Neuropediatrics 2007; 38(6): 317-319
DOI: 10.1055/s-2008-1062714
Short Communication

© Georg Thieme Verlag KG Stuttgart · New York

Hypocarnitinemic Hypoglycemia and Heart Failure in an Infant with a Constant Parenteral Elementary Nutrition during Measles Vaccination-Related Febrile Illness

K. Okanari 1 , M. Takahashi 1 , T. Maeda 1 , K. Sato 1 , S. Suenobu 1 , T. Izumi 1
  • Department of Brain and Nerve Science, Pediatrics, Oita University Faculty of Medicine, Oita, Yufu, Japan
Further Information

Publication History

received 02.08.2007

accepted after revision 15.02.2008

Publication Date:
06 May 2008 (online)

Abstract

A 1-year and 11-month-old female infant with bilateral lesions of the thalamus, basal ganglia, cerebellar and brainstem disease died from heart failure 9 days after being administered a measles vaccination. She had a high fever, hypocarnitinemic and non-ketotic hypoglycemia, serum levels of total carnitine 7.4 μmol/L, free carnitine 5.6 μmol/L, acylcarnitine 1.8 μmol/L and glucose 13 mg/dL. Due to feeding difficulty, the patient, however, had been administered parenteral elementary nutrition through a feeding tube since early infancy. The commercially available parenteral nutrition solutions do not contain carnitine. A secondary carnitine deficiency followed by non-ketotic hypoglycemia-related heart failure may readily develop even in a patient without valproic acid, during high fever.

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Correspondence

K. Okanari

Department of Brain and Nerve Science, Pediatrics

Faculty of Medicine

Oita University

1-1 Idaigaoka

Hasama

Oita

879-5593 Yufu

Japan

Phone: +81/97/586 58 33

Fax: +81/97/586 58 39

Email: o-kazuo@med.oita-u.ac.jp

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