In a female newborn presenting with rapid metabolic deterioration (hypoketotic hypoglycaemia and acidosis) clinically accompanied by a "sweaty feet"-odour, the excretion pattern of organic acids in the urine suggested on the fourth day of live multiple acyl-CoA-dehydrogenase-deficiency, a potentially lethal autosomal-recessively inherited inborn error of fatty acid beta-oxidation and of the metabolism of certain amino acids. Diagnosis was confirmed by tandem-mass-spectrometry of acyl-carnitines in blood. Despite the poor prognosis of neonatal-onset multiple acyl-CoA-dehydrogenase-deficiency, treatment with carnitine, riboflavine, and a high-energy diet low in fat and high in carbonhydrates resulted in clinical stabilization. The infant survived various infection-associated decompensations and developed satisfyingly up to the age of 15 months, when another metabolic crisis resulted in multiorgan failure and death.
Discussion: Patients with neonatal-presenting multiple acyl-CoA-dehydrogenase-deficiency but without severe malformations may survive the first months of life. Tandem mass-spectrometry is a suitable tool to differentiate between multiple acyl-CoA-dehydrogenase-deficiency and other defects of fatty acid beta-oxidation.