Clinical Description
Glycogen storage disease type V (GSDV) is a metabolic myopathy with onset frequently in the first decade of life. Clinical heterogeneity exists; about 10% of all affected individuals have mild manifestations (e.g., fatigue or poor stamina without contractures) and remain virtually asymptomatic during daily activities of living [Santalla et al 2017], whereas a more severe, rapidly progressive form may manifest shortly after birth. In some individuals, progressive weakness manifests in the sixth or seventh decade of life. The fixed weakness that occurs in approximately 20% of affected individuals is more likely to involve proximal muscles and is more common in individuals older than age 40 years [Santalla et al 2017]. Most affected individuals learn to adjust their daily activities and can lead relatively normal lives.
The usual presentation of GSDV is exercise intolerance (including contractures, stiffness, and/or weakness of the muscles in use), myalgia, and fatigue in the first few minutes of exercise. These symptoms are usually precipitated by isometric exercise (e.g., carrying weights) or sustained vigorous "aerobic" exercise (e.g., stair climbing, jogging), and typically are relieved by rest. Any skeletal muscle can be affected. Recurrent episodes of myoglobinuria as a consequence of such exercise are observed in about 50% of affected individuals [Santalla et al 2017].
Atypical presentations have been also described, such as difficulty with mastication, dysphagia, and oral motor function (which appear to be more common in younger individuals) [Kouwenberg et al 2018], spontaneous compartment syndrome [Mull et al 2015, Triplet et al 2017], and acute contracture of the posterior neck muscles [Scalco et al 2016].
While most affected individuals remember painful symptoms from early childhood, the disorder is rarely diagnosed before adulthood (i.e., usually after age 20 years, median age 33 years) [Santalla et al 2017, Scalco et al 2017]. Some people notice in middle age a worsening of their symptoms that may be accompanied by some muscle wasting. Presentation with exertional dyspnea has been described.
Most individuals learn to improve their exercise tolerance by exploiting the second-wind phenomenon, a unique feature of GSDV, which is relief of myalgia and rapid fatigue after a few minutes of rest. The metabolic events underlying the second wind are the increased supply of blood-borne glucose and free fatty acids as exercise progresses, leading to an increase in the rate of metabolism of these fuels inside working muscle fibers. The ability to develop a second wind is greatly increased in those who stay physically fit with regular aerobic exercise, such as walking.
In contrast, continuing to exercise in the presence of severe pain might result in muscle damage (rhabdomyolysis) and myoglobinuria. Myoglobinuria due to rhabdomyolysis following intense exercise occurs in approximately 50% of individuals; despite the risk of acute renal failure, very few develop it. While kidney failure is almost always reversible, emergency treatment is required [Lucia et al 2012]. It is noteworthy that a history of dark urine could help avoid misdiagnosis and complications of GSDV [Scalco et al 2016, Martinez-Thompson et al 2017].
Other presentations of GSDV:
Acute renal failure in the absence of exertion
HyperCKemia (asymptomatic elevations of serum CK activity) up to 17,000 IU/L in the infantile myopathy and preadolescents.
Pathophysiology. The two types of exercise:
Aerobic exercise includes walking, gentle swimming, jogging, and cycling. During aerobic exercise, the fuel used by skeletal muscle depends on several factors including the following: type, intensity, and duration of exercise; physical condition; and dietary regimen. Because aerobic exercise favors the utilization of blood-borne substrates, such as fatty acids, it is better tolerated by individuals with GSDV and thus beneficial as a therapeutic regimen.
"Anaerobic" exercise is intense and cannot be sustained (e.g., weight lifting or 100-meter dash). Normally, during anaerobic exercise, myophosphorylase converts glycogen to glucose, which enters the glycolytic pathway and produces ATP "anaerobically" (or with no need for oxygen).
The first few minutes of any exercise have an anaerobic component. Depending on intensity and duration of the exercise, muscle uses different fuel sources such as anaerobic glycolysis, blood glucose, muscle glycogen, and aerobic glycolysis, followed by fatty acid oxidation.
At rest the main energy source is blood free fatty acids. These molecules are oxidized in the mitochondrial beta-oxidation pathway to produce acetyl-CoA, which is further metabolized through the Krebs cycle and the mitochondrial respiratory chain resulting in ATP production.