From Surf Wiki (app.surf) — the open knowledge base
Lipodystrophy
Inability to produce or maintain healthy fat tissue
Inability to produce or maintain healthy fat tissue
| Field | Value |
|---|---|
| name | Lipodystrophie |
|
Lipodystrophy syndromes are a group of genetic or acquired disorders in which the body is unable to produce and maintain healthy fat tissue. The medical condition is characterized by abnormal or degenerative conditions of the body's adipose tissue. A more specific term, lipoatrophy (), is used when describing the loss of fat from one area (usually the face). This condition is also characterized by a lack of circulating leptin which may lead to osteosclerosis. The absence of fat tissue is associated with insulin resistance, hypertriglyceridemia, non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) and metabolic syndrome.
Types
Lipodystrophy can be divided into the following types:
- Congenital lipodystrophy syndromes
- Congenital generalized lipodystrophy (Berardinelli-Seip syndrome)
- Familial partial lipodystrophy
- Marfanoid–progeroid–lipodystrophy syndrome
- Chronic atypical neutrophilic dermatosis with lipodystrophy and elevated temperature syndrome
- Acquired lipodystrophy syndromes
- Acquired partial lipodystrophy (Barraquer-Simons syndrome)
- Acquired generalized lipodystrophy
- Centrifugal abdominal lipodystrophy (lipodystrophia centrifugalis abdominalis infantilis)
- Lipoatrophia annularis (Ferreira-Marques lipoatrophia)
- Localized lipodystrophy
- HIV-associated lipodystrophy
Pathogenesis
Due to an insufficient capacity of subcutaneous tissue to store fat, fat is deposited in non-adipose tissue (lipotoxicity), leading to insulin resistance. Patients may display hypertriglyceridemia, severe fatty liver disease and little or no adipose tissue. Average patient lifespan is approximately 30 years before death, with liver failure being the usual cause of death. In contrast to the high levels seen in non-alcoholic fatty liver disease (NAFLD) associated with obesity, leptin levels are very low in lipodystrophy.
Insulin injections
Main article: Lipohypertrophy
Lipodystrophy can appear as a lump or small dent in the skin that forms when a person performs injections repeatedly in the same spot. These types of lipodystrophies are harmless and can be avoided by changing (rotating) the locations of injections. For those with diabetes, using purified insulins and new needles with each injection may also help. (Although, in some cases, rotation of the injection sites may not be enough to prevent lipodystrophy.)
Some of the side-effects of lipodystrophy are the rejection of the injected medication, the slowing down of the absorption of the medication, or trauma which can cause bleeding that, in turn, causes rejection of the medication. In any of these scenarios, the dosage of the medication, such as insulin for diabetics, becomes impossible to gauge correctly and the treatment of the disease for which the medication is administered is impaired, thereby allowing the condition to worsen.
Antiretroviral drugs
Main article: HIV-associated lipodystrophy
Lipodystrophy can be a possible side effect of certain antiretroviral drugs. Lipoatrophy is most commonly seen in patients treated with thymidine analogues and other older HIV drug treatments such as the nucleoside reverse transcriptase inhibitors [NRTIs] like zidovudine (AZT) and stavudine (d4T). Other lipodystrophies manifest as lipid redistribution, with excess, or lack of, fat in various regions of the body. This is often most noticeable in the face. These include, but are not limited to, having sunken cheeks and/or "humps" on the back or back of the neck (also referred to as buffalo hump) which also exhibits due to excess cortisol (a so-called "stress" hormone).
Diagnosis
The diagnosis is a clinical one, usually established by an experienced endocrinologist. Using a skinfold caliper to measure skinfold thickness in various parts of the body or a total body composition scan using dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry may also help identify the subtype. Dual-energy X-ray absorptiometry may be useful by providing both regional %fat measurements, and direct visualization of fat distribution by means of a "fat shadow". A genetic confirmation is sometimes possible, depending on the subtype. However, in up to 40% of partial lipodystrophy patients, a causative gene has not been identified.
Treatment
Leptin replacement therapy with human recombinant leptin metreleptin has been shown to be an effective therapy to alleviate the metabolic complications associated with lipodystrophy, and has been approved by the FDA for the treatment of generalized lipodystrophy syndromes. In Europe based on EMA, metreleptin should be used in addition to diet to treat lipodystrophy, where patients have loss of fatty tissue under the skin and build-up of fat elsewhere in the body such as in the liver and muscles. The medicine is used in: adults and children above the age of two years with generalised lipodystrophy (Berardinelli-Seip syndrome and Lawrence syndrome) and in adults and children above the age of 12 years with partial lipodystrophy (including Barraquer-Simons syndrome), when standard treatments have failed.
Volanesorsen is an Apo-CIII inhibitor that is currently being investigated as a potential therapeutic to reduce levels of hypertriglycerides in Familial Partial Lipodystrophy patients in the BROADEN study.
Epidemiology
Congenital lipodystrophy (due to inherited genetic defect) is estimated to be extremely rare, possibly affecting only one per million persons. Acquired lipodystrophy is much more common, especially affecting persons with HIV infection.
References
References
- (January 2005). "Lipin, a lipodystrophy and obesity gene". Cell Metabolism.
- "UCLA/VA Researchers discover fat gene".
- (December 2016). "The Diagnosis and Management of Lipodystrophy Syndromes: A Multi-Society Practice Guideline". The Journal of Clinical Endocrinology and Metabolism.
- (May 2017). "Spectrum of disease associated with partial lipodystrophy: lessons from a trial cohort". Clinical Endocrinology.
- (2006). "Andrews' Diseases of the Skin: clinical Dermatology". Saunders Elsevier.
- (March 2010). "Chronic atypical neutrophilic dermatosis with lipodystrophy and elevated temperature (CANDLE) syndrome". Journal of the American Academy of Dermatology.
- (2019). "Recent advances in understanding lipodystrophy: a focus on lipodystrophy-associated cardiovascular disease and potential effects of leptin therapy on cardiovascular function". [[Faculty of 1000#F1000Research.
- (Jul 2019). "The Injection Technique Factor: What You Don't Know or Teach Can Make a Difference". Clinical Diabetes.
- (July 2002). "Abacavir substitution for nucleoside analogs in patients with HIV lipoatrophy: a randomized trial". JAMA.
- (May 2003). "Randomized, controlled, 48-week study of switching stavudine and/or protease inhibitors to combivir/abacavir to prevent or reverse lipoatrophy in HIV-infected patients". Journal of Acquired Immune Deficiency Syndromes.
- [http://www.medicinenet.com/script/main/art.asp?articlekey=19678 Physical and Biochemical Changes in HIV Disease] Eric S. Daar, M.D. MedicineNet, Accessed 22 September 2007
- (November 2016). "Type 1 familial partial lipodystrophy: understanding the Köbberling syndrome". Endocrine.
- (October 2018). ""Fat Shadows" From DXA for the Qualitative Assessment of Lipodystrophy: When a Picture Is Worth a Thousand Numbers". Diabetes Care.
- (February 2002). "Leptin-replacement therapy for lipodystrophy". The New England Journal of Medicine.
- (17 September 2018). "Myalepta {{!}} European Medicines Agency".
- (December 2014). "Targeting APOC3 in the familial chylomicronemia syndrome". The New England Journal of Medicine.
- (July 2015). "Antisense Inhibition of Apolipoprotein C-III in Patients with Hypertriglyceridemia". The New England Journal of Medicine.
- "The BROADEN Study: A Study of Volanesorsen (Formerly ISIS-APOCIIIRx) in Patients With Familial Partial Lipodystrophy - Full Text View - ClinicalTrials.gov".
- (2019). "Fatty liver in lipodystrophy: A review with a focus on therapeutic perspectives of adiponectin and/or leptin replacement". [[Metabolism: Clinical and Experimental]].
This article was imported from Wikipedia and is available under the Creative Commons Attribution-ShareAlike 4.0 License. Content has been adapted to SurfDoc format. Original contributors can be found on the article history page.
Ask Mako anything about Lipodystrophy — get instant answers, deeper analysis, and related topics.
Research with MakoFree with your Surf account
Create a free account to save articles, ask Mako questions, and organize your research.
Sign up freeThis content may have been generated or modified by AI. CloudSurf Software LLC is not responsible for the accuracy, completeness, or reliability of AI-generated content. Always verify important information from primary sources.
Report