Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
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Gene/Protein
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Target Concepts:
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Query: UMLS:C0019209 (
hepatomegaly
)
5,798
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
A male patient, born to unrelated Belgian parents, presented at 4 months with epistaxis, haematemesis and haematochezia. On physical examination he presented petechiae and haematomas, and a slightly
enlarged liver
. Serum transaminases were elevated to 5-10 times upper limit of normal, alkaline phosphatases were 1685 U/L (<720), total bilirubin was 2.53 mg/dl (<1.0), ammonaemia 69 microM (<32), prothrombin time less than 10%, thromboplastin time >180 s (<60) and alpha-fetoprotein 29723 microg/L (<186). Plasma tyrosine (651 microM) and methionine (1032 microM) were strongly increased. In urine, tyrosine metabolites and 4-oxo-6-hydroxyheptanoic acid were increased, but succinylacetone and succinylacetoacetate--pathognomonic for tyrosinemia type I--were repeatedly undetectable. Delta-aminolevulinic acid was normal, which is consistent with the absence of succinylacetone. Abdominal ultrasound and brain CT were normal.Fumarylacetoacetase (
FAH
) protein and activity in cultured fibroblasts and liver tissue were decreased but not absent. 4-hydroxyphenylpyruvate dioxygenase activity in liver was normal, which is atypical for tyrosinemia type I. A novel mutation was found in the
FAH
gene: c.103G>A (Ala35Thr). In vitro expression studies showed this mutation results in a strongly decreased
FAH
protein expression.Dietary treatment with phenylalanine and tyrosine restriction was initiated at 4 months, leading to complete clinical and biochemical normalisation. The patient, currently aged 12 years, shows a normal physical and psychomotor development.This is the first report of mild tyrosinemia type I disease caused by an Ala35Thr mutation in the
FAH
gene, presenting atypically without increase of the diagnostically important toxic metabolites succinylacetone and succinylacetoacetate.
...
PMID:A novel mutation causing mild, atypical fumarylacetoacetase deficiency (Tyrosinemia type I): a case report. 2000 95