Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0016719 (Friedreich's ataxia)
2,098 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

An Amerindian girl with Friedreich's ataxia presented at the age of 14 years with intermittent bifrontal headaches and abdominal aching, often associated with nausea and recurrent vomiting and an evanescent pink, blotchy rash on the upper trunk. In these attacks she also had hypertension up to 210/160 mm Hg. Renal function studies, including intravenous pyelogram and angiography, were normal. Plasma renin activity (2.5 ng/ml/hr) was also normal. Total body CT scan was negative for phaeochromocytoma, and repeated estimations of 24-hour excretion of urinary VMA were normal or borderline high. Levels of total catecholamines in 24-hour urine were normal twice, but two random specimens during the paroxysmal episodes contained abnormally high levels of norepinephrine and dopamine. Plasma catecholamine concentrations were increased but not as high as with phaeochromocytoma. Blood pressure monitoring demonstrated marked fluctuations with position and temperature. A clonidine suppression test showed a substantial fall of plasma catecholamine levels, consistent with dysautonomia and not with phaeochromocytoma. It is concluded that the patient has dysautonomia of central origin, probably as a manifestation of Friedreich's ataxia. These findings are discussed in relation to the recent demonstration of increased levels of plasma catecholamines in that disease.
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PMID:Friedreich's ataxia with dysautonomia and labile hypertension. 670 98

The catalytic properties of many enzymes depend on the participation of vitamins as obligatory cofactors. Vitamin B12 (cobalamin) and folic acid (folate) deficiencies in infants and children classically present with megaloblastic anemia and are often accompanied by neurological signs. A number of rare inborn errors of cobalamin and folate absorption, transport, cellular uptake, and intracellular metabolism have been delineated and identification of disease-causing mutations has improved our ability to diagnose and treat many of these conditions. Two inherited defects in biotin metabolism are known, holocarboxylase synthetase and biotinidase deficiency. Both lead to multiple carboxylase deficiency manifesting with metabolic acidosis, neurological abnormalities, and skin rash. Thiamine-responsive megaloblastic anemia is characterized by megaloblastic anemia, non-type I diabetes, and sensorineural deafness that responds to pharmacological doses of thiamine (vitamin B1). Individuals affected with inherited vitamin E deficiencies including ataxia with isolated vitamin E deficiency and abetalipoproteinemia present with a spinocerebellar syndrome similar to patients with Friedreich's ataxia. If started early, treatment of these defects by oral or parenteral administration of the relevant vitamin often results in correction of the metabolic defect and reversal of the signs of disease, stressing the importance of early and correct diagnosis in these treatable conditions.
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PMID:Vitamin-responsive disorders: cobalamin, folate, biotin, vitamins B1 and E. 2362 2