Gene/Protein Disease Symptom Drug Enzyme Compound
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Query: UMLS:C0026827 (hypotonia)
5,860 document(s) hit in 31,850,051 MEDLINE articles (0.00 seconds)

Infants with macrocephaly, young children with acute disease resembling encephalitis, and children with truncal hypotonia, ataxia, or dystonia may be affected by glutaric aciduria type I (GA 1, glutaryl-CoA-dehydrogenase deficiency), a not-so-rare autosomal recessive neurometabolic disease. Well-known features of GA1 are fronto-temporal brain atrophy with macrocephaly and acute encephalopathic episodes with striatal necrosis followed by dystonia, but some patients develop motor disease without overt crises and other biochemically affected individuals remain asymptomatic. Biochemical and molecular characterization is available and allows post- and prenatal diagnosis. The pathogenesis of fronto-temporal atrophy, macrocephaly, and basal ganglia necrosis is still not understood, and there is no close correlation between biochemical parameters and clinical outcome. There is, however, evidence suggesting that carnitine supplementation and anticatabolic treatment of intercurrent illness may arrest or prevent neurological deterioration, while the role of limitation of dietary lysine and tryptophane is not yet clear. Although pathogenetic aspects are poorly understood, the natural course of glutaric aciduria type 1 can be changed by early diagnosis and treatment. Coordinated research is needed to understand the pathogenesis of brain toxicity, to define the role of dietary therapy, and to explore the possibility of neonatal screening.
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PMID:Glutaric aciduria type 1 (glutaryl-CoA-dehydrogenase deficiency): advances and unanswered questions. Report from an international meeting. 939 91

Glutaric aciduria typo I (GA I) is an uncommon metabolic disease with autosomal recessive inheritance. It usually presents in the first years of life and frequently causes movement disorders. Only a few cases have been diagnosed in adulthood. Two siblings who were diagnosed of GA I after a course of more than 20 years are reported here. The elder brother, after 9 months of normal psychomotor development, suffered from an acute encephalopathy with generalized hypotonia and, later on, dyskinetic movements. Throughout the following years severe generalized dystonia developed. The younger brother presented at 16 months with acute encephalopathy, hypotonia and generalized choreoathetoid movements. Cranial computed tomography showed in both patients an slight enlargement of Silvian cisures and diffuse white matter hypodensities. Magnetic resonance imaging performed in the second case disclosed in addition bilateral hyperintensities in putamen and caudate nucleous. At 29 and 24 years of age, respectively, an increased urinary excretion of glutaric and 3-hydroxiglutaric acids was detected in both patients. Glutaryl-CoA deshidrogenase activity in fibroblasts was absent in both. The patients were treated with carnitine and riboflavine, with no response. The present report shows that diagnosis of GA I should be considered in adults presenting a range of movement disorders from childhood.
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PMID:[Glutaric aciduria type I: diagnosis in adulthood and phenotypic variability]. 1173 16