1. Liver Transplantation in a Woman with Mahvash Disease.
- Author
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Robbins J, Halegoua-DeMarzio D, Basu Mallick A, Vijayvergia N, Ganetzky R, Lavu H, Giri VN, Miller J, Maley W, Shah AP, DiMeglio M, Ambelil M, Yu R, Sato T, and Lefler DS
- Subjects
- Female, Humans, Esophageal and Gastric Varices etiology, Esophageal and Gastric Varices surgery, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage etiology, Gastrointestinal Hemorrhage surgery, Hypertrophy genetics, Liver Cirrhosis, Pancreatic Diseases genetics, Pancreatic Diseases pathology, Pancreatic Diseases surgery, Glucagon-Secreting Cells pathology, Glucagon blood, Glucagon genetics, Hypertension, Portal blood, Hypertension, Portal etiology, Hypertension, Portal genetics, Hypertension, Portal surgery, Liver Transplantation, Genetic Diseases, Inborn blood, Genetic Diseases, Inborn diagnosis, Genetic Diseases, Inborn genetics, Genetic Diseases, Inborn surgery
- Abstract
Mahvash disease is an exceedingly rare genetic disorder of glucagon signaling characterized by hyperglucagonemia, hyperaminoacidemia, and pancreatic α-cell hyperplasia. Although there is no known definitive treatment, octreotide has been used to decrease systemic glucagon levels. We describe a woman who presented to our medical center after three episodes of small-volume hematemesis. She was found to have hyperglucagonemia and pancreatic hypertrophy with genetically confirmed Mahvash disease and also had evidence of portal hypertension (recurrent portosystemic encephalopathy and variceal hemorrhage) in the absence of cirrhosis. These findings established a diagnosis of portosinusoidal vascular disease, a presinusoidal type of portal hypertension previously known as noncirrhotic portal hypertension. Liver transplantation was followed by normalization of serum glucagon and ammonia levels, reversal of pancreatic hypertrophy, and resolution of recurrent encephalopathy and bleeding varices., (Copyright © 2023 Massachusetts Medical Society.)
- Published
- 2023
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