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Query: UMLS:C0022716 (Menkes)
1,057 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The incorporation of 64Cu into cultured fibroblasts from 7 boys with Menkes' steely hair disease and from 9 controls was examined. The median 20 h incorporation was 74-4 ng 64Cu/mg protein for the patients and 26-1 ng 64Cu/mg protein for the controls (P less than 0.01). Thus, the defect in copper metabolism in the disease was expressed in cultured cells. The method was applied to amniotic fluid cell-cultures of 2 pregnancies at risk and to amniotic fluid cell-cultures with a male karyotype of 8 normal pregnancies. The median 20h 64Cu incorporation into the normal cell-cultures was 19.2 ng 64Cu/mg protein, into the cell-culture from one pregnancy at risk was 48-6 ng 64Cu/mg protein, and from the other, 12-5 ng 64Cu/mg protein. The first case was aborted and the copper distribution in the fetus was found to be abnormal--consistent with Menkes' disease. The second case at risk was born in May, 1975, and no signs of Menkes' disease have developed. These cases demonstrate that prenatal diagnosis of Menkes' steely hair disease might be feasible.
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PMID:Copper incorporation studies on cultured cells for prenatal diagnosis of Menkes' disease. 5 1

The evolution of neurophysiological features including the electroencephalogram (EEG), electroretinogram (ERG), and visual evoked potentials (VEP) is reported in eight cases of Menkes' "kinky hair" disease. All EEGs were severely abnormal, with some characteristic features seen from 3-5 months of age, after the onset of clinical symptomatology. From the age of 5 months, the EEGs resembled hypsarrhythmic patterns. The ERG was not affected in any patient, but the VEP was either of low amplitude or completely absent in all but one of the six patients tested. All eight patients received copper injections without substantial effect on either the clinical course of the disease or the EEG features.
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PMID:Menkes' disease: neurophysiological aspects. 9 72

The authors describes a case of Menkes' disease, sex-linked recessive hereditary disease characterized by early progressive psychomotor deterioration, failure to gain weight, seizures, hypothermie and characteristic Kinky hair (Pilitorti). This boy is a blind child, unable to fix and follow light. Fundus examination shows optic nerve atrophy with tortuosity of the retinal blood vessels. The case is discussed in the light of similar and others reports in the literature. The disease is believed to be cause by a generalized copper deficiency in the body by defect in copper intestinal absorbtion. The pathologic changes in the retina are similar to those seen in the brain which shows diffuse neuronal degeneration lose of nerve filers and optic atrophy. Retinal changes should be reversible by short term systemic copper administration.
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PMID:[Menkes' disease: apropos of a recent case]. 15 8

A male infant with Menkes Kinky Hair Syndrome was treated with a 3-week course of cupric acetate infusions, which was terminated when he developed aminoaciduria. The lack of improvement seen in this infant is representative of the reported experience with parenteral copper therapy in this condition, and may be attributable to the presence of a clinically significant abnormality in copper metabolism in utero.
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PMID:Menkes kinky hair syndrome: Is it a treatable disorder? 18 59

The clinical and biochemical evaluation of 6 patients with trichopoliodystrophy indicates that the disease process can begin in utero and is related to a selective abnormality in copper metabolism. Examination of 2 infants on the first day of life revealed abnormal neurological signs, a characteristic hair abnormality, and elevated levels of copper and ceruloplasmin. Decreased hepatic copper levels and increased urinary copper excretion were documented during the first week. The 2 neonates demonstrated a progressive decrease in blood copper levels in the first month of life. Four infants identified at ages 2 to 11 months had low values for blood copper and ceruloplasmin. All infants had progressive neurological dysfunction, and 4 of the 6 died at ages ranging from 2 1/2 months to 5 1/2 years. Parenteral copper therapy achieved normal blood and hepatic copper levels in 1 patient, but the copper values in the cerebral cortex and white matter were significantly decreased compared to control specimens.
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PMID:Clinical and biochemical aspects of trichopoliodystrophy. 42 69

Thalamic degeneration was present in 5 autopsied cases of X-chromosome-linked copper malabsorption (X-cLCM), Menkes' kinky hair disease. Among the thalamic nuclei, those in the formatio paraventricularis, intralamellaris, and extralamellaris were spared. The nuclei projecting to the granular cortices had severe neuronal depopulation. The thalamic nuclei that send axons to the agranular cortices were less often and less severely involved. The thalamic afferent system was intact except for degeneration of the red nucleus. Cerebral cortical lesions varied from case to case and usually were less marked than thalamic neuronal changes.
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PMID:Thalamic degeneration in X-chromosome--linked copper malabsorption. 44 70

Metallothionein biosynthesis is not induced by extracellular copper in Menkes Kinky hair disease (MKHD) or in normal cultured fibroblasts under the conditions of these experiments. In the presence of copper, MKHD fibroblasts also incorporated less cysteine than did normal fibroblasts. Extracellular cadmium greatly enhanced the uptake of cysteine in both normal and MKHD cultures. By the technique of polyacrylamide gel electrophoresis, it was demonstrated that metallothionein is induced by cadmium in normal and MKHD-cultured fibroblasts.
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PMID:Inducibility of metallothionein biosynthesis in cultured normal and Menkes kinky hair disease fibroblasts: effects of copper and cadmium. 47 76

A seven month old male with Menkes' disease ("Kinky hair") is presented. Low ranges of copper and caeruloplasmin were found. The angiogram of all intracranial arteries revealed torturous form. Biopsy of an extracranial artery (branch of the temporal artery) was normal. Authors review previously reported cases and possible causes that can contribute to hypomyelination of central nervous system.
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PMID:[Menke's disease. A case report (author's transl)]. 55 62

The brindled mouse (Mobr) is a neurological mutant mouse with a deficiency in copper transport. This mutant has many clinical as well as biochemical features in common with Kinky hair syndrome (KHS) in humans (Tab. 1). Male hemizygotes (Mobr/Y) are characterized by the absence of fur pigment and curly whiskers. They become inactive, losing weight at around the 10th-12th post-natal day. They usually die in an emaciated state around the 15th-16th postnatal day. The brain weight is usually about three fourths of that of littermate controls. Microscopically, widespread neuronal degeneration was noted in the cerebral cortex and thalamic nuclei of male hemizygotes after the 12th post-natal day. The degeneration continued to increase until death. Scattered degenerated cells were also noted in the cerebellum. No such degenerative changes were observed in the brain of female heterozygotes (Mobr/+) or in normal or starved littermates. These degenerative changes of neurons in the brindled hemizygote mouse will be compared with the neuropathological changes observed in KHS and in experimental animals with copper deficiency, and the possible pathogenesis of these changes will be discussed.
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PMID:Neuronal degeneration in the brain of the brindled mouse--a light microscope study. 57 Oct 7

The defect in Menkes' disease in man is identical to that in Brindled mice. The defect manifests itself in a accumulation of copper in some tissues, such as renal, intestinal (mucosa and muscle), pancreatic, osseous, muscular, and dermal. Hence a fatal copper deficiency results in other tissues (e.g., hepatic). The copper transport through the intestine is impaired and copper, which circumvents the block in the copper resorption, is irreversibly trapped in the above-mentioned, copper accumulating tissues where it is bound to a cytoplasmatic protein with molecular weight 10,000 daltons, probably the primary cytoplasmatic copper transporting protein. This protein shows a Cu-S absorption band at 250 nm, and the copper:protein ratio is increased. Such copper rich protein was found neither in the kidneys of the unaffected mice nor in the liver of the mice that do have the defect. Three models of the primary defect in Menkes disease are proposed.
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PMID:Primary biochemical defect in copper metabolism in mice with a recessive X-linked mutation analogous to Menkes' disease in man. 57 98


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