Abstract:
Introduction. MELAS syndrome (Mitochondrial Encephalopathy, Lactic Acidosis, and Stroke-like
episodes) is a rare condition with early childhood outset that affects the nervous and muscular systems. The
condition is caused by mutations in the mitochondrial DNA, mutations that may be inherited through the
maternal lineage may be spontaneous. Clinical manifestations include seizures, recurrent headaches, strokelike episodes with hemiplegia, hearing loss, myopathy, cardiomyopathy.
Case presentation. The patient, a 2-year-old and 7-month-old girl, presented to the hospital with the
following accusations: superior paraplegia, balance disorders, aphasia. From the history of the disease: at
one year and 8 months on the background of pneumonia, the first convulsive crisis appears. He begins to
receive anticonvulsant medication. MRI shows ischemic stroke with postischemic encephalomalacia, left
cerebrovascular malformation, clinically manifested by right hemiparesis and motor dysphasia. The
echocardiographic examination shows restrictive heart disease, ASD, severe atriomegaly, RV diastolic
dysfunction, fluid pericarditis and pulmonary hypertension, Heart failure NYHA gr II-III. After about a
year, based on the results and the multisystemic effect, the diagnosis of mitochondrial encephalopathy,
MELAS syndrome with multisystemic effect is confirmed based on the clinical manifestations as well as
the genetic test. In the process of following the patient, other diagnoses were evaluated and excluded.
Discussion. MELAS is a progressive mitochondrial disease whose key element is stroke-like episodes, but
it remains heterogeneous and symptomatically variable. Patients with unexplained stroke-like symptoms
should be investigated, especially children, for whom early onset of symptoms could indicate a more
aggressive phenotype. The presence of cortical and subcortical lesions on MRI and MRS increase the
likelihood of mitochondrial pathology. Increased lactate in CSF during acute episodes and skeletal muscle
biopsy are specific tests for this syndrome. Confirmation requires genetic testing for mutations in the MTTL1 gene (up to 80% of cases).
Conclusions: The occurrence of stroke symptoms in pediatric patients requires a multidisciplinary
approach and complex investigations. The polymorphism of the manifestations in MELAS syndrome can
create difficulties in the diagnosis of the disease, but at the same time its importance lies in the genetic
consultation that the family and the patient's treatment will need.