Clinical Description
The clinical manifestations of systemic primary carnitine deficiency (CDSP) can vary widely with respect to age of onset, organ involvement, and severity of symptoms. The CDSP phenotype encompasses a broad clinical spectrum including metabolic decompensation in infancy, cardiomyopathy in childhood, fatigability in adulthood, or absence of symptoms. CDSP has typically been associated with infantile metabolic presentation in about half of affected individuals and childhood myopathic presentation in the other half. However, adults with CDSP who have mild or no symptoms have been reported. Such milder phenotypes are expected to be underdiagnosed; therefore, it is difficult to determine the relative prevalence of different phenotypes associated with CDSP [Longo et al 2006, El-Hattab & Scaglia 2015].
Infantile metabolic (hepatic) presentation. Affected children can present between age three months and two years with episodes of metabolic decompensation triggered by fasting or common illnesses such as upper-respiratory tract infection or gastroenteritis. These episodes are characterized clinically by poor feeding, irritability, lethargy, and hepatomegaly. Laboratory evaluations usually reveal hypoketotic hypoglycemia (hypoglycemia with minimal or no ketones in urine), hyperammonemia, and elevated liver transaminases. If affected children are not treated with intravenous dextrose infusion during episodes of metabolic decompensation (see Management), they may develop coma and die [Longo et al 2006, El-Hattab & Scaglia 2015].
Childhood myopathic (cardiac) presentation. The average age of myopathic presentation is between age two and four years, indicating that the myopathic manifestations of CDSP may develop over a longer period of time. Myopathic manifestations include dilated cardiomyopathy, hypotonia, skeletal muscle weakness, and elevated serum creatine kinase (CK). Death from cardiac failure can occur before the diagnosis is established, indicating that this presentation can be fatal if not treated. Older children with the infantile presentation may also develop myopathic manifestations including elevated CK, cardiomyopathy, and skeletal muscle weakness [Longo et al 2006, El-Hattab & Scaglia 2015].
Adulthood presentation. Several women have been diagnosed with CDSP after newborn screening identified low carnitine levels in their infants. About half of those women complained of fatigability, whereas the other half were asymptomatic. One woman was found to have dilated cardiomyopathy and another had arrhythmias [Schimmenti et al 2007, El-Hattab et al 2010, Lee et al 2010]. An asymptomatic adult male with CDSP has also been reported [Spiekerkoetter et al 2003].
Pregnancy-related symptoms. Pregnancy is a metabolically challenging state because energy consumption significantly increases. In addition, during pregnancy plasma carnitine levels are physiologically lower than those of non-pregnant controls. Affected women can have decreased stamina or worsening of cardiac arrhythmia during pregnancy, suggesting that CDSP may manifest or exacerbate during pregnancy [Schimmenti et al 2007, El-Hattab et al 2010].
Atypical manifestations. Other manifestations reported in individuals with CDSP include the following:
Heterozygous carriers. Heterozygous carriers are asymptomatic [Amat di San Filippo et al 2008].
Prognosis. Infantile metabolic and childhood myopathic presentations of CDSP can be fatal if untreated (see Management). The long-term prognosis is favorable as long as affected individuals remain on carnitine supplements. Repeated attacks of hypoglycemia or sudden death from arrhythmia have been described in affected individuals discontinuing carnitine supplementation [Longo et al 2006].