BMC Geriatrics (Nov 2020)

An elderly diabetic patient with McArdle disease and recurrent rhabdomyolysis: a potential association with late hypoinsulinemia?

  • Pedro Renato Chocair,
  • Sara Mohrbacher,
  • Precil Diego Miranda de Menezes Neves,
  • Leonardo Victor Barbosa Pereira,
  • Erico Souza Oliveira,
  • Luciana Loureiro Nardotto,
  • Alessandra Martins Bales,
  • Victor Augusto Hamamoto Sato,
  • Sabrina Neves Silva,
  • Bernadete Maria Coelho Ferreira,
  • Américo Lourenço Cuvello-Neto

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/s12877-020-01812-4
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 20, no. 1
pp. 1 – 6

Abstract

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Abstract Background McArdle disease is a myopathy caused by mutations in PYGM gene that is characterized by reduced or absent activity of myophosphorylase. Reports of patients with concomitant McArdle disease and diabetes are scarce. We report a case of a patient with a late diagnosis of McArdle disease and we postulate that symptoms may be related to hypoinsulinemia. Case presentation This report describes the evolution of an elderly diabetic patient with confirmed diagnosis of McArdle’s disease based on the absence of myophosphorylase activity in the analysis of muscle biopsy, and a homozygous mutation in the PYGM gene. The variant – Chr11: 64.525 (p. Asn168*fs) has not been previously described. The diagnosis of McArdle disease was confirmed after two episodes of rhabdomyolysis, at 77 and 81 years of age, as the symptoms were, until then, discrete. The “second-wind phenomenon” was not spontaneously reported, but it was confirmed when directly questioned. We postulate that the later episodes of rhabdomyolysis occurred because of a progressive decrease in insulin production with a consequent reduction in the uptake of blood glucose by muscle cells, thus compromising the cellular energy balance. To our knowledge, this is the first report of recurrent rhabdomyolysis in an elderly diabetic patient with genetically proven McArdle disease. Our initial attempt to reduce insulin resistance with metformin and pioglitazone was not effective, possibly because of inadequate insulinemia. However, an improvement was evident after the administration of low doses of intermediate-acting insulin. Conclusions In view of the patient’s clinical evolution, we suggest the use of medication that reduces insulin resistance for patients with McArdle disease and type 2 diabetes, pre-diabetes or even normoglycemic metabolic syndrome.

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