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Many inherited conditions result from disorders of intermediary metabolism. Many more are discovered annually using advanced gene sequencing and other tools. These diseases cause symptoms because of the accumulation of precursors, absence of the final product, excessive toxic intermediaries, or a combination of all three mechanisms. Many are fatal in childhood, but some are compatible with adult life and pregnancy. A better understanding of the enzymatic deficiencies and new technologies have made recombinant enzyme replacement therapy possible. Along with early diet manipulation, current management allows many patients to live relatively normal lives. Because fertility may not be affected, some of these conditions will be encountered by the anesthesiologist. This chapter describes diseases caused by certain enzyme deficiencies and the by-products that cause symptoms. Some are exacerbated by pregnancy and the stress of labor and delivery. The anesthesiologist plays an essential role in reducing physiologic stress and avoiding triggering agents and routines that cause severe metabolic derangements or cardiopulmonary decompensation. The final portion of the chapter describes the most recent advances in the prevention and treatment of malignant hyperthermia in pregnancy, discussing the impact on mother and baby.
Edited by
Helen Liapis, Ludwig Maximilian University, Nephrology Center, Munich, Adjunct Professor and Washington University St Louis, Department of Pathology and Immunology, Retired Professor
This chapter addresses the clinicopathologic features of kidney diseases in various categories of inherited metabolic diseases or inborn errors of metabolism, most often secondary to a systemic disease in the pediatric population. Considering the rarity of these diseases, renal involvement may be silent, purely functional and/or manifest parenchymal alterations with organ dysfunction. They may affect the glomerular, tubulo-interstitial or rarely vascular compartments, although they are not mutually exclusive in a given disease. The major groups of diseases include various forms of lipid, protein/lipoprotein, glycogen disorders and other organic substances, as a result of specific cellular organelle dysfunction or an inherited enzyme deficiency, allowing for accumulation of abnormal metabolites or substrates that cells are unable to eliminate effectively. The clinical manifestations may appear during the neonatal period or develop later during childhood with progressive organ dysfunction with a wide spectrum of signs and symptoms, having an acute, subacute or chronic presentation. The age of onset and disease severity may depend on the inheritance patterns and the type of gene mutations, as well as environmental influences. A detailed family history and genetic studies are often useful, along with clinical and laboratory findings at the time of presentation, to make a definitive diagnosis. Although the kidney is rarely a target organ, when affected, a renal biopsy is valuable in establishing a diagnosis and also in further delineating specific entities, based on their unique clinical, pathological, histochemical, ultrastructural and molecular/genetic characteristics.
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