diagnosis?
ans: Carnitine "uptake" deficiency vs LCAD deficiency
The answer says I can rule out carnitine "uptake" deficiency because of carnitine esters (long chain acyl carnitines) are accumulating in serum and in muscle tissue but I was having trouble understanding how this rules out carnitine "uptake" deficiency. Would someone explain this pleaes?
Thanks.
Edit: I'm sorry, I actually forgot the key word "uptake" in carnitine deficiency.
Two 4mo old baby has progressive weakness, diminished deep tendon reflex, and a frog-leg position since infancy. The parents say that both boys experienced seizure accompanied by hypoketotic hypoglycemia. One twin dies at 5 months of age. At 3 years of age, the surviving twin is diagnosed with cardiomegaly and lab tests show elevated carnitine esters in both muscle tissue and serum. What is the diagnosis?
ans: Carnitine "uptake" deficiency vs LCAD deficiency
The answer says I can rule out carnitine "uptake" deficiency because of carnitine esters (long chain acyl carnitines) are accumulating in serum and in muscle tissue but I was having trouble understanding how this rules out carnitine "uptake" deficiency. Would someone explain this pleaes?
Thanks.
Edit: I'm sorry, I actually forgot the key word "uptake" in carnitine deficiency.
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