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Query: UMLS:C0023380 (
lethargy
)
5,697
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Two infants with
lethargy
, vomiting, convulsions, coma and marked metabolic acidosis were found to have very high concentrations of methylmalonic acid in their serum and urine. In vitro studies of fibroblasts demonstrated that the infants had different variants of
methylmalonic acidemia
.Vitamin B(12) was given in two different forms at 1 month of age and at 12 months of age. Each trial continued for 4 months but neither infant showed a clinical or biochemical response.In both infants hyperglycinemia, neutropenia and thrombocytopenia developed during acute metabolic crises only. Hypoglycemia was found in patient 2. Hyperammonemia was severe in patient 2 during acute crises but never appeared in patient 1. When clinically well, both infants continued to excrete abnormal amounts of methylmalonic acid in the urine and both had persistent compensated metabolic acidosis.Marked hyperuricemia developed in patient 1 at 18 months of age and led to progressive renal failure. Allopurinol therapy was necessary to keep the uric acid concentration within the normal range. Renal function returned to normal, as indicated by a marked increase in the renal clearance of creatinine and uric acid.Patient 1 is physically and mentally retarded, and has moderate hypotonia, hepatomegaly and persistent vomiting. Patient 2 has developed normally.The urine concentrations of methylmalonic acid in the four parents were normal.
...
PMID:Methylmalonic acidemia: 6 years' clinical experience with two variants unresponsive to vitamin B12 therapy. 3 17
A case of
methylmalonic acidemia
with intermittend homocystinuria is described. Special attention is given to the early symptoms of this inborn error of metabolism, like
lethargy
, muscular hypotony, poor feeding, ketoacidosis, and recurrent vomiting. Furthermore, the necessary diagnostic steps, the pertinent differential diagnosis (septicemia, duodenal stenosis, other inborn errors of metabolism), and the possible treatment are discussed.
...
PMID:[A case of cobalamin-dependent methylmalonic acidemia. Biochemical aspects, diagnosis and possible treatment (author's transl)]. 65 92
A 9-month-old sexually intact male longhair cat was examined because of
lethargy
, anorexia, cold intolerance, and failure to thrive since acquisition at an early age. Clinical signs of disease were less pronounced when the cat was fed a low-protein diet. Anemia, hypoglycemia, low total CO2 content, and hyperammonemia were detected. The cat was euthanatized. Urine obtained immediately before euthanasia contained a large amount of methylmalonic acid. Total serum cobalamin concentration was low. Hepatic methylmalonic-CoA mutase activity, with and without the addition of coenzyme adenosylcobalamin, was consistent with a cobalamin deficiency.
Methylmalonic acidemia
secondary to a putative defect in cobalamin absorption was diagnosed.
...
PMID:Cobalamin deficiency associated with methylmalonic acidemia in a cat. 150 Mar 7
The clinical and morphologic findings of three patients with metabolic acidosis,
methylmalonic aciduria
, and homocystinuria are presented. The clinical evolution of the patients was similar and was characterized in the first weeks of life by failure to thrive, hypotonia, and
lethargy
associated with pancytopenia and hepatic dysfunction, eventually progressing to severe respiratory insufficiency and renal failure consistent with a hemolytic-uremic syndrome. The patients died at 40, 45, and 75 days of age. Biochemical analyses and complementation studies revealed a congenital anomaly of vitamin B12 metabolism (cobalamin C disease). Postmortem morphologic findings in all three cases were dominated by a thrombotic microangiopathy of the kidneys and lungs, diffuse hepatic steatosis, and megaloblastic changes in the bone marrow. A severe gastritis with striking cystic dysplastic mucosal changes and total absence of parietal and chief cells was a consistent finding in all three cases, the rest of the gastrointestinal tract appearing essentially normal. Cobalamin C disease is an intracellular defect of cobalamin metabolism with possible recessive inheritance that can result in multiorgan failure early in life, with a thrombotic microangiopathy and unusual changes in the gastric mucosa.
...
PMID:A congenital anomaly of vitamin B12 metabolism: a study of three cases. 156 46
A male infant with methyl-B12 deficiency (cblE) presented at age 6 weeks with
lethargy
, staring spells, and vomiting. He later became hypotonic and unresponsive to stimuli and required intubation and ventilation. He had homocystinuria and hypomethioninemia with megaloblastic anemia but normal serum folate and vitamin B12 concentrations. No
methylmalonic aciduria
was detected. Fibroblasts, cultured from the patient, were unable to grow in medium in which homocysteine replaced methionine and incorporated abnormally small amounts of [14C]-methyl-tetrahydrofolate but normal amounts of [14C]-propionate into protein. Methyl-B12 content of fibroblasts was low, while the adenosyl-B12 content was normal. Methionine synthase activity was decreased when the assay was performed under both optimal and suboptimal reducing conditions, suggesting heterogeneity in the cblE disease. The patient responded dramatically to hydroxocobalamin treatment. Homocystinuria disappeared after 10 days of therapy, and methionine was normalized after 3 weeks. Psychometric testing at age 15 months showed a developmental age of 9 months.
...
PMID:Vitamin B12 responsive homocystinuria and megaloblastic anemia: heterogeneity in methylcobalamin deficiency. 381 89
We describe two patients with
methylmalonic aciduria
and homocystinuria (Cbl C). The disorder was not diagnosed in patient 1 until 4 1/2 years of age; he had a history of fatigue, anorexia, delirium, and spasticity. Moderate megaloblastic bone marrow changes were observed, and there was hyperreflexia of the lower limbs. His condition improved clinically with hydroxycobalamin therapy. Patient 2 was hospitalized at 6 weeks of age because of
lethargy
and poor feeding. She was found to have macrocytosis. Despite an initial good clinical response to hydroxycobalamin, she developed a striking pigmentary retinopathy.
Methylmalonic aciduria
persisted in both patients, and homocystinuria persisted in patient 1 despite therapy. The diagnosis of Cbl C disease has been confirmed in both patients by biochemical studies of cultured fibroblasts, including complementation studies. The differences in age of onset and clinical findings together with the similar biochemical findings in these two patients demonstrate the heterogeneity of phenotypic expression in patients with apparently identical abnormalities of vitamin B12 metabolism.
...
PMID:Clinical heterogeneity in cobalamin C variant of combined homocystinuria and methylmalonic aciduria. 395 Aug 20
Methylmalonic acidemia
is an inherited metabolic disorder thus far found in children and characterized by the excessive excretion of methylmalonate in the urine. Typically these children exhibit vomiting,
lethargy
, ketoacidosis, and failure to grow. Many of the patients are mentally retarded and die early in life. Two variants of this disease are known. In one, the administration of vitamin B(12) will reverse or prevent these clinical findings, whereas in a second variant vitamin B(12) therapy is of no value. This paper presents the first enzymatic evidence (obtained with cell-free liver extracts) that bears on two important aspects of the disease. It has been found that methylmalonylCoA carbonylmutase activity is essentially absent in the livers of patients suffering from one variant (vitamin B(12)-unresponsive) of the disease. Secondly, it has been found that the livers of patients with the second variant (vitamin B(12)-responsive) of the disease show normal enzymatic behavior in the presence of the coenzyme form of vitamin B(12), but are identical to the vitamin B(12)-unresponsive variant in the absence of the added coenzyme. Thus the enzyme studies fully support the clinical observations that two types of this disease exist.
...
PMID:Congenital methylmalonic acidemia: enzymatic evidence for two forms of the disease. 525 62
Methylmalonic acidemia
is a recessively inherited inborn error of metabolism presenting with metabolic acidosis, vomiting,
lethargy
, anorexia, and hypotonia. The disease may either begin in the neonatal period with acute, life-threatening episodes, or manifest itself with a milder clinical course and a more favorable outcome depending on the location and the severity of enzyme block. Enzymatic abnormalities, clinical features, diagnostic approach with regard to differential diagnosis and the possible treatment are discussed. Genetic counseling and prenatal diagnosis are also stressed.
...
PMID:[Methylmalonic acidemia: classification, diagnosis and therapy]. 636 67
Screening for metabolic diseases at Children's Hospital of Michigan, Detroit during 1978 and 1979 led to the discovery of 7.5 cases per year, representing a marked increase over previous years. Five cases of organic aciduria were identified during this two-year period by use of urinary gas chromatography. Four of these were found to have
methylmalonic aciduria
. The increase in detection rate was due to the addition of an organic acid screening technique and greater use of two standard screening tests. The yield of screening by these two tests also improved, which we attribute to the better use of specific criteria. Inclusion of a simple urine screening test for methylmalonic acid is recommended in the workup of infants with episodic vomiting,
lethargy
, acidosis, or catastrophic illness.
...
PMID:Screening for metabolic disease in a metropolitan hospital. 706 26
A six-month-old beagle was presented with a three-month history of failure to gain weight,
lethargy
, intermittent vomiting and seizures. Hypoglycaemia, portosystemic shunt, lead intoxication, gastrointestinal diseases and hereditary metabolic disorders were considered. Laboratory test results of low serum cobalamin (Cbl) concentrations, anaemia, leucopenia and
methylmalonic aciduria
while the dog was receiving a balanced commercial canine diet were suggestive of a congenital selective Cbl malabsorption. Treatment with repeated injections of parenteral cyanocobalamin (CN-Cbl) at 50 microg/kg every two weeks corrected the Cbl-deficient state and reversed all the clinical abnormalities. Selective Cbl malabsorption has previously been described in giant schnauzers and border collies and represents a unique readily treatable hereditary metabolic disorder.
...
PMID:Persistent cobalamin deficiency causing failure to thrive in a juvenile beagle. 1102 27
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