Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Pivot Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Target Concepts:
Gene/Protein
Disease
Symptom
Drug
Enzyme
Compound
Query: UMLS:C0025362 (
mental retardation
)
15,878
document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)
Phenylketonuria
is no longer associated with
mental retardation
and other devastating neurological effects. Nonetheless, learning disabilities and IQ loss are common, even in early-treated individuals. Until recently, IQ was used as the sole measure of mental functioning in this population. As specific academic deficits were recognized and as a greater variety of tests became available, evaluation of children with
phenylketonuria
has included neuropsychological testing. A review of the 21 published reports highlights the areas of consensus and the need for additional well designed studies in the future. Problem solving, particularly abstract reasoning and executive functions, appears to be impaired in children with
phenylketonuria
. Reaction time, or speed of mental processing, appears to be the other important area affected in
PKU
. An information processing model is presented as a paradigm for further research and development of remedial strategies for children with
phenylketonuria
.
...
PMID:Review of neuropsychological functioning in treated phenylketonuria: an information processing approach. 776 71
The objective of neonatal screening for
phenylketonuria
and congenital hypothyroidism is early diagnosis and initiation of treatment to prevent brain damage and
mental retardation
. We present the results of the Norwegian national neonatal screening programme for
phenylketonuria
and congenital hypothyroidism. Screening for
phenylketonuria
based on serum phenylalanine determinations started in 1967 and covered the whole country in 1978. National screening for congenital hypothyroidism started in 1979. One hundred children with
phenylketonuria
and 280 children with a strong indication of congenital hypothyroidism have been detected up to 1 October 1994. Screening-related challenges and principles of treatment are discussed.
...
PMID:[Screening of newborn infants in Norway for severe metabolic disease]. 790 Jan 9
We report our experience with the deficiency of 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase, the most common form of tetrahydrobiopterin deficiency. We investigated 5200 patients suspected of having some inborn error of metabolism in a 10-year period, and detected 30 cases (from 28 sibships) of hyperphenylalaninaemias, HPA. From these, 4 sibships (5 patients) were affected by deficiency of 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin synthase. All of them were ethnically mixed, with some European ancestry detected in all. The age of diagnosis ranged from 2 to 9 years, and all were initially referred for investigation by having
mental retardation
and seizures. All of them showed low urinary biopterin levels and a marked elevation of neopterin. Although we detected only a few cases of HPA (30), 5 cases of 6-pyruvoyltetrahydropterin account for almost 20% of this total. The literature, however, reports a proportion of around 0.5%. As the frequency of classical
phenylketonuria
in our region is similar to that found in Caucasians (1/12,500), we believe that the frequency of this disease in South Brazil may be higher than expected (of the order of 1/400,000). We speculate that this finding could be related to a genetic drift (or founder effect).
...
PMID:Possible high frequency of tetrahydrobiopterin deficiency in south Brazil. 796 77
Maternal phenylketonuria (
PKU
) has adverse effects on the offspring including microcephaly,
mental retardation
, congenital heart disease, and intrauterine growth retardation. Maternal non-
PKU
mild hyperphenylalaninaemia (MHP) is believed to be benign, but whether there may be long-term consequences to offspring is unclear. In an international survey we have obtained information about 86 mothers with MHP (blood phenylalanine 167-715 mumol/L), their 219 untreated pregnancies, and 173 offspring. Spontaneous fetal loss (13% of pregnancies), congenital heart disease (2.3% of offspring), and severe non-cardiac anomalies (2.9% of offspring) occurred at frequencies within expected limits for the general population. For weight and length at birth the median percentile was the 50th but that for birth head circumference was the 25th. Median z-scores for birth length and head circumference were significantly lower for offspring of mothers with phenylalanine concentrations above 400 mumol/L than for those whose mothers had lower values (p = 0.05 and p = 0.005, respectively). The median intelligence quotient (IQ) of the offspring (3-27 years) was 100 for those whose mothers had higher phenylalanine concentrations and 108 for those of the lower phenylalaninaemia group. However, offspring IQ correlated slightly more closely with maternal IQ (r = 0.53, p < 0.001) than with maternal phenylalanine concentration (r = 0.45, p = 0.02). Maternal MHP does not seem to have serious consequences for the fetus. A maternal phenylalanine concentration of less than 400 mumol/L does not warrant intervention. Nevertheless, maternal blood phenylalanine above this value is associated with slightly lower birth measurements and offspring IQ than lower maternal blood phenylalanine concentrations.
...
PMID:Maternal mild hyperphenylalaninaemia: an international survey of offspring outcome. 784 32
We performed a retrospective study of all patients with methylmalonic acidemia diagnosed during the past 20 years. Only those patients who were nonresponsive to vitamin B12 in vivo and in vitro were included. The final study group consisted of 26 patients, of whom 16 had a neonatal (early) onset; in 10 patients the diagnosis was made after 2 months to 2.2 years (late onset). Of the early-onset patients, 14 (87%) died, with a mean survival time of 1.5 years (range, 10 days to 2.5 years), whereas four of the late-onset patients (40%) died (range, 1.2 to 15 years). At present, eight patients are alive; their mean age is 4.6 years (range, 1 to 10 years). In the early 1970s, treatment was based on the principles of treating patients with
phenylketonuria
: restricting natural protein intake and supplementing essential amino acids, vitamins, and trace elements. After about 1980, nasogastric tube feeding became a mainstay of the therapy, natural protein restriction became stricter, and the use of essential amino acid mixtures diminished. Carnitine was added to the therapy and, in later years, metronidazole. Since these changes were implemented, the number of episodes of metabolic decompensation and hospitalizations has decreased. Mean survival time of the patients, in particular those with early onset, has only slightly improved, partly because of psychosocial problems in many of these families. Almost all the patients, especially those with early onset, had some degree of neurologic impairment and
mental retardation
, and many patients were at less than 2 SD for weight or height or both. In contrast, the neurologic and mental status of the late-onset patients was frequently normal, and their weight and height were more often within normal limits. Our results show that the treatment of methylmalonic acidemia still poses considerable problems; despite intense medical efforts and familial stress, the prognosis for the early-onset patients is disappointing. The patients with late-onset disease, however, appear to have a fairly good prognosis with the present therapeutic approach. Liver transplantation or possibly genetic therapy might improve our results in the future.
...
PMID:Clinical outcome of long-term management of patients with vitamin B12-unresponsive methylmalonic acidemia. 799 62
In Japan, a nationwide mass screening system for neonatal metabolic diseases was established in 1977. This system consisted of screening programs for five main congenital metabolic diseases, including
phenylketonuria
(
PKU
). To evaluate the efficiency of the mass screening system, a cost-benefit analysis of the screening program for
PKU
(as a typical case in Japan) was carried out. The costs of the detection and the treatment program were compared with the projected benefit (avoided costs) that results from prevention of the
mental retardation
associated with the disorders due to
PKU
. Costs and benefits were discounted at an annual rate of 7%. Assuming that the incidence of
PKU
was 1/80,500 and the total number of infants screened was 1.2 million, net benefits for the screening program were $283,000, and the cost-benefit ratio was 1:2.5. The sensitivity analysis for the incidence of
PKU
showed that the cost-benefit ratios exceeded one.
...
PMID:Health economic analysis of the neonatal screening program in Japan. 807 Oct 1
Phenylketonuria (PKU)
is an autosomal recessive genetic disorder caused by phenylalanine hydroxylase (PAH) deficiency. Individuals afflicted with
PKU
develop irreversible
mental retardation
that can be largely prevented by the administration of a low-phenylalanine diet. A number of restriction fragment-length polymorphisms (RFLPs) have been identified in the PAH gene. Combinations of RFLPs constitute unique haplotypes that can be used to identify mutant PAH chromosomes for prenatal diagnostic purpose in
PKU
families. Unfortunately, the utility of haplotype analysis is limited in populations with a single predominant haplotype. We have identified a novel short tandem repeat (STR) within the PAH gene that has an average level of heterozygosity of about 75% in Orientals and about 80% in European Caucasian populations. This single marker is as informative as haplotype analysis in Europeans and nearly twice as informative as haplotype analysis in Orientals. Although there is statistically significant disequilibrium between STR alleles and RFLP-based haplotypes, there is a relatively low degree of disequilibrium between STR alleles and certain RFLP sites. Nevertheless, the combined use of the STR and RFLP haplotype systems increases the informativity of linkage-based tests for prenatal diagnosis and carrier screening in
PKU
families.
...
PMID:A single polymorphic STR system in the human phenylalanine hydroxylase gene permits rapid prenatal diagnosis and carrier screening for phenylketonuria. 810 Jan 64
Maternal phenylketonuria (
PKU
) is associated with significant complications such as
mental retardation
, microcephaly and congenital heart defects in nonphenylketonuric offspring. Dietary control with a low phenylalanine diet during the gestation period is effective in improving perinatal outcome in these cases. We present the case of a 27-year-old woman with classical features of
PKU
who had previously given birth to three babies, all of whom died of congenital heart disease. A low phenylalanine diet was started one month prior to the pregnancy and satisfactory fetal outcome was achieved.
...
PMID:Successful management of a pregnancy with maternal phenylketonuria: report of a case. 810 49
Previous studies on the effect of hyperphenylalaninaemia on the development of the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor in the cerebrum of the rat, using alpha-methylphenylalanine-induced hyperphenylalaninaemia, have shown a gradual and steady decrease in the number of binding sites for this neurotransmitter. The HPH-5 mouse, a phenylalanine hydroxylase mutant, can be hyperphenylalaninaemic without the use of a hydroxylase inhibitor. By employing quantitative autoradiography using [3H]quinuclinidylbenzilate to label muscarinic acetylcholine receptors, a refined analysis of this decrease in neurotransmitter binding sites can be made. The decrease was confirmed and is therefore due to the hyperphenylalaninaemia per se and not to the use of the inhibitor. Various areas of the brain reacted differently to hyperphenylalaninaemia, from no change (putamen) to a gradual decrease (external layer of the olfactory bulb, parietal, occipital and cingulate areas of the cerebral cortex, CA1 and CA3 layer of the hippocampus) to a decrease preceded by a transient increase (frontal area of the cerebral cortex, caudate nucleus). The extent of these changes depends on the duration of exposure to hyperphenylalaninaemia as well as on the degree of brain maturation, but can even be observed in the brain of the adult mouse on a hyperphenylalaninaemic regimen for 11 days. Since the hippocampus has been shown to be involved in the long-term storage of information, damage to this structure by hyperphenylalaninaemia may provide a clue to the global
mental retardation
observed in untreated
PKU
.
...
PMID:The effect of hyperphenylalaninaemia on the muscarinic acetylcholine receptor in the HPH-5 mouse brain. 812 72
Pregnant women who have elevated levels of serum phenylalanine are more likely to have a spontaneous abortion or to give birth to an infant with congenital cardiac anomalies, symmetrical growth retardation, microcephaly and
mental retardation
than pregnant women with normal levels of this amino acid (1). Nine pregnancies in 7 women were managed in conjunction with the staff of the Children's Hospital, Sydney. In 6 patients, satisfactory serum levels of phenylalanine were attained and 6 offspring are all normal at follow-up, ranging from 15 years to 1 year. The 2 children of the poorly controlled mother were of low birth-weight and both had microcephaly at birth. The poor control of serum phenylalanine was due to poor compliance with the strict dietary regimen. It is concluded that dietary control of serum phenylalanine levels below 600 umol/l in pregnant women with
PKU
is possible and desirable and may improve perinatal and long-term outcome. This requires close co-operation between paediatrician, dietician, obstetrician and patient. Further data are required to confirm these findings in larger numbers and to provide long-term neurological follow-up.
...
PMID:Pregnancy complicated by maternal phenylketonuria. 821 17
<< Previous
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
Next >>