This article is available to subscribers. Subscribe now. Already have an account? Sign in

Original ArticleFree PreviewArchive

Development of a Scleroderma-like Illness during Therapy with L-5-Hydroxytryptophan and Carbidopa

List of authors.
  • Esther M. Sternberg, M.D.,
  • Melvtn H. Van Woert, M.D.,
  • Simon N. Young, Ph.D.,
  • Ib Magnussen, M.D.,
  • Herman Baker, Ph.D.,
  • Serge Gauthier, M.D.,
  • and C. Kirk Osterland, M.D.

Abstract

A scleroderma-like illness developed in a patient treated with L-5 hydroxytryptophan (L-5HTP) and carbidopa for intention myoclonus. The patient had high plasma kynurenine levels that remained high when the L-5HTP-carbidopa combination was discontinued. However, levels rose further on drug rechallenge, suggesting that the drug unmasked an abnormality in one of the enzymes that catabolize kynurenine. Plasma kynurenine was also determined to be high in seven of 15 patients with idiopathic scleroderma, but not in eight patients with intention myoclonus treated with L-5HTP and a decarboxylase inhibitor and in whom scleroderma did not develop or in 10 patients with Parkinson's disease treated with L-dopa and carbidopa.

Our data and studies in the literature suggest that two factors may be important in the pathogenesis of some scleroderma-like illness: high plasma serotonin and the abnormality associated with elevated kynurenine. (N Engl J Med. 1980; 303:782–7.)

Funding and Disclosures

Supported in part by grants from the Royal Victoria Hospital, the Canadian Arthritis Society, and the Medical Research Council of Canada; by grants (NS 12341–04 and, in part, RR-00071) from the Division of Research Resources, General Clinical Research Center Branch, U.S. Public Health Service; and by the Danish Medical Research Council.

We are indebted to Dr. I. Libman for allowing us to study his patient, to Dr. O. Marner for performing the urinary 5-HIAA measurements, to Dr. S. Jothy for preparing the photomicrographs, to Fong Kun Chan for excellent technical assistance, and to Mrs. Linda Carfagnini for preparation of the manuscript.

Author Affiliations

From the departments of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology, Psychiatry, and Neurology and Neurosurgery, McGill University School of Medicine, Montreal: the Department of Neurology, Mount Sinai School of Medicine, New York; and the Department of Medicine and Preventive Medicine, New Jersey Medical School, East Orange, N.J. (address reprint requests to Dr. Sternberg at the Division of Clinical Immunology and Rheumatology, Royal Victoria Hospital, 687 Pine Ave. W., Montreal, Quebec, Canada H3A 1A1).

Dr. Sternberg is a Fellow of the Canadian Arthritis Society. Dr. Magnussen holds a Merck Foundation International Fellowship in Clinical Pharmacology.

Print Subscriber? Activate your online access.