Abstract

The aim of this case report is to call attention to short‐chain acyl‐CoA dehydrogenase (SCAD) deficiency as a possible contributory factor to hypoglycaemia in childhood. We report on a previously healthy 14 mo‐old Danish boy who presented with hypoglycaemia and metabolic acidosis after a few days of upper airway infection. After two days on a normal diet, he recovered clinically and biochemically. A thorough biochemical examination did not reveal the cause of the hypoglycaemia. However, the excretion of ethylmalonic acid in two morning urine samples was moderately increased, and hence the SCAD gene was screened for mutations. We found the child homozygous for the G > A SCAD gene variation at position 625. Conclusion: In this patient, reduced function of the SCAD protein is reflected in the excretion of ethylmalonic acid, a marker of intracellular accumulation of butyryl‐CoA and the cytotoxic butyric acid. Furthermore, gluconeogenesis might be compromised owing to lack of reducing equivalents from the oxidation of short‐chain fatty acids in the fasting or stressed state, thus contributing to the predisposition for fasting hypoglycaemia.

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