Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (hepatomegaly)
5,798 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Two infants with lethargy, vomiting, convulsions, coma and marked metabolic acidosis were found to have very high concentrations of methylmalonic acid in their serum and urine. In vitro studies of fibroblasts demonstrated that the infants had different variants of methylmalonic acidemia.Vitamin B(12) was given in two different forms at 1 month of age and at 12 months of age. Each trial continued for 4 months but neither infant showed a clinical or biochemical response.In both infants hyperglycinemia, neutropenia and thrombocytopenia developed during acute metabolic crises only. Hypoglycemia was found in patient 2. Hyperammonemia was severe in patient 2 during acute crises but never appeared in patient 1. When clinically well, both infants continued to excrete abnormal amounts of methylmalonic acid in the urine and both had persistent compensated metabolic acidosis.Marked hyperuricemia developed in patient 1 at 18 months of age and led to progressive renal failure. Allopurinol therapy was necessary to keep the uric acid concentration within the normal range. Renal function returned to normal, as indicated by a marked increase in the renal clearance of creatinine and uric acid.Patient 1 is physically and mentally retarded, and has moderate hypotonia, hepatomegaly and persistent vomiting. Patient 2 has developed normally.The urine concentrations of methylmalonic acid in the four parents were normal.
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PMID:Methylmalonic acidemia: 6 years' clinical experience with two variants unresponsive to vitamin B12 therapy. 3 17

A regional population-based survey identified six patients with pyridoxine dependency. Four presented on the first day of life and the other two at 1 and 8 months of age. Apart from multiple seizure types, other presenting features included jitteriness; encephalopathy, at first thought to be hypoxic-ischaemic; hepatomegaly, and abdominal distension with bilious vomiting. Later problems included break-through fits with fever; transient visual agnosia; squint; severe articulatory apraxia; motor delay with later dyspraxia; macrocephaly, and post-haemorrhagic hydrocephalus. Magnetic resonance imaging showed variable structural abnormalities in all the early onset cases. Psychometric assessment revealed a stereotyped pattern of intelligence scale subtest scores, with a specific impairment of expressive verbal ability. In a prospective open study over one year, an increased dose of pyridoxine was associated with an improvement in IQ, particularly in performance subtests. Pyridoxine dependency is more common than has been thought. It has a wider range of clinical features than the classical neonatal seizures and causes specific impairments of higher function, some of which may be reversible. The dosage of pyridoxine should be optimal for IQ as well as seizure control.
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PMID:Pyridoxine-dependent seizures: demographic, clinical, MRI and psychometric features, and effect of dose on intelligence quotient. 891 81