Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0025362 (mental retardation)
15,878 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

The Richner-Hanhart syndrome corresponds to a tyrosine elevation in serum due to deficit in soluble tyrosine aminotransferase in liver cells. This new enzymopathy which is transmitted in an autosomal recessive mode is called oculocutaneous tyrosinosis. It is curable by a poor diet in tyrosine and its precursors. The diagnosis has been invoked in a 18 months old girl, on the association of punctuate palmar and plantar keratosis, dentritic ulcerated keratitis, and mental retardation. The diagnosis is confirmed by elevation of tyrosinemia to 52 mgs/100 mls associated with a high urinary elimination of tyrosine and plenylcetonic acid. Absences of anomaly in the metabolism of methionin and hepatorenal absence of disturbance of hepatorenal system is characteristic. The keratosis accompany orthokeratotic hyperkeratosis. The keratinocytes show 2 types of anomaly ranged in strates in the epiderm. Intracytoplasmic vacuoles which include or lead to pseudomyelinic formations extend progressively from the mitochondrial alterations in the epidemial basal layers. Bulky polyhedral electron dense particles are found in the cytoplasm of the superficial keratinocytes. Most of these aspects have been demonstrated anteriorly in the keratinocytes and the cornea; on the other hand, signs of mitochondrial sulferance had not been observed. The genesis of these cellular alterations based on the liberation of lysosomial enzymes by the action of crystals of tyrosine has been suggested by Goldsmith from experimental facts. However, it seems the mitochondrial defect occurs outside this mechanism.
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PMID:[Oculo-cutaneous tyrosinosis (Richner-Hanhart syndrome). Histo-pathological study of a case]. 611 39

The Richner-Hanhart syndrome corresponds to a tyrosine elevation in serum due to a defect in soluble tyrosine amino-transferase in liver cells. This new enzymopathy which is transmitted in an autosomal recessive mode is called oculo-cutaneous tyrosinosis. It is curable by a low diet in tyrosine and its precursors. The diagnosis has been clinically suggested in an 18 months old girl, by the association of punctate palmar and plantar keratosis, dendritic ulcerated keratitis, and mental retardation. The diagnosis was established by elevation of tyrosinemia up to 52 mg/100 ml associated with a high urinary elimination of tyrosine and phenylcetonic acid. Absence of anomaly in the metabolism of methionin and hepatorenal lesion is characteristic. The diagnosis was confirmed by the absence of soluble tyrosine aminotransferase in liver cells and by the effectiveness of the diet. The clinical keratosis corresponds histologically to a orthokeratotic hyperkeratosis. The keratinocytes show 2 types of anomalies ranged in the epiderm. Intracytoplasmic vacuoles which include or lead to pseudomyelinic formations extend progressively from the mitochondrial alterations in the epidemial basal layers. Bulky polyhedral electron dense particles are found in the cytoplasm of the superficial keratinocytes. Most of these images have been demonstrates anteriorly in the keratinocytes ant the corned; on the other hand, signs of mitochondrial anomaly had not been observed. The genesis of these cellular alterations based on the liberation of lysosomial enzymes by the action of crystals of tyrosine has been suggested by Goldsmith from experimental facts. However, it seems that the mitochondrial defect occurs outside this mechanism.
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PMID:[Changes in the keratinocytes in oculo-cutaneous tyrosinosis: Richner-Hanhart syndrome (author's transl)]. 723 83

Richner-Hanhart syndrome, also called oculo-cutaneous tyrosinosis type II, is a recessive autosomal genodermatosis consecutive to a disorder of tyrosine metabolism. It presents as a varying association of palmo-plantar keratosis, bilateral keratitis and mental retardation. The authors report a new case which is atypical in that palmoplantar keratosis made a late appearance. The diagnosis was confirmed by the presence of hypertyrosinaemia, hypertyrosinuria and urinary excretion of phenolic acids, and the absence of hepato-renal lesion. Needle biopsy of the liver, which demonstrates the deficiency of soluble cytosolic tyrosine aminotransferase, is not indispensable to the diagnosis and was not performed in our patient. Treatment consisted of a dietary measure: a controlled phenylalanine and tyrosine intake to obtain a tyrosinaemia below 10 mg/100 ml. This resulted in a favourable and durable course of the oculo-cutaneous lesions. In case of isolated skin lesion, retinoids can be prescribed either alone of combined with a diet, making it less strict.
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PMID:[Oculocutaneous type II tyrosinosis]. 836 6