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)

Children with chronic metabolic acidosis should be investigated to determine the presence of an organic acid, especially when the plasma electrolyte profile shows a deficiency of anion. One of the organic acids that should be looked for in such a patient is lactic acid. Lactic acidosis due to tissue hypoxia is a well-known phenomenon (e.g., in shock and cardiopulmonary disease) and has not been discussed in this essay; nor has lactic acidosis due to exogenous causes like infusion of fructose or sorbitol, or admiministration of phenformin. Chronic lactic acidosis in infancy is a rare condition. It may be associated with glycogen storage disease Type 1, fructose diphosphatase deficiency, methylmalonic acidemia, propionic acidemia, pyruvate carboxylase or dehydrogenase deficiency and Leigh's subacute necrotizing encephalomyelopathy (SNE). Some patients with chronic lactic acidosis do not have nay of these diseases and comprise an "idiopathic" group. This is a heterogeneous group, probably having several different causes for the metabolic error. In Leigh's SNE, a metabolic block in the formation of thiamine triphosphate in brain has been demonstrated and has been attributed to the presence of an inhibitor of thiamine pyrophosphate-adenosine triphosphate (TPP-ATP) phosphoryl transferase in body fluids. The inhibitor has also been encountered in cases of intermittent cerebellar ataxia and of primary hypoventilation (Ondine's curse), which may represent variants of Leigh's disease. Increased blood levels of lactate, pyruvate and alanine frequently are encountered in SNE, but it still is not clear whether they are due to a primary or secondary disturbance in the catabolism of pyruvate. Disturbed lactate and pyruvate metabolism has also been encountered in isolated cases of mental retardation and growth failure, in mitochondrial myopathies and in polyneuropathies, and may be expected to occur in Wernicke's encephalopathy. Finally, it has been noted in malignancy and in association with other rare metabolic disorders.
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PMID:Lactic acidosis in childhood. 17 59

Congenital childhood lactic acidaemia is a poorly understood group of genetic diseases. The most common underlying inherited defect encountered in this group is deficiency of the pyruvate dehydrogenase complex. Of 23 cases we have diagnosed, 18 have a deficiency in the first component of the complex, the E1 decarboxylase, while the other five have multiple alpha-keto acid dehydrogenase deficiency due to a defect in lipoamide dehydrogenase. In addition to the lactic acidosis associated with pyruvate decarboxylase deficiency, ten of the cases showed evidence of facial dysmorphism consisting of a narrow head, wide nasal bridge and flared nostrils or gross microcephaly. Two further patients had agenesis of the corpus callosum. Isolated pyruvate carboxylase deficiency was found to present in two different forms, one with lactic acidaemia and mental retardation, the other with lactic acidaemia, hyperammonaemia citrullinaemia and hyperlysinaemia. The former presentation we have shown to be associated with the presence of a biotinylated pyruvate carboxylase protein of the correct subunit molecular weight (125 kd) which has no catalytic activity (CRM + ve). The latter we have shown to be associated with the absence of any recognizable pyruvate carboxylase protein (CRM - ve).
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PMID:Lactic acidaemia. 643 48

A seven-year-old girl with slowly progressive motor neurological impairment and high levels of lactate and pyruvate in blood and cerebrospinal fluid was found to have severe hepatic pyruvate carboxylase deficiency. However, in contrast to other patients with this deficiency, no mental retardation was apparent. Treatment with aspartic acid and thiamine over a period of seven years resulted in biochemical improvement and a stable neurological condition. The level of cognitive functioning remained the same. When treatment with aspartic acid was temporarily discontinued, lactate and pyruvate concentrations increased so markedly that the drug was resumed. This indicates that aspartic acid was the effective drug, and that the effect of thiamine was secondary.
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PMID:A patient with pyruvate carboxylase deficiency in the liver: treatment with aspartic acid and thiamine. 679 75