https://www.selleckchem.com/erk.html LCHAD (long-chain 3-hydroxyacyl-CoA dehydrogenase) deficiency is a rare genetic disorder of mitochondrial long-chain fatty acid oxidation inherited as a recessive trait. Affected patients can present with hypoglycaemia, rhabdomyolysis and cardiomyopathy. About half of the patients may suffer from retinopathy. A 19-year-old girl was diagnosed as suffering from LCHAD deficiency with recurrent rhabdomyolysis episodes at the age of 7months by an inaugural coma with hypoglycaemia and hepatomegaly. Appropriate dietary management with carnitine supplementation was initiated. Retinopathy was diagnosed at age two. Ophthalmological assessments including visual acuity, visual field, OCT, flash ERGs, P-ERG, flash VEPs and EOG recordings were conducted over a 17-year period. Visual acuity was decreased. Fundi showed a progressive retinopathy and chorioretinopathy. Photophobia was noticed 2years before the decrease in photopic-ERG amplitude with normal scotopic-ERGs. Scotopic-ERG amplitude decreased 10years after the decrease in photopic-ERG amplitude. No EOG light rise was observed. Flash VEPs remained normal. These results suggest that the cone system dysfunction occurs largely prior to the rod system dysfunction with a relative preservation of the macula function. This dysfunction of cones prior to the dysfunction of rods was not reported previously. This could be related to mitochondrial energy failure in cones as cones are greater consumers of ATP than rods. This hypothesis needs to be further confirmed as other long-chain fatty oxidation defective patients (VLCAD and CPT2 deficiencies) do not exhibit retinopathy. This dysfunction of cones prior to the dysfunction of rods was not reported previously. This could be related to mitochondrial energy failure in cones as cones are greater consumers of ATP than rods. This hypothesis needs to be further confirmed as other long-chain fatty oxidation defective patients (VLCAD and CPT2 deficiencies)