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Query: UMLS:C0022716 (
Menkes
)
1,057
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
The author presents and discusses the anaesthetic implications of a four-month-old infant with
Menkes' syndrome
who required tracheostomy.
Menkes' syndrome
is an X-linked recessive disorder of
copper
absorption and metabolism. Defective processing of
copper
results in abnormalities of several enzyme systems leading to severe dysfunction of multiple organ systems. Due to the progressive nature of this disorder and its severe effects on several different organ systems, most importantly the central nervous system, these children frequently require anaesthetic care during imaging procedures such as MRI or during various surgical operations. The high prevalence of seizure disorders, gastroesophageal reflux with the risk of aspiration, and airway complications related to poor pharyngeal muscle control are of concern to the anaesthetist. In addition, defective collagen formation, similar to that seen in Ehlers-Danlos syndrome, may be present. Identification of these associated conditions during the preoperative examination will guide the selection of appropriate, safe anaesthetic care for these children.
...
PMID:Anaesthetic considerations in the child with Menkes' syndrome. 139 61
We herein describe a case of
Menkes
' Syndrome in a Jamaican infant. The diagnosis was confirmed by low serum
copper
and ceruloplasmin levels.
...
PMID:Menkes' kinky hair syndrome. 156 95
The effects of a low
copper
diet on pigmentation, pigment cell and melanosome morphology have been investigated in ACI/T male rats. After a three months treatment the fur and skin pigmentation is reduced as compared to the controls. The melanocytes of the treated rats show the phenotype of active pigment cells while some melanosomes are abnormally differentiated: both lamellar and granular organelles are present in the same pigment cell and mosaic age melanosomes appear. The abnormal melanosome structure expressed by the treated-rat melanocytes is also evident in vitro. After incubation with deoxycholate the melanosomes from the low-
copper
diet treated rats are much more altered than those from the control rats. The phenotype of the rats starved for
copper
seems to mimic as regards pigmentation the phenotype of the mouse Mo (mottled) mutation that is an experimental model of the
Menkes' kinky hair syndrome
. In conclusion
copper
deficiency seems to affect both the morphology and function of the pigment cells.
...
PMID:Copper deficiency and pigmentation in the rat: morphofunctional aspects. 160 May 17
The aim of this article is to emphasize the important role that
copper
plays in the function of nerve cells. We are reporting preliminary data which suggest that the swelling of axons which we produce in rats by iminodipropionitrile, IDPN, is due to its chelating action on
copper
, and how conversely supplementation with
copper
abolishes both symptoms and lesions. The
copper
values we obtained by atomic absorption spectrophotometry of the spinal cord and brain from the animals fully support this contention. In comparing these results with the diseases that are known to be due to
copper
deficiency, namely
Menkes disease
in man, swayback in lambs and several neurological mutant mice, we find not only similar axonal swellings, but also amelioration of symptoms and lesions by early administration of
copper
. Considering the main forms in which
copper
is present, we discuss the cuproproteins, i.e. ceruloplasmin and metallothionein, and their role in transport and delivery of
copper
to various organs. Further, the many cuproenzymes i.e. superoxide dismutase, tryptophan-2,3-dioxygenase, lysine oxidase, cytochrome oxidase, monoamine oxidases, tyrosinase, dopamine-beta-hydroxylase and d-amino levulinate dehydratase are noted for their roles in the nervous system. Finally, we suggest that neuronal
copper
deficiency should be more fully investigated as a possible etiological factor in the more common neurodegenerative diseases, such as Alzheimer's disease and amyotrophic lateral sclerosis, ALS.
...
PMID:Deficiency of copper can cause neuronal degeneration. 161 61
We report a male infant with
Menkes
' disease who showed, at the age of 3 months, slow growth, hair abnormalities such as pili torti and white hair, and low levels of serum
copper
and ceruloplasmin. The exceptionally bright portions of his hair contained eumelanin and pheomelanin at levels only half those of normal Japanese controls. After subcutaneous administration of
copper
-histidinate for 2 months, his scalp hair changed to dark brown.
...
PMID:Menkes' disease: report of a case and determination of eumelanin and pheomelanin in hypopigmented hair. 163 75
The macular mouse is an animal model of
Menkes disease
. The neurological degeneration is caused by decreased cuproenzymes activity, such as cytochrome c oxidase (CCO), associated with
copper
deficiency in the brain. We investigated the age-related changes in
copper
concentration and CCO activity in the brain of macular mice which were given a single injection of cupric on postnatal day 7. The
copper
concentration in the brain of macular mice was always about 40% of that of the age-matched controls. However, the
copper
concentration of both macular and control mice increased with age gradually. The CCO activity in the brain of macular mice was significantly lower than that of controls at the age of 8 days. However the activity in macular mice increased with growth and reached a level equal to the controls at 180 days. These results suggest that the improvement of CCO activity in the brain of macular mice is due to the brain
copper
concentration which increased with age. Therefore, parenteral administration of
copper
is recommended especially during infancy in patients with
Menkes disease
.
...
PMID:Changes of copper level and cytochrome c oxidase activity in the macular mouse with age. 165 7
Occipital horn syndrome (OHS; Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IX) belongs to the category of the
copper
metabolism disorders and is at present being investigated biochemically as is
Menkes disease
. We report a case of OHS in a 34-year-old male, which we believe to be the first Japanese case. He had been noted to have psychomotor retardation since his early childhood and now presents severe psychomotor retardation and muscle atrophy. He shows characteristic facial appearance, hyperelasticity of the skin, joint subluxation and generalized muscular atrophy. Laboratory investigations revealed a low serum
copper
and ceruloplasmin level as well as intestinal non-absorption of
copper
. Radiologic imagings showed occipital exostoses and bladder diverticula. The activity of lysyl oxidase, a
copper
-dependent enzyme involved in cross-link formation in collagen, was decreased in a skin-biopsied specimen. Electronmicroscopic investigation of a muscle biopsy showed irregularity of the myofibrillar network and accumulation of the concentric laminated bodies in the subsarcolemmal regions.
...
PMID:[Occipital horn syndrome (Ehlers-Danlos syndrome type IX) with severe psychomotor retardation and muscle atrophy--a first Japanese case]. 168 78
The distribution of immunoreactive catecholamine neurons and fibers was investigated in brindled mottled mouse, a murine model of
Kinky hair syndrome
(
KHS
), using antisera against tyrosine hydroxylase (TH) and dopamine-beta-hydroxylase (DBH). In all mice, including normal littermate controls, a transient increase of TH-immunoreactive neurons (TH-IN) was observed in the cerebral cortex during the second postnatal week. The numbers of TH-IN were more pronounced in hemizygous brindled males (MObr/y). In addition, TH-IN appeared and rapidly increased in number in the striatum of MObr/y after postnatal day 11 (P11). Striatal TH-IN were rarely detected in controls. After cupric chloride (CuCl2) treatment, TH-IN in the striatum of some of the MObr/y mice became less conspicuous. In the substantia nigra and ventral tegmental area where TH-IN are normally present, no differences either in the immunostaining of TH-IN or the pattern of TH immunoreactive fibers were detected between MObr/y and controls. In MObr/y, a superficial plexus of DBH immunoreactive fibers was more pronounced than in controls but there were no DBH immunoreactive neurons in the cerebral cortex or striatum in any of the mice examined. Neurochemical analysis revealed a marked decrease in norepinephrine levels and increase of serotonin and its metabolites in the brain in MObr/y. Together, these data suggest that the unusual expression of TH-IN in MObr/y represents perturbations of normal development of catecholamine neurons in this
copper
deficient mutant mouse.
...
PMID:Neurochemical and immunocytochemical studies of catecholamine system in the brindled mouse. 168 2
The brindled mottled mutant mouse, a model of
Menkes
' disease, has alterations in
copper
homeostasis which cause, among other sequelae, neuronal degeneration in selected areas of brain. This work examined the neurochemical changes at postnatal days (PND) 15, 30 and 60 in females heterozygous for the sex-linked brindled mutation. These data were compared to behavioral alterations and to fur coat color at these same time points. The brindled heterozygotic females had lower concentrations of norepinephrine (NE) in the cingulate cortex, and higher levels of dopamine or dopamine metabolites in the cingulate cortex, thalamus and hypothalamus across all ages, although the difference was greatest at PND 15. The brindled females were much less active than their normal littermates at PND 15, but the differences were no longer evident at PND 30 and 60. Mottling of the fur is believed to result from low tyrosinase activity caused by abnormalities in
copper
metabolism. The fur pattern and behavior of the brindled mice were highly correlated with NE levels in the cingulate cortex and thalamus. These data show that female brindled mice have neurochemical abnormalities similar to (if less severe than) the male hemizygotes, that these abnormalities are regionally specific, are most apparent prior to 30 days of age, and are linked to behavioral deficits. These data also show that the extent of such deficits can be predicted by a quantitative analysis of the fur pattern of these females.
...
PMID:The female brindled mouse as a model of Menkes' disease: the relationship of fur pattern to behavioral and neurochemical abnormalities. 175 14
The
copper
concentration was investigated in the cultured astrocytes from macular mice, an animal model of
Menkes disease
. An excessive amount of
copper
was accumulated in the astrocytes as
copper
-metallothionein. These results show that the underlying genetic defect of the macular mouse is expressed in the astrocytes. A similar situation may exist in
Menkes disease
and cause a failure of
copper
transport to neurones.
...
PMID:Genetic expression of Menkes disease in cultured astrocytes of the macular mouse. 177 48
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