Abstract

BACKGROUNDNonketotic hyperglycinemia (NKH) is a rare autosomal recessive genetic disorder of abnormal glycine metabolism caused by insufficient activity of the glycine cleavage enzyme system. Glycine is believed to function mainly as an inhibitory neurotransmitter, but it can also act as a co-agonist of the N-methyl-D-aspartate (NMDA) receptor. The accumulation of a large amount of glycine in the brain leads to neuronal and axonal injury via overactivation of NMDA receptors located in the hippocampus, cerebral cortex, olfactory bulb, and cerebellum and to stimulation of the inhibitory function of glycine receptors located in the spinal cord and brain stem, resulting in central apnea, hiccups, and hypotonia in the early stage of the disease.CASE SUMMARYThe child described in this report had typical clinical manifestations of NKH, such as hiccups, disturbance of consciousness, hypotonia, and convulsions, within the first week after birth. Whole-exome genetic testing revealed that the child had a compound heterozygous mutation, namely, c.395C>A (p.S132X) and c.2182G>A (p.G728R), in the GLDC gene, and he was diagnosed with NKH. For treatment, we administered an oral levetiracetam solution and added topiramate and prednisone for epilepsy control, but the epilepsy remained uncontrollable. Ketogenic diet therapy was started at 6 mo of age, his seizures were significantly reduced, and there were no obvious adverse reactions during ketogenic treatment. Furthermore, we found that with the development of the disease, high levels of serum glycine decreased or even disappeared without intervention, and as the disease progressed, the corpus callosum became dysplastic.CONCLUSIONThis case shows that plasma glycine levels cannot be used to evaluate the prognosis of NKH, that the development of the corpus callosum can be affected by NKH, and that a ketogenic diet may be effective for seizure control in NKH patients.

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