0521779407-08 CUNY1086/Karliner 0 521 77940 7 June 13, 2007 7:47
Glycogen Storage Disease 635
Glycogen Storage Disease..............................
RANDOLPH B. LINDE, MD
history & physical
History
■Inherited and uncommon enzyme deficiencies that vary by:
➣Age of presentation: from infancy to senior citizen
➣Whether defect is in synthesis or degradation of glycogen
➣Involvement of muscle, liver, or both, with or without other tis-
sues
➣Whether muscle involvement is limited to exercise intolerance
or progresses to a fatal outcome
➣Whether cardiac muscle is involved
➣Severity of liver disease, including risk of cirrhosis or cancer
➣Presence or absence of fasting hypoglycemia
Signs & Symptoms
■Vary per missing enzyme (Types 0, I–VII) and organ system involved
➣Most severe
A fatal form in infancy with cardiomegaly and hypotonia (II:
Pompe disease from lysosomal acid alpha-glucosidase defi-
ciency)
Another form can cause neuromuscular disease with neonatal
death, or fatal liver disease in childhood (IV: Andersen disease
from branching enzyme deficiency)
➣Most mild
Asymptomatic siblings of affected children have been
described (0: from glycogen synthase deficiency)
➣Most common presentations
Infant with failure to thrive, hypoglycemia as feeding time
intervals increase, and a protuberant abdomen from hep-
atomegaly (I: Von Gierke disease from glucose-6-phosphatase
deficiency)
Infant or child with growth retardation, hepatomegaly, less
prominent hypoglycemia with ketosis (III: Cori or Forbes
disease from debranching enzyme deficiency) (VI: Hers dis-
ease from liver phosphorylase deficiency) (VIa: phosphorylase
kinase deficiency)
Child with exertional muscle cramping which can be severe
with nausea, vomiting, and passage of burgundy urine from