Lipids in Health and Disease (Dec 2006)

Severe combined hyperlipidaemia and retinal lipid infiltration in a patient with Type 2 diabetes mellitus

  • Rae Derek,
  • O'Neal David N,
  • Favaloro Jenny M,
  • Tebbutt Niall C,
  • Davey Rachel A,
  • Zajac Jeffrey D,
  • Best James D

DOI
https://doi.org/10.1186/1476-511X-5-29
Journal volume & issue
Vol. 5, no. 1
p. 29

Abstract

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Abstract Severe combined hyperlipidaemia has occasionally been associated with infiltration of tissues in addition to arteries and the skin. We report a woman with Type 2 diabetes mellitus (DM) and severe combined hyperlipidaemia who developed retinal lipid infiltration, resulting in blindness. A 61-year-old woman with a 15-year history of Type 2 DM was admitted following a two-week history of progressive visual loss. Examination identified lipid infiltration into the retina. Phenotypically she had severe combined hyperlipidaemia with elevated IDL cholesterol and a broad beta band on lipoprotein electrophoresis, raising the possibility of familial dysbetalipoproteinaemia. However, gene sequencing analysis indicated that the patient was homozygous for the E3/E3 allele of the ApoE gene with no mutations detected in either the coding region or intron-exon boundaries. Her lipid profile improved following dietary therapy and gemfibrozil treatment, but this had little effect on either her fundal appearances or her visual acuity. Type 2 DM plays a vital role both in allowing expression of severe combined hyperlipoproteinaemia, in addition to serving as a risk factor for complications such as tissue infiltration.