Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0022716 (Menkes)
1,057 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

In an infant with Menkes's steely-hair syndrome, early treatment (from 21 days of age) with parenteral copper failed to halt the disease. In addition to urinary tract abnormalities, panlobular emphysema was present a finding not previously noted in the syndrome.
Arch Dis Child 1978 Dec
PMID:Menkes's syndrome. Report of a patient treated from 21 days of age with parenteral copper. 74 1

A clinical and neuropathological study is presented of two cases each of which showed neuronal heterotopia. Microgyria was also present in one case. One patient was suffering from a degenerative disorder affecting the white matter. The other was a case of Menkes' disease. It is suggested that the antenatal damage may have been caused by an imbalance of the maternal metabolism, the predisposing factor being the mother's carrier state for a metabolic defect. This is the first report of teratogenesis in a case of Menkes' disease. It is also noted that in this case there is interference with the postnatal as well as the antenatal development of the brain.
Acta Neuropathol 1976 Dec 21
PMID:Cerebral malformation associated with metabolic disorder. A report of 2 cases. 101 41

The macular mouse is an X-linked recessive inherited mutant and is considered to be a model for human congenital copper deficiency, Menkes' kinky hair disease. The activity of urate oxidase, which has been believed to be a copper enzyme, and copper content in the liver of the mutant mouse were determined. The oxidase activity was maintained at normal level even though there was very low level of copper present in the liver through days 7 to 14. Copper administration increased the copper content in the liver to the normal level, but did not affect the oxidase activity.
J Nutr Sci Vitaminol (Tokyo) 1991 Dec
PMID:Urate oxidase activity and copper content in the liver of macular mutant mouse, a model animal for human congenital copper deficiency, Menkes' kinky hair disease. 181 48

Menkes' disease is an inherited disturbance of copper metabolism. Addition of copper to the medium of cultured fibroblasts and lymphoblasts from patients with Menkes' disease results in an increased induction of metallothionein. We investigated the metallothionein induction in response to copper and zinc in muscle cells (myoblasts and myotubes). Metallothionein synthesis was analyzed by gel electrophoresis of labeled proteins and metallothionein synthesis in muscle cells was compared with the synthesis in fibroblasts. The induction by copper was higher both in muscle cells and in fibroblasts from the Menkes' patient compared to the control cells. Hybrid myotubes obtained by fusion of control myoblasts and Menkes' myoblasts render a system in which complementation can be studied. Metallothionein synthesis in hybrid myotubes occurred at a level intermediate between the synthesis in Menkes' and control myotubes. The abnormal accumulation of copper-induced metallothionein was only partially corrected by fusion with normal cells. Metallothionein induction by zinc was similar in Menkes' and control fibroblasts. Combination of copper and zinc yielded no differences in additional metallothionein synthesis for Menkes' cells and control fibroblasts. Therefore, metallothionein induction in Menkes' disease can primarily be accounted for by copper rather than by zinc.
J Neurol Sci 1990 Dec
PMID:Metallothionein in Menkes' disease: induction in cultured muscle cells. 208 40

Three female patients with Menkes syndrome are described. Clinically, they have typical Menkes syndrome. Biochemically, they have significantly increased 64Cu-uptake in cultured fibroblasts. The chromosomal analysis was normal for two of the patients and abnormal for one patient (45X/46XX mosaicism).
Clin Genet 1990 Dec
PMID:Clinical expression of Menkes syndrome in females. 228 18

The authors present a simple and rapid method for assaying ultrafilterable copper (Cu UF) and albumin-bound copper (Cu ALB). It is based on the ultrafiltration of serum in the presence of ethylenediaminetetraacetic acid (EDTA), used to prevent adsorption on the membranes. EDTA at 0.4 g/L has no effect on the equilibrium of serum copper vectors and enables Cu UF to be assayed by flameless atomic absorption. EDTA at 2 g/L is used to assay total exchangeable copper (CU EXC) (ultrafilterable + albumin-bound). The evaluation criteria of the method are furnished, as are the normal values in healthy subjects: 14.6 micrograms/L for Cu UF and 87 micrograms/L for Cu EXC. Finally, the usefulness of the methods described here for the diagnosis of Wilson's and Menkes' disease was demonstrated.
Biol Trace Elem Res 1988 Dec
PMID:Simple assay of serum copper fractions by ultrafiltration and flameless atomic absorption. 248 60

A 30-month-old infant with Menkes kinky-hair disease died, with prominent vascular, cerebral and cerebellar degeneration. Increased numbers of mitochondria containing homogeneous dense bodies were seen on electron-microscopic examination of Purkinje cells. Subsarcolemmal aggregates of mitochondria ('ragged red' fibers) were present in skeletal muscle. These mitochondrial alterations support the hypothesis that copper deficiency results in mitochondrial encephalomyopathy.
Dev Med Child Neurol 1988 Dec
PMID:Menkes kinky hair disease with 'ragged red' fibers. 323 9

The effects of copper administration to neonatal male mice on the copper concentrations and activities of copper-containing enzymes in cerebrum, liver, and kidney were studied. Intraperitoneal copper injections at 7 and 10 days of age increased the activities of superoxide dismutase and cytochrome oxidase in cerebrum and liver, and also increased the copper concentrations in cerebrum, liver, and kidney at 13 days of age. Maternal copper administration during the late-gestational period (from 13 days gestation to delivery) decreased the activities of both enzymes and increased the copper concentration in cerebrum. This increased level of copper remained by 13 days of age after birth. Liver showed similar changes to those in cerebrum, but the renal responses were less remarkable. Maternal copper administration from the late-gestational through lactational periods affected neonatal growth, decreased the activity of cytochrome oxidase, and increased the copper concentrations in all tissues examined. It is known that the copper concentration and copper-containing enzyme activity are low in cerebrum of mottled mice as well as of patients with Menkes' disease. These results suggested that the cytochrome oxidase activity in cerebrum was decreased by not only copper deficiency but also excess. The combination of prenatal copper supplementation by means of maternal copper administration during the late-gestational period and intraperitoneal copper injections after birth, while being careful not to overdose, is expected to be efficient for the copper supplementation to mottled mice.
J Nutr Sci Vitaminol (Tokyo) 1988 Dec
PMID:Effects of copper administration on fetal and neonatal mice. 324 47

A boy who died at 6 months of age was noted to have sparse, stubby and light hair, pili torti were observed microscopically, and his skin was dry and redundant. As a suspicion of Menkes disease was first raised after his death, serum copper and ceruloplasmin in serum were not measured. Unfortunately, no fibroblasts were available - only fixed and paraffin-embedded samples of brain, spleen and liver. The copper contents of the brain and the liver were lower than in an age-matched control. Fibroblast cultures from the mother, the maternal grandmother, and a maternal aunt of the index patient were analysed for 64Cu-uptake. All these females showed the uptake values expected for Menkes carriers, thus supporting the clinical suspicion of Menkes disease in the index patient. From the above-mentioned results it was highly likely that the index patient had suffered from Menkes disease. Adequate genetic counseling could thus be offered to the family, and in the next pregnancy a first trimester prenatal diagnosis was performed.
Clin Genet 1987 Dec
PMID:Postmortem Menkes diagnosis from carrier testing of female relatives. 343 89

The difficulties of early diagnosis of Menkes' kinky hair syndrome are described guided by the clinical courses of three related patients. One of these children could be observed continuously from birth. Different from other descriptions the diagnostic value of the clinical features observed in our patients is estimated as follows: 1. severe cerebral degeneration with seizures in the first year of life; 2. subdural hygroma; 3. decreased levels of serum copper and serum coeruloplasmin; 4. hair abnormalities; 5. skin abnormalities. The diagnosis is likely, if serum copper and serum coeruloplasmin are decreased. The diagnosis is proved by increased copper uptake into cultured fibroblasts. The prenatal diagnosis is possible by chorionic villus biopsy or amniocentesis. The importance of carrier detection by cultured fibroblasts and subsequent genetic counselling is underlined.
Monatsschr Kinderheilkd 1987 Dec
PMID:[Clinical aspects of Menkes syndrome]. 343 7


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