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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)
Adamowicz and colleagues raised the alert in 2007 about patients with atypical hereditary fructose intolerance (HFI) primarily misdiagnosed as CDG Ix. We describe a girl with neonatal hypertonia, facial trismus, absent swallowing and coughing reflexes, gastro-oesophageal reflux and sporadically elevated Krebs cycle metabolites and lactate. At 14 months microcephaly and
hepatomegaly
were noted, with hypertransaminasaemia but normal blood coagulation, glucose, phosphate, and absent urinary reducing substances. Neurological impairment persisted. Because of hepatic and neurological abnormalities with developmental delay, Tf IEF was performed and showed a severe type 1 pattern, resulting in a wrong diagnosis of CDG. Subsequently, an aversion to fruits suggested HFI, confirmed by the finding of ALDOB mutations (p.A150P/p.N335K). The girl improved with fructose-free diet, but liver cirrhosis led to hepatic transplantation. She is now 7 years old with good evolution; facial trismus and hypertonia reversed, but microcephaly persists. Transferrin MALDI-TOF MS characterization revealed underoccupation of glycosylation sites and glycan abnormalities, which reversed with dietary treatment. High maternal fructose concentrations might have caused neonatal abnormalities. Although in our patient's mother there is no fructose accumulation at present, it is possible that increased ingestion of fruits and vegetables during pregnancy, together with her heterozygosity, caused an accumulation of fructose that finally affected the fetus. We also describe slightly abnormal transferrin isoelectric focusing and MALDI-TOF MS patterns of intact transferrin and N-glycans in a fructose-1,6-bisphosphatase (
FBP1
)-deficient patient. While HFI is a well-known cause of secondary CDG, we found no reports of abnormal transferrin isoelectric focusing patterns in
FBP1
deficiency and we introduce this condition as a possible secondary cause for altered transferrin isoelectric focusing.
...
PMID:Secondary disorders of glycosylation in inborn errors of fructose metabolism. 1976 53
A 14-month-old female infant presented with recurrent episodes of acute gastroenteritis accompanied by severe metabolic acidosis and hypoglycemia. Physical examination showed
hepatomegaly
. Laboratory evaluation revealed elevated hepatic enzymes, prolonged prothrombin time, hyperuricemia, and extremely elevated lactate and alanine levels. Glucagon injection during hypoglycemia resulted in a further decrease of blood glucose. She was treated with glucose-containing intravenous fluids, with rapid improvement and normalization of her blood pH and glucose levels. Hormonal assessment during two episodes of hypoglycemia indicated growth hormone (GH) deficiency. However, as isolated GH deficiency could not explain all other concomitant features, such as severe lactic acidosis,
hepatomegaly
, impaired liver function, and hyperuricemia, the possibility of a combined defect was suggested. Further lymphocytic enzymatic investigation revealed fructose-1,6-diphosphatase deficiency and molecular genetic analysis demonstrated frame shift mutation in the
FBP1
gene. This enzyme deficiency causes a rare metabolic disorder not previously described in combination with GH deficiency.
...
PMID:Recurrent infantile hypoglycemia due to combined fructose-1,6-diphosphatase deficiency and growth hormone deficiency. 2358 10