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Query: UMLS:C0022716 (
Menkes
)
1,057
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Twin males aged 24 years showed dementia, dysarthria, gait disturbances and involuntary movements, with slightly low levels of serum copper and ceruloplasmin, and markedly low excretion of urinary copper. We propose that the unique combination of dementia, dysarthria, gait disturbances, involuntary movements and abnormalities of copper metabolism does not fit any known nosological entity and constitutes a "new" syndrome different from Wilson's and
Menkes
' diseases.
J Neurol 1988
Sep
PMID:An unusual neurological disorder with abnormal copper metabolism. 306 63
We have performed 28 first trimester diagnoses for
Menkes disease
in 27 high risk pregnancies by direct copper measurement on chorionic villi (c.v.) Two male fetuses were found to be affected because of significantly increased copper content. In one male fetus a slightly increased copper content was observed indicating an exogenous copper contamination of the sample. This view was supported by normal results observed after abortion. Three out of 15 diagnostic c.v. samples with a female karyotype showed increased copper levels. In two of these cases, part of the copper content might have been released from the cannulae used for these particular biopsies. Histochemical visualization of copper accumulation in fixed chorionic villi of two affected fetuses and one female fetus was observed. [64Cu]-uptake studies have been performed on 11 diagnostic and 10 control c.v. samples. As the control samples in some cases were found to incorporate more [64Cu] than the corresponding diagnostic sample, this method cannot at present be used for diagnosis. Compiled results on newborn females gave evidence that two carriers expressed the paternal X-chromosome, and two carriers expressed the maternal X-chromosome in in chorionic villi.
Prenat Diagn 1987
Sep
PMID:Experience with first trimester prenatal diagnosis of Menkes disease. 367 35
Previous studies by others indicated that alterations in brain catecholamines were different for perinatal copper deficiency produced by diet in rats and that resulting from a genetic mutation of the X-chromosome,
Menkes' syndrome
in humans and brindled mice. Thus, copper deficiency was studied in a model in which dietary and genetic deficiency (brindled mice) were compared in two strains of the same species. C57BL and C3H/HeJ mice. Dietary copper deficiency was also produced in rats for comparison. In brain, both dietary and genetic copper deficiency resulted in impaired growth, low brain copper levels, greatly decreased norepinephrine concentrations but normal dopamine levels. The activity of brain cytochrome oxidase was greatly depressed following both dietary and genetic copper deficiency, suggesting a functional deficit of copper. However, the activity of another cuproenzyme, dopamine-beta-hydroxylase, was significantly elevated in deficient animals. The elevation was observed when either copper or N-ethylmaleimide was added to inactivate an endogenous inhibitor. The cause of low brain norepinephrine remains unknown; however, depressed brain norepinephrine may be partly responsible for functional changes in the deficient animals, such as hypomyelination, since the activity of the myelin protein, 2',3'-cyclic nucleotide 3'-phosphodiesterase, was lower in the most deficient animals.
J Nutr 1982
Sep
PMID:Effect of dietary or genetic copper deficiency on brain catecholamines, trace metals and enzymes in mice and rats. 628 8
Cultured fibroblasts from
Menkes
kinky hair disease patients showed markedly reduced succinate dehydrogenase and amine oxidase activities. Cytochrome oxidase activity, however, was greatly reduced in some cells and almost normal in others. Cultured fibroblasts from patients with Wilson's disease showed moderately reduced succinate dehydrogenase and cytochrome oxidase activities. Amine oxidase activity was only slightly reduced when compared to that of normal. These results indicated that the histochemical phenotype observed in fibroblasts from patients with
Menkes
kinky hair disease and Wilson's disease were distinctly different from each other and from normal fibroblasts.
Histochem J 1982
Sep
PMID:Histochemical studies of fibroblasts from patients with Menkes kinky hair disease and Wilson's disease. 629 Apr 31
The recognition of
Menkes' kinky hair syndrome
,
trichopoliodystrophy
, may present problems in the early neonatal period. The serum copper, and ceruloplasmin levels are within the range of normal infants in the first week of life; they are higher than normal in the cord blood of affected infants and fall gradually. Pili torti may only develop later, as the primary fetal hair is normal. The baby may appear bald, or both normal and abnormal hair may be found in different areas of the skull. The roentgenographic signs of wormian bones in the skull, metaphyseal spurring of the long bones, and diverticuli of the bladder develop progressively and may not be seen until after 6 weeks of age. However, diagnosis is possible in the neonatal period, if male infants with unexplained hypothermia, hypotonia, septicemia, or seizures are investigated by serum copper and ceruloplasmin levels after 1 month of age.
Clin Pediatr (Phila) 1984
Sep
PMID:Difficulties in the neonatal diagnosis of Menkes' kinky hair syndrome--trichopoliodystrophy. 646 87
Three patients with
Menkes
' disease, an inherited disorder of copper transport, were studied to determine whether the copper deficiency was associated with a lipoprotein disorder. Hypocuprinemia was documented in all three cases. Two patients had severe copper and ceruloplasmin deficiencies, whereas the third patient had a less severe deficiency. Hypertriglyceridemia was observed in the first patient, and elevations in triglyceride, cholesterol, apolipoprotein B (ApoB), and apolipoprotein C-III (ApoC-III) occurred predominantly in the very low density lipoprotein fraction (VLDL). This patient had normal lipoprotein lipase activity but mild glucose intolerance. The second patient had a borderline high cholesterol level with normal plasma triglycerides and apolipoproteins, whereas the third patient appeared to have normal total cholesterol but slightly higher triglycerides with elevated plasma apolipoprotein E (ApoE). No striking differences were observed in the chemical composition of all lipoprotein subfractions between patients and controls except that the neutral lipid content of VLDL was higher in patients than in controls. The ApoB was initially normal in molecular weight but degraded faster than the controls during storage. The appearance of the major low density lipoprotein (LDL) fraction of the first two patients was opaque white, in contrast to clear yellow in the third patient and in the age- and diet-matched controls. This abnormal appearance of LDL in these patients was associated with low plasma levels of beta-carotene and ceruloplasmin. These findings suggest that decreased serum copper levels may be associated with lipid and lipoprotein abnormalities and may enhance lipid peroxidation of LDL accounting for the color change.(ABSTRACT TRUNCATED AT 250 WORDS)
Pediatr Res 1984
Sep
PMID:Studies of lipids, lipoproteins, and apolipoproteins in Menkes' disease. 648 10
The authors report a case of
Menkes' syndrome
, probably the first one described in Brazil. The patient, a 15-month-old boy, showed pili torti, early progressive psychomotor deterioration and seizures. Serum levels of ceruloplasmin and copper were very low. Neuroradiological and roentgenological examinations revealed diffuse cerebral atrophy, arterial changes and bone abnormalities. At the post-mortem examination the more consistent findings were cerebral atrophy, neuronal loss in the thalamus and above all cerebellar cortical lesions. The disease has a sex-linked recessive inheritance and is believed to be caused by an inborn error of copper metabolism, perhaps subordinated to changes of proteins which carry copper to different tissues. The relevant literature in relation to the pathogenesis is reviewed.
Arq Neuropsiquiatr 1984
Sep
PMID:[Menkes syndrome: review of the pathogenesis apropos of a clinico-pathological case]. 649 17
The brindled mutant mouse is a useful model to study
Menkes kinky-hair syndrome
. The metabolic dysfunctions in both human and rodent are related to insufficient levels of bioavailable copper. Recently, copper supplementation therapy has been able both to prevent the appearance of various neuropathological changes and to prolong the life of these mutant mice. The optimum conditions for supplementation have been shown to be two intraperitoneal injections on postnatal days 7 and 10. The present study reports on the brain copper concentrations before, during and after the intraperitoneal copper therapy. The results demonstrate that postnatal days 7 and 10 correspond to two important epochs in copper homoeostasis. The supplementation therapy seems to provide sufficient bioavailable copper to respond to the needs of the animal at these crucial time points. The results are discussed in terms of their importance to the human copper disorder.
Biochem J 1982
Sep
01
PMID:The effect of copper supplementation on the concentration of copper in the brain of the brindled mouse. 689 Aug 11
Trichopoliodystrophy
(also known as
Menkes
' kinky or steely hair disease), a recessive sex-linked syndrome, is characterized by severely retarded mental and physical development, convulsions, a particular phenotype and abnormalities of the hair, bones and arteries. Very low levels of copper and ceruloplasmin in the serum confirm the diagnosis. This rare disorder is caused by an inborn error of copper metabolism whose nature is not yet clear. Recent hypotheses favour either an abnormality in the transport of copper across the cell membrane or increased affinity for copper of the intracellular binding protein. Because the metabolic abnormality is expressed autonomously and irregularly in various tissues, the distribution of copper within the body is disordered. Up to now none of the many forms of copper therapy has succeeded in modifying the fatal course of the disease in humans. This article presents a new case, the first in Canada, and a review of the other 69 cases described in the literature. The new case illustrates, in addition to the classic picture, less well known features, such as diverticula of the bladder mucosa and serosa, as well as cortical atrophy and malformed cerebral vessels demonstrated by computer-assisted tomography.
Can Med Assoc J 1980
Sep
20
PMID:[Trichopoliodystrophy or Menkes disease]. 700 75
Copper and zinc concentrations, and the nature of the copper- and zinc-binding proteins, were studied using tissues from a
Menkes
patient who had been given intravenous infusions of cupric acetate. The liver and brain copper contents were lower than in an untreated, non-
Menkes
control, and the spleen, intestine and kidney showed higher copper concentrations than control tissues. Zinc concentrations in all the organs (except the kidneys) from the
Menkes
patient were slightly lower than those the control child. Using Sephadex G-75 column chromatography of cytosols (105,000 x g supernatant), three copper- and zinc-containing peaks were eluted. In all the
Menkes
tissues studied, copper was prominent in peak 3. On the other hand, peak 3 was the smallest and peak 1 was the largest in the control tissues. Zinc predominated in peak 1 in both
Menkes
and control tissues, except for
Menkes
kidney. In this tissue peak 3 was again the largest. The copper- and zinc-binding material in peak 3 fractions from
Menkes
kidney was chromatographed on DEAE-cellulose columns. Three copper- and zinc-containing peaks were observed at the same positions as metallothionein from human adult kidneys.
Eur J Pediatr 1981
Sep
PMID:Nature of copper and zinc compounds in tissues from a patient with Menkes kinky hair syndrome. 727 94
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