Distrophinopathy: A rare cause of elevated transaminase in newborn

silfeler, ibrahim and dorum, bayram ali and canbak, yekta and acar, yesim (2011) Distrophinopathy: A rare cause of elevated transaminase in newborn. Pakistan Journal of Medical Sciences, 27 (2). pp. 474-476.

[thumbnail of 563-4249-1-PB.pdf] Text
563-4249-1-PB.pdf - Published Version

Download (56kB)

Abstract

Elavated transaminase levels are encountered in neonates and infancy because of several �reasons. Muscular dystrophy is a rare hereditary disease compared to other disease causing elevation of transaminase. Some of them progress rapidly and result in death. Our case, who was born from a healthy non-relative marriage, delivered with NSD as term and weighed 3750g. Patient was admitted to the service with diagnosis of meconium aspiration syndrome and perinatal asphyxia due to being stained with meconium and having respiratory distress.The patient was examined because of elevated transaminase levels. There was no reason which could lead to elevation of transaminases derived from liver. We examined the patient in terms of �myopathy because of the high level of creatinine kinase. Since the muscle biopsy was compatible with distrophinopathy, it was diagnosed as distrophinopathy. In children with prolonged transaminase levels, such clinical symptom may not be encountered. However, in these patients, it should be noted that rare myopathies may cause transaminase elevation. By reporting of this case we wanted to emphasize that determination of creatine kinase levels is important for early diagnosis.

Item Type: Article
Subjects: Archive Digital > Medical Science
Depositing User: Unnamed user with email support@archivedigit.com
Date Deposited: 14 Apr 2023 10:02
Last Modified: 07 Feb 2024 05:03
URI: http://eprints.ditdo.in/id/eprint/574

Actions (login required)

View Item
View Item