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Query: UMLS:C0018799 (heart disease)
34,133 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Maternal phenylketonuria (PKU) refers to fetal damage from PKU in the pregnant woman. The progeny from such pregnancies are almost always microcephalic and mentally subnormal and have an increased frequency of congenital heart disease and low birth weight. Treatment with a phenylalanine-restricted diet, if begun before conception, seems to protect the fetus. The degree of protection is much less if dietary treatment is delayed until the pregnancy is in progress. The origin of fetal damage in maternal PKU is not known. Due to placental concentration of amino acids, the fetus is exposed to a higher concentration of phenylalanine than that in the mother, but it is not certain that phenylalanine is the toxic agent. Animal models made hyperphenylalaninemic by the administration of phenylalanine, often accompanied by a phenylalanine hydroxylase inhibitor, do not reproduce the full maternal PKU syndrome; but fetuses and newborns from these models have had reduced growth of the body and brain, and offspring later may show evidence of impaired learning ability.
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PMID:Maternal phenylketonuria. Review with emphasis on pathogenesis. 332 36

The frequency and types of congenital heart disease in offspring from pregnancies in women with hyperphenylalaninemia were examined in the international prospective Maternal Phenylketonuria Collaborative Study. Relationships of congenital heart disease in offspring to the basal blood phenylalanine level in the mother, metabolic control through diet during pregnancy, and phenylalanine hydroxylase mutations in mother and offspring were determined. The 416 offspring from 412 maternal phenylketonuria pregnancies that produced live births and 100 offspring from the 99 control pregnancies were included in this examination. Thirty-four of the 235 offspring (14%; 95% CI, 10.2 to 19.6%) from pregnancies in phenylketonuric women with a basal phenylalanine level > or = 900 microM (15 mg/dL) [normal blood phenylalanine < 120 microM (2 mg/dL)] and not in metabolic control [phenylalanine level < or = 600 microM (10 mg/dL)] by the eighth gestational week had congenital heart disease compared with one control offspring (1%) with congenital heart disease. One offspring among the 50 (2%) from mothers with non-phenylketonuria mild hyperphenylalaninemia also had congenital heart disease. Coarctation of the aorta and hypoplastic left heart syndrome were overrepresented compared with expected percentages among those with congenital heart disease in the general population. A basal maternal phenylalanine level > 1800 microM (30 mg/dL) significantly increased the risk for bearing a child with congenital heart disease (p = 0.003). Phenylalanine hydroxylase mutations in the mothers and offspring did not have an independent relationship to congenital heart disease but were related through the basal maternal phenylalanine levels. The data in this study indicate that a basal maternal phenylalanine level of 900 microM may be a threshold for congenital heart disease, that women with the most severe degree of phenylketonuria are at highest risk for bearing such a child, and that prevention of the congenital heart disease requires initiation of the low phenylalanine diet before conception or early in pregnancy with metabolic control no later than the eighth gestational week.
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PMID:Congenital heart disease in maternal phenylketonuria: report from the Maternal PKU Collaborative Study. 1132 45

Phenylketonuria (PKU) is an autosomal recessive inborn error of phenylalanine (Phe) metabolism resulting from deficiency of phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH). Most forms of PKU are caused by mutations in the PAH gene. Untreated PKU is associated with an abnormal phenotype, which includes growth failure, seizures, global developmental delay and severe intellectual impairment. The maternal PKU (MPKU) syndrome is caused by high blood Phe concentrations during pregnancy and presents with serious foetal anomalies, especially microcephaly, congenital heart disease and mental retardation. However, since the introduction of newborn screening programs and with early dietary intervention, children born with PKU can now expect to lead relatively normal lives. We present the case of a 33-year-old woman who had been diagnosed as having PKU only after a pregnancy with MPKU embryopathy, to emphasize that undiagnosed maternal phenylketonuria still exists. On that ground, we reviewed updated literature on the pathogenesis of this syndrome, possibility of prophylaxis and treatment.
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PMID:Undiagnosed maternal phenylketonuria: own clinical experience and literature review. 1955 60