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Morphological correlates of mitochondrial dysfunction in children.
[pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency]
Morphological
studies
have
traditionally
played
a
major
role
in
the
study
of
adults
with
suspected
mitochondrial
diseases
.
Here
we
review
their
role
in
the
investigation
of
paediatric
patients
.
The
morphological
changes
may
be
macroscopic
,
such
as
developmental
abnormalities
of
the
brain
in
pyruvate
dehydrogenase
deficiency
,
including
ectopic
inferior
olives
and
the
absence
of
corpus
callosum
and
pyramids
.
Other
changes
are
histological
,
such
as
rarefaction
of
the
neuropil
and
endothelial
prominence
in
Leigh
syndrome
,
and
spongiosis
with
neuronal
loss
and
gliosis
in
Alpers
disease
.
The
ragged-
red
fibres
typical
of
mitochondrial
disease
in
adults
are
only
rarely
seen
in
skeletal
muscle
biopsies
from
children
.
On
the
other
hand
,
dramatic
ultrastructural
changes
involving
the
mitochondria
may
be
seen
in
many
organs
,
including
the
liver
,
heart
and
intestine
.
In
Alpers
and
lethal
infantile
mitochondrial
diseases
,
the
hepatocytes
show
marked
accumulation
of
small
droplets
of
lipid
alternating
with
densely
packed
mitochondria
with
pale
matrix
and
loss
of
granules
.
These
changes
are
associated
with
a
marked
decrease
in
respiratory
chain
enzyme
activity
in
the
liver
,
often
without
similar
decrease
in
the
skeletal
muscle
or
fibroblasts
.
Enlarged
mitochondria
with
concentric
cristae
are
prominent
in
the
cardiac
myocytes
in
Barth
syndrome
.
For
the
assessment
of
children
with
a
suspected
disorder
of
mitochondrial
dysfunction
,
detailed
morphological
studies
of
the
brain
(
at
autopsy
)
and
of
biopsies
(
especially
of
the
liver
)
,
including
ultrastructural
assessment
of
the
mitochondria
,
can
be
a
very
useful
preliminary
investigation
.
The
findings
should
then
be
correlated
with
the
clinical
features
and
used
as
a
guide
for
further
biochemical
and
molecular
studies
,
preferably
on
multiple
tissues
.
Diseases
Validation
Diseases presenting
"including ectopic inferior olives and the absence of corpus callosum and pyramids"
symptom
pyruvate dehydrogenase deficiency
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