open access

Vol 66, No 6 (2015)
Case report
Submitted: 2015-02-25
Accepted: 2015-05-04
Published online: 2015-12-07
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Familial partial lipodystrophy as differential diagnosis of polycystic ovary syndrome

Krzysztof C. Lewandowski, Andrzej Lewiński, Katarzyna Dąbrowska, Lucjusz Jakubowski, Agnieszka Gach
DOI: 10.5603/EP.2015.0067
·
Pubmed: 26662654
·
Endokrynol Pol 2015;66(6):550-554.

open access

Vol 66, No 6 (2015)
Case report
Submitted: 2015-02-25
Accepted: 2015-05-04
Published online: 2015-12-07

Abstract

According to current diagnostic criteria, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is effective as a diagnosis of exclusion. Here, we present a case of a 31-year-old woman with a history of oligomenorrhoea and hirsutism, who, despite a “muscular” appearance and a normal body mass index (22.27 kg/m2), was found to have an extreme insulin resistance and diabetes accompanied by hyperandrogenism and polycystic ovaries. An autoimmune screen for possible latent autoimmune diabetes in adults was negative. She was subsequently found to have familial partial lipodystrophy (FPLD2, OMIM #151660) caused by an R482Q mutation in the LMNA gene encoding lamin A/C. This mutation results in arginine to glutamine substitution at the protein level, while phenotypically this condition presents with a loss of body fat, insulin resistance, dyslipidaemia, and other features mimicking PCOS. Interestingly her mother, with a history of myocardial infarction and diabetes at the age of 46 but no oligomenorrhoea, was also found to harbour the same mutation (LMNA R482Q).

Conclusions: Our case highlights the importance of assessment of adipose tissue distribution, as well as a significance of assessment of glucose tolerance and insulin resistance in the differential diagnosis of PCOS. Furthermore, patients with atypical adipose tissue distribution should be referred for formal genetic testing. (Endokrynol Pol 2015; 66 (6): 550–554)

Abstract

According to current diagnostic criteria, polycystic ovary syndrome (PCOS) is effective as a diagnosis of exclusion. Here, we present a case of a 31-year-old woman with a history of oligomenorrhoea and hirsutism, who, despite a “muscular” appearance and a normal body mass index (22.27 kg/m2), was found to have an extreme insulin resistance and diabetes accompanied by hyperandrogenism and polycystic ovaries. An autoimmune screen for possible latent autoimmune diabetes in adults was negative. She was subsequently found to have familial partial lipodystrophy (FPLD2, OMIM #151660) caused by an R482Q mutation in the LMNA gene encoding lamin A/C. This mutation results in arginine to glutamine substitution at the protein level, while phenotypically this condition presents with a loss of body fat, insulin resistance, dyslipidaemia, and other features mimicking PCOS. Interestingly her mother, with a history of myocardial infarction and diabetes at the age of 46 but no oligomenorrhoea, was also found to harbour the same mutation (LMNA R482Q).

Conclusions: Our case highlights the importance of assessment of adipose tissue distribution, as well as a significance of assessment of glucose tolerance and insulin resistance in the differential diagnosis of PCOS. Furthermore, patients with atypical adipose tissue distribution should be referred for formal genetic testing. (Endokrynol Pol 2015; 66 (6): 550–554)

Get Citation

Keywords

insulin resistance; lipodystrophy; polycystic ovary syndrome

About this article
Title

Familial partial lipodystrophy as differential diagnosis of polycystic ovary syndrome

Journal

Endokrynologia Polska

Issue

Vol 66, No 6 (2015)

Article type

Case report

Pages

550-554

Published online

2015-12-07

Page views

2403

Article views/downloads

3547

DOI

10.5603/EP.2015.0067

Pubmed

26662654

Bibliographic record

Endokrynol Pol 2015;66(6):550-554.

Keywords

insulin resistance
lipodystrophy
polycystic ovary syndrome

Authors

Krzysztof C. Lewandowski
Andrzej Lewiński
Katarzyna Dąbrowska
Lucjusz Jakubowski
Agnieszka Gach

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